Collapse to view only § 263c. Anti-piracy information sharing
- § 261. Policy as to settlement of disputes and disarmament
- § 262. President’s participation in international congresses restricted
- § 262-1. Restriction relating to United States accession to any new international criminal tribunal
- § 262a. Contributions to international organizations; consent of State Department; limitations as to certain organizations
- § 262b. Commitments for United States contributions to international organizations; limitations; consultation with Congressional committees
- § 262c. Commitments for United States contributions to international financial institutions fostering economic development in less developed countries; continuation of participation
- § 262d. Human rights and United States assistance policies with international financial institutions
- § 262d-1. Congressional statement of policy of human rights and United States assistance policies with international institutions
- § 262e. Comparability of salaries and benefits of employees of international financial institutions with employees of American private business and governmental service
- § 262f. Promotion of development and utilization of light capital technologies and United States assistance policies with international financial institutions
- § 262g. Human nutrition in developing countries and United States assistance policies with international financial institutions; declaration of policy
- § 262g-1. Targeting assistance to specific populations
- § 262g-2. Establishment of guidelines for international financial institutions
- § 262g-3. International negotiations on future replenishments of international financial institutions; consultation with appropriate Members of Congress
- § 262h. Opposition by United States Executive Directors of international financial institutions to assistance for production or extraction of export commodities or minerals in surplus on world markets
- § 262i. Repealed.
- § 262j. Use of renewable resources for energy production
- § 262k. Financial assistance to international financial institutions; considerations and criteria
- § 262k-1. Transparency of budgets
- § 262k-2. Female genital mutilation
- § 262l. Environmental reform measures and remedial measures; Committee on Health and the Environment
- § 262l-1. Sustainable economic growth and management of natural resources; environmental impact of loans; pest management; addition of trained professionals; “early warning system”
- § 262l-2. Sustainable use of natural resources; use of agricultural and industrial chemicals
- § 262l-3. Environmental and energy initiatives; benchmarks; Global Warming Initiative; appropriations
- § 262m. Congressional findings and policies for multilateral development banks respecting environment, public health, natural resources, and indigenous peoples
- § 262m-1. Environmental performance of banks; mechanisms for improvement
- § 262m-2. Environmental impact of assistance proposals
- § 262m-3. Cooperative information exchange system
- § 262m-4. Environmental educational and training programs for mid-level bank managers and officials of borrowing countries
- § 262m-5. Environmental impact statements; factors considered; promotion of activities by United States Executive Directors
- § 262m-6. Repealed.
- § 262m-7. Assessment of environmental impact of proposed multilateral development bank actions
- § 262m-8. Climate change mitigation and greenhouse gas accounting
- § 262n. Congressional findings and policies respecting agricultural and commodity production
- § 262n-1. Increase in income and employment in developing countries; enhancement of purchasing power; diversification away from single crop or product economies
- § 262n-2. Financing projects for production of export commodities, products, or minerals in surplus in world markets discouraged; instructions by Secretary of the Treasury to United States Executive Directors
- § 262n-3. Reduction of barriers to agricultural trade
- § 262o. Negotiations concerning replenishment or increase in capital; annual reports on implementation of lending policy goals
- § 262o-1. Military spending by recipient countries; military involvement in economies of recipient countries
- § 262o-2. Advocacy of policies to enhance general effectiveness of International Monetary Fund
- § 262o-3. Administrative provisions
- § 262o-4. Promotion of policy goals
- § 262p. Impact adjustment lending programs
- § 262p-1. Grassroots Collaboration Program
- § 262p-2. Instructions to United States Executive Directors for extension of credit
- § 262p-3. Participation of women in economic, social and policy development activities
- § 262p-4. Instructions to United States Executive Directors; indigenous people in borrowing country; determination of impact; protection of rights; consultation
- § 262p-4a. Loan programs to reduce economic dependence on illicit narcotics
- § 262p-4b. Directives regarding government-owned enterprises in countries receiving World Bank loans
- § 262p-4c. Initiation of discussions to facilitate debt-for-development swaps for human welfare and environmental conservation
- § 262p-4d. Initiation of discussions to facilitate financing of human welfare and natural resource programs in sub-Saharan Africa in connection with debt reduction and conversion
