A mixed funding pattern: China's exercise of power within the United Nations

Author:

Zhang Xueying1ORCID,Jing Yijia2

Affiliation:

1. School of International Relations and Public Affairs Fudan University Shanghai China

2. Institute for Global Public Policy Fudan University Shanghai China

Abstract

AbstractChina's financial contributions to the United Nations have increased in tandem with its growing economic might. However, their composition differs from that of other large (Western) contributors, being predominantly made up of mandatory fees and to a much lesser degree of voluntary core and earmarked contributions. What types of power does China seek and exercise through these different funding modalities? This article uses the conceptual power framework developed by Barnett and Duvall to answer this question. We argue that China's UN funding strategy reflects a careful balance between its commitments as a ‘responsible great power’ contributing to multilateralism and its desire to expand its influence within the UN system. We suggest that China exercises compulsory and structural power through assessed contributions and acquires some limited institutional and structural power via voluntary core contributions, while its voluntary earmarked contributions relate, to varying degrees, to all four power types — compulsory, structural, institutional, and productive. We also discuss key reasons behind the limited nature of China's voluntary funding. Based on our analysis, we suggest that the overall increase in China's funding contributes to changes in China's favor but, so far, has not led to more substantive power shifts at the UN.

Funder

National Social Science Fund of China

Publisher

Wiley

Reference55 articles.

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3. Baumann M.‐O. Haug S.&Weinlich S.(2023)China's expanding engagement with the United Nations development pillar: the selective long‐term approach of a Programme country superpower. IDOS. Available from:https://library.fes.de/pdf‐files/iez/19692.pdf

4. From developing country to superpower? China, power shifts, and the United Nations development pillar;Baumann M.‐O.;Global Policy,2024

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