In March 2025, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres initiated the UN80 reform initiative. Organized around three ‘workstreams’, the UN80 initiative combined very ambitious reform and restructuring goals with extremely tight timelines under massive resource constraints. The workstreams combined budget cuts announced as efficiency gains and internal reorganization (Workstream 1). They included a UN decision-making reform announced initially as a mandate review (Workstream 2) and proposals for reform(s) of the entire UN system structure (Workstream 3) that ended up with relatively limited, disconnected, and uncoordinated proposals for mergers and joint services.
At the start of 2026, the UN80 reform process is ongoing and on a path to a productive failure. Failure, first, because ambition and financial crisis clashed and, second, because member states’ interests and geopolitical realities were not openly factored in. UN80 nevertheless succeeded in putting large-scale reform on the agenda and in linking up disconnected smaller reform efforts under a common roof.
This GGI Analysis situates this critical appraisal in the literature on international organization reform and policy accumulation. It provides recommendations on how to better balance bureaucratic, diplomatic, geofiscal, and geopolitical aspects of reform dynamics in times of (budget) crisis, acknowledging that a fundamental system-wide reform is almost impossible from within the current global governance complex.
Photo credtis: UN Photo/Werner Schmidt (Scaffolding in the General Assembly Hall during renovation)