- § 262p-4e. Extent to which borrowing country governments have honored debt-for-development swap agreements to be considered as factor in making loans to such borrowers
- § 262p-4f. Assistance to countries to develop statistical assessment of well-being of poor
- § 262p-4g. Directives regarding government-owned enterprises in countries receiving IADB loans
- § 262p-4h. Discussions to increase productive economic participation of poor; reports
- § 262p-4i. Multilateral development banks and debt-for-nature exchanges
- § 262p-4j. Promotion of lending for environment
- § 262p-4k. Promotion of institution-building for nongovernmental organizations concerned with environment
- § 262p-4l. Improvement of interaction between International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and nongovernmental organizations
- § 262p-4m. Population, health, and nutrition programs
- § 262p-4n. Equal employment opportunities
- § 262p-4o. Respect for indigenous peoples
- § 262p-4p. Encouragement of fair labor practices
- § 262p-4q. Opposition to assistance by international financial institutions to terrorist states
- § 262p-4r. Use of authority of United States Executive Directors
- § 262p-5. Definitions
- § 262p-6. Improvement of the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative
- § 262p-7. Reform of the Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility
- § 262p-8. Modification of the Enhanced HIPC Initiative
- § 262p-9. Reform of the “Doing Business” Report of the World Bank
- § 262p-10. Enhancing the transparency and effectiveness of the Inspection Panel process of the World Bank
- § 262p-11. Opposition to loans or funds for countries that support terrorism
- § 262p-12. Cancellation of Haiti’s debts to international financial institutions
- § 262p-12a. Ukraine debt payment relief
- § 262p-13. Support for capacity of the International Monetary Fund to prevent money laundering and financing of terrorism
- § 262p-14. Support to enhance the capacity of fund members to evaluate the legal and financial terms of sovereign debt contracts
- § 262p-15. United States policy on Burma at the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank Group, and the Asian Development Bank
- § 262p-16. United States policy on World Bank Group and Asian Development Bank Assistance to the People’s Republic of China
- § 262p-17. Support for international initiatives to provide debt restructuring or relief to developing countries with unsustainable levels of debt
- § 262q. Transferred
- § 262r. Annual report by Chairman of National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Policies
- § 262r-1. Transmission to the Congress of operating summaries of the multilateral development banks
- § 262r-2. Combined report on effect of pending multilateral development bank loans on environment, natural resources, public health, and indigenous peoples
- § 262r-3. Reports on financial stabilization programs led by International Monetary Fund in connection with financing from Exchange Stabilization Fund
- § 262r-4. Annual report and testimony on state of international financial system, IMF reform, and compliance with IMF agreements
- § 262r-5. Repealed.
- § 262r-6. Reports on policies, operations, and management of international financial institutions
- § 262s. Multilateral development bank procurement
- § 262s-1. Procurement opportunities for United States firms
- § 262s-2. Commercial Service Officers and multilateral development bank procurement
- § 262t. Personnel practices
- § 263. International Prison Commission
- § 263a. International Criminal Police Organization
- § 263b. Transnational repression accountability and prevention
- § 263c. Anti-piracy information sharing
- §§ 264, 265. Omitted
- § 266. International commission of congresses of navigation; authorization of appropriation for expenses
- § 266a. Transferred
- § 266b. Repealed.
- § 267. Permanent Commission of International Geodetic Association; representative of United States
- § 267a. Appointment of delegates; compensation
- § 267b. International Joint Commission; invitation to establish; personnel; duties
- § 268. International Joint Commission; salaries; powers
- § 268a. Repealed.
- § 268b. Advances from appropriation “Boundary line, Alaska and Canada, and the United States and Canada”
- § 268c. Limitation on expenditure of funds for compensation of International Boundary Commissioner to actual hours worked
- § 269. Permanent International Association of Road Congresses; authorization of membership
- § 269a. Central Bureau of the International Map of the World on the Millionth Scale; authorization of appropriations
- § 269b. Omitted
- § 269c. International Statistical Bureau at The Hague; authorization of appropriations
- § 269d. Inter American Statistical Institute; authorization of appropriations
- § 269e. Omitted
- § 269f. International Bureau for the Protection of Industrial Property; authorization of appropriations
- § 269g. Private International Law Conference at The Hague and Private Law International Institute in Rome; membership; appointment of delegates
- § 269g-1. Authorization of appropriations
- § 269h. International Union for the Publication of Customs Tariffs; authorization of annual appropriations for expenses
- §§ 270 to 270g. Repealed.
- § 271. International Labor Organization; membership
- § 272. Omitted
- § 272a. Authorization of appropriations
- § 272b. Loyalty check on United States personnel
- § 273. Pan American Institute of Geography and History; authorization of annual appropriations for membership
- § 274. International Council of Scientific Unions and Associated Unions; authorization of annual appropriations for membership
- § 274a. International biological program
- § 274b. Cooperation of Federal and non-Federal departments, agencies, and organizations; transfers of funds
- § 275. International Hydrographic Bureau
- § 275a. Permanent International Commission of the Congresses of Navigation; authorization of appropriations
- §§ 276 to 276a-4. Repealed.
- § 276b. Repealed.
- § 276c. Designation of Senate delegates to Conferences of the Interparliamentary Union
- § 276c-1. Reports of expenditures by members of American groups or delegations and employees; consolidated reports by congressional committees; public inspection
- § 276c-2. Employee benefits for United States citizen-representatives to international financial institutions; Treasury Department as collecting, accounting, and depositing agency for employee payments; contributions from appropriated funds
- § 276c-3. Repealed.
- § 276c-4. Employment of United States citizens by certain international organizations
- § 276c-5. Authorization for United States participation in the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations
- § 276c-6. Supporting the employment of United States citizens by international organizations
- § 276c-7. Internships of United States nationals at international organizations
It is declared to be the policy of the United States to adjust and settle its international disputes through mediation or arbitration, to the end that war may be honorably avoided. It looks with apprehension and disfavor upon a general increase of armament throughout the world, but it realizes that no single nation can disarm, and that without a common agreement upon the subject every considerable power must maintain a relative standing in military strength.
The Executive shall not extend or accept any invitation to participate in any international congress, conference, or like event, without first having specific authority of law to do so.
All financial contributions by the United States to the normal operations of the international organizations covered by this Act, which member states are obligated to support annually, shall be limited to the amounts provided in this Act: Provided, That contributions for special projects not regularly budgeted by such international organizations shall not be subject to the above limitation.
All financial contributions by the United States to international organizations in which the United States participates as a member shall be made by or with the consent of the Department of State regardless of the appropriation from which any such contribution is made.
No representative of the United States Government in any international organization hereafter shall make any commitment requiring the appropriation of funds for a contribution by the United States in excess of 33⅓ per centum of the budget of any international organization for which the appropriation for the United States contribution is contained in this Act: Provided, That in exceptional circumstances necessitating a contribution by the United States in excess of 33⅓ per centum of the budget, a commitment requiring a United States appropriation of a larger proportion may be made after consultation by United States representatives in the organization or other appropriate officials of the Department of State with the Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and House of Representatives: Provided, however, That this section shall not apply to the United States representatives to the Inter-American organizations, Caribbean Commission and the Joint Support program of the International Civil Aviation Organization.
It is the sense of the Congress that, where other means have proven ineffective in promoting international human rights, and except where the President determines that the cause of international human rights is served more effectively by actions other than voting against such assistance or where the assistance is directed to programs that serve the basic needs of the impoverished majority of the country in question, United States representatives to the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the International Development Association, the African Development Fund, the Asian Development Bank, and the Inter-American Development Bank should oppose loans and other financial or technical assistance to any country that persists in a systematic pattern of gross violations of fundamental human rights.
The President shall direct the United States Executive Directors of such international financial institutions to take all appropriate actions to keep the salaries and benefits of the employees of such institutions to levels comparable to salaries and benefits of employees of private business and the United States Government in comparable positions.
The United States Government, in connection with its voice and vote in the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the International Development Association, the International Finance Corporation, the Inter-American Development Bank, the African Development Fund, the Asian Development Bank, and the African Development Bank, shall promote the development and utilization of light capital technologies, otherwise known as intermediate, appropriate, or village technologies, by such international institutions as major facets of their development strategies, with major emphasis on the production and conservation of energy through light capital technologies.
The Congress declares it to be the policy of the United States, in connection with its voice and vote in the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the International Development Association, the International Finance Corporation, the Inter-American Development Bank, the African Development Fund, the Asian Development Fund, and the Asian Development Bank, to combat hunger and malnutrition and to encourage economic development in the developing countries, with emphasis on assistance to those countries that are determined to improve their own agricultural production, by seeking to channel assistance for agriculturally related development to projects that would aid in fulfilling domestic food and nutrition needs and in alleviating hunger and malnutrition in the recipient country. The United States representatives to the institutions named in this section shall oppose any loan or other financial assistance for establishing or expanding production for export of palm oil, sugar, or citrus crops if such loan or assistance will cause injury to United States producers of the same, similar, or competing agricultural commodity.
The Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of State, in cooperation with the Administrator of the Agency for International Development, shall vigorously promote mechanisms to strengthen the environmental performance of these banks. These mechanisms shall include strengthening organizational, administrative, and procedural arrangements within the banks which will substantially improve management of assistance programs necessary to ensure the sustainable use of natural resources and the protection of indigenous peoples.
The Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State and the Administrator of the Agency for International Development, shall create a system for cooperative exchange of information with other interested member countries on assistance proposals of the multilateral development banks.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Directors of the multilateral development banks to support the strengthening of educational programs within each multilateral development bank to improve the capacity of mid-level managers to initiate and manage environmental aspects of development activities, and to train officials of borrowing countries in the conduct of environmental analyses.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund to use aggressively the voice and vote of the United States to vigorously promote policies to encourage the opening of markets for agricultural commodities and products by requiring recipient countries to make efforts to reduce trade barriers.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development to urge the bank to support an increase in the amount the bank lends annually to support population, health, and nutrition programs of the borrower countries.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Directors of the multilateral development banks and of the International Monetary Fund to use the voices and votes of the Executive Directors to urge their respective banks and the Fund to adopt a policy which provides, and implement procedures which ensure, that such banks and the Fund, and the affiliates of such banks and of the Fund, shall not discriminate against any person on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, color, or religious affiliation in any determination related to employment.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall direct the United States Executive Directors of the international financial institutions (as defined in section 262r(c)(2) of this title) and the United States representative to the council of the Global Environment Facility administered by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development to use the voice and vote of the United States to bring about the creation and full implementation of policies designed to promote respect for and full protection of the territorial rights, traditional economies, cultural integrity, traditional knowledge and human rights of indigenous peoples.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director at each of the International Financial Institutions 1
The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund to use the voice and vote of the United States to support the increased use of the administrative budget of the Fund for technical assistance that strengthens the capacity of members of the Fund to prevent money laundering and the financing of terrorism.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund to use the voice and vote of the United States to advocate that the Fund promote international standards and best practices with respect to sovereign debt contracts and provide technical assistance to Fund members, and in particular to lower middle-income countries and countries eligible to receive assistance from the International Development Association, seeking to enhance their capacity to evaluate the legal and financial terms of sovereign debt contracts with multilateral, bilateral, and private sector creditors.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall transmit to the Congress, on a monthly basis, current copies of the Monthly Operating Summary of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, showing the loan proposals or appraisal reports under consideration and the status of those loan proposals or appraisal reports within the Bank. The Secretary of the Treasury shall also transmit to the Congress, at such times as may be appropriate, comparable documents prepared by the other multilateral development banks which show the loans or credits under consideration in the other multilateral development banks.
Not later than April 1 and October 1 of each year, the Administrator of the Agency for International Development, in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of State, shall submit to the Committee on Appropriations and the Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on Appropriations and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate, as a combined report, the reports required by section 262m–2(c) of this title and by section 262l–1(h)(2) of this title.
The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Directors of the multilateral development institutions to take all possible steps to ensure that information relating to potential procurement opportunities for United States firms is expeditiously communicated to the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of State, and the Secretary of Commerce, and is disseminated as widely as possible to large and small businesses.
The United States shall continue as an adhering member of the International Prison Commission and participate in the work of said commission.
The Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorized annually to pay the pro rata share of the United States in the administration expenses of the International Prison Commission and the necessary expenses of a commissioner to represent the United States on said commission at its annual meetings, together with necessary clerical and other expenses, out of any money which shall be appropriated for such purposes from time to time by Congress.
The Attorney General is authorized to accept and maintain, on behalf of the United States, membership in the International Criminal Police Organization, and to designate any departments and agencies which may participate in the United States representation with that organization. All dues and expenses to be paid for the membership of the United States shall be paid out of sums authorized and appropriated for the Department of Justice.
The Secretary is authorized to provide for the participation by the United States in the Information Sharing Centre located in Singapore, as established by the Regional Cooperation Agreement on Combating Piracy and Armed Robbery against Ships in Asia (ReCAAP).
The sum of $3,000 a year is authorized to be appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the support and maintenance of the permanent international commission of the congresses of navigation and for the payment of the actual expenses of the properly accredited national delegates of the United States to the meetings of the congresses and of the commission; and the Secretary of the Army is authorized to draw his warrant each year upon the Secretary of the Treasury for such sum, not to exceed $3,000, as may in his opinion be proper to apply to the purposes above mentioned, and the said sum shall be disbursed under such regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Army.
The national delegates aforesaid from the United States shall serve without compensation, but shall be reimbursed for their actual expenses incurred while traveling to and from the meetings, and while in attendance thereon, from the funds appropriated in this section and authorized to be expended.
The duly appointed representative of the United States on the permanent commission of the International Geodetic Association is granted authority to vote with the representatives on the permanent commission from other nations on all matters coming before the association, including the extension of its existence, subject to the approval of Congress.
The President is authorized to appoint delegates, who shall be officers of the National Ocean Survey, to attend the meetings of the International Geodetic Association whenever and wheresoever the same shall be held; but no extra salary or additional compensation shall be paid to such officers by reason of such attendance.
The President of the United States is requested to invite the Government of Great Britain to join in the formation of an international commission, to be composed of three members from the United States and three who shall represent the interests of the Dominion of Canada, whose duty it shall be to investigate and report upon the conditions and uses of the waters adjacent to the boundary lines between the United States and Canada, including all of the waters of the lakes and rivers whose natural outlet is by the River Saint Lawrence to the Atlantic Ocean; also upon the maintenance and regulation of suitable levels; and also upon the effect upon the shores of these waters and the structures thereon, and upon the interests of navigation, by reason of the diversion of these waters from or change in their natural flow; and, further, to report upon the necessary measures to regulate such diversion, and to make such recommendations for improvements and regulations as shall best subserve the interests of navigation in said waters. The said commissioners shall report upon the advisability of locating a dam at the outlet of Lake Erie, with a view to determining whether such dam will benefit navigation, and if such structure is deemed advisable, shall make recommendations to their respective Governments looking to an agreement or treaty which shall provide for the construction of the same, and they shall make an estimate of the probable cost thereof. The President, in selecting the three members of said Commission who shall represent the United States, is authorized to appoint one officer of the Corps of Engineers of the United States Army, one civil engineer well versed in the hydraulics of the Great Lakes, and one lawyer of experience in questions of international and riparian law, and said Commission shall be authorized to employ such persons as it may deem needful in the performance of the duties hereby imposed.
The salaries of the members on the part of the United States, of the International Joint Commission, established under the treaty of January 11, 1909, between the United States and Great Britain, relating to boundary waters between the United States and Canada, shall be fixed by the President. Said commission or any member thereof shall have power to administer oaths and to take evidence on oath whenever deemed necessary in any proceeding or inquiry or matter within its jurisdiction under said treaty, and said commission shall be authorized to compel the attendance of witnesses in any proceedings before it or the production of books and papers when necessary by application to the district court of the United States for the district within which such session is held, which court is hereby empowered and directed to make all orders and issue all processes necessary and appropriate for that purpose.
Advances of money under the appropriation “Boundary line, Alaska and Canada, and the United States and Canada”, may be made to the commissioner on the part of the United States and by his authority to chiefs of parties prior to March 2, 1921.
Funds appropriated on and after September 30, 1996, or otherwise made available under this Act or any other Act may be expended for compensation of the United States Commissioner of the International Boundary Commission, United States and Canada, only for actual hours worked by such Commissioner.
The President is authorized to maintain membership of the United States in the Permanent International Association of Road Congresses.
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, an annual sum of $50 as a contribution on the part of the United States toward the expenses incurred by the Central Bureau of the International Map of the World on the Millionth Scale.
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated, out of any sums in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, sums not exceeding $2,500 per annum to enable the United States to maintain membership in the International Statistical Bureau at The Hague, such sums to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State.
To enable the United States to become an adhering member of the Inter American Statistical Institute, there is hereby authorized to be appropriated annually, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, such sums as may be required for expenditure under the direction of the Secretary of State, for the payment of the share of the United States toward the support of the Institute: Provided, That (1) the membership dues of the United States payable for any fiscal year shall not be paid unless, during the preceding fiscal year, at least eight other American nations shall have been in good standing as adhering members, and unless at least eight of such other adhering members for the last preceding year for which such members were respectively obligated to pay dues shall have paid dues which aggregated at least $10,000, and (2) the total cost to the United States for any fiscal year, for adhering membership, shall not exceed $35,000.
Funds appropriated to the Secretary of State for “International Organizations and Conferences” shall be available for the payment by the United States of its proportionate share of the expenses of the International Bureau for the Protection of Industrial Property for any year after 1981 as determined under article 16(4) of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, as revised, except that in no event shall the payment for any year exceed 6 per centum of all expenses of the Bureau apportioned among countries for that year.
The President is hereby authorized to accept membership for the Government of the United States in (1) the Hague Conference on Private International Law and (2) the International (Rome) Institute for the Unification of Private Law, and to appoint the United States delegates and their alternates to meetings of the two organizations, and the committees and organs thereof.
There are authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary for the payment by the United States of its proportionate share of the expenses of the Hague Conference on Private International Law and of the International (Rome) Institute for the Unification of Private Law.
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated annually to the Department of State such sums as may be necessary, including contributions pursuant to the convention of July 5, 1890, as amended, for the payment by the United States of its share of the expenses of the International Union for the Publication of Customs Tariffs and of the Bureau established to carry out the functions of the Union, but not to exceed 6 per centum of such expenses per annum.
The President is authorized to accept membership for the Government of the United States of America in the International Labor Organization, which, through its general conference of representatives of its members and through its International Labor Office, collects information concerning labor throughout the world and prepares international conventions for the consideration of member governments with a view to improving conditions of labor.
No person shall serve as representative, delegate, or alternate from the United States until such person has been investigated as to loyalty and security by the Director of the Office of Personnel Management.
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of State, in paying the annual share of the United States as an adhering member of the International Council of Scientific Unions and Associated Unions, including the International Astronomical Union, International Union of Chemistry, International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics, International Union of Mathematics, International Scientific Radio Union, International Union of Physics, and International Geographical Union, and such other international scientific unions as the Secretary of State may designate, such sum as may be necessary for the payment of such annual share, not to exceed $100,000 in any one year.
To enable the United States to become a member of the International Hydrographic Bureau, and for the first annual contribution of the United States toward the creation and maintenance of such bureau, there is hereby appropriated out of money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated $2,500, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to be paid by the Secretary of State when the exact quota shall have been ascertained.
Not to exceed $45,000 annually of the funds appropriated for rivers and harbors shall be available for the support and maintenance of the Permanent International Commission of the Congresses of Navigation and for the payment in amounts approved by the Chief of Engineers of the expenses of the properly accredited delegates of the United States to the meetings of the congresses and of the Commission.
On and after June 30, 1958, Senate delegates to Conferences of the Interparliamentary Union shall be designated by the Presiding Officer of the Senate. Not less than two Senators so designated shall be members of the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Each chairman or senior member of the House of Representatives and Senate group or delegation of the United States group or delegation to the Interparliamentary Union, the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, the Canada-United States Interparliamentary Group, the Mexico-United States Interparliamentary Group, or any similar interparliamentary group of which the United States is a member or participates, by whom or on whose behalf local currencies owned by the United States are made available and expended and/or expenditures are made from funds appropriated for the expenses of such group or delegation, shall file with the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate in the case of the group or delegation of the Senate, or with the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives in the case of the group or delegation of the House, an itemized report showing all such expenditures made by or on behalf of each Member or employee of the group or delegation together with the purposes of the expenditure, including per diem (lodging and meals), transportation, and other purposes. Within sixty days after the beginning of each regular session of Congress, the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations and the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs shall prepare consolidated reports showing with respect to each such group or delegation the total amount expended, the purposes of the expenditures, the amount expended for each such purpose, the names of the Members or employees by or on behalf of whom the expenditures were made and the amount expended by or on behalf of each Member or employee for each such purpose. The consolidated reports prepared by the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate shall be filed with the Secretary of the Senate, and the consolidated reports prepared by the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House shall be filed with the Clerk of the House and shall be open to public inspection.
Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, the Executive Directors and Directors and their alternates, representing the United States in the International Monetary Fund, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank, the Bank for Economic Cooperation and Development in the Middle East and North Africa, the Asian Development Bank, the African Development Fund, the African Development Bank, and the Inter-American Investment Corporation, shall, if they are citizens of the United States, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, each be eligible on the basis of such service and the total compensation received therefor, for all employee benefits afforded employees in the civil service of the United States. The Treasury Department shall serve as the employing office for collecting, accounting for, and depositing in the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund, Employees Life Insurance Fund, and Employees Health Benefits Fund, all retirement and health insurance benefits payments made by these employees, and shall make any necessary agency contributions from funds appropriated to the Department of the Treasury.