The Manila Times

Transformi­ng economies, states and societies – building evidence for achieving SDGS

- Action BY KUNAL SEN Experience Hunger and Public

HELSINKI, Finland: Following on from Finn Tarp, my predecesso­r, is a daunting prospect, but I look forward to working with my colleagues at Unu- Wider and with our many partners to build on the achievemen­ts of the past 10 years.

Wider as a graduate student in the United States in the late 1980s. I came across several of the institutes publicatio­ns which became classics

- ics, including

by Jean Dreze and Amartya Sen, and by Lance Taylor. These publicatio­ns had a profound impact on my own thinking, and since then many other Unu- Wider publicatio­ns have had similar transforma­tive effects on successive generation­s of social scientists.

In a world where there are increasing asymmetrie­s of knowledge creation and sharing between the Global North and South, Unu-Wider is ideally placed to use the power of its global network to address the pressing questions in developmen­t.

The three interconne­cted transforma­tions I am delighted to take the helm at Unu-Wider, an institutio­n which has been associated with some of the most advanced thinking in developmen­t economics.

Unu- Wider has combined outstandin­g research with sustained policy engagement on some of the most pressing concerns affecting the living standards of the world’s poorest people.

Wider impact

Over the past 33 years, and most recently under the leadership of my predecesso­r, Finn Tarp, in the last 10

advanced our understand­ing of the causes of poverty and inequality, climate change, the roots of gender inequality, and the challenges of structural transforma­tion for low-income countries necessary to achieve the SDGs

In the new year, we launched our new work program for 2019– 23. This will be the most ambitious work programme that Unu- Wider has undertaken so far. I believe the challenge of developmen­t is ultimately a question of transforma­tion — how to bring about broadbased sustained improvemen­t in multiple dimensions of wellbeing necessary to achieve the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals ( SDGs).

This involves transforma­tion in three different dimensions: economies, polities, societies. The new work program will address these dimensions of transforma­tion, which will become the thematic foci of Unu- Wider’s research in the coming years: Transformi­ng Economies, Transformi­ng States, and Transformi­ng Societies.

Transformi­ng Economies — the

new work program — is at the core of any meaningful developmen­t strategy and set of policies.

Large-scale changes in the structure of economic activity and employment opportunit­ies must take

place if absolute poverty is to be reduced alongside addressing economic and social inequaliti­es.

Economic transforma­tion is also essential in delivering higher levels of income and increasing market activity. These are critically needed to improve the mobilizati­on of domestic resources and establish an enlarged tax base

needed to achieve the SDGs.

But for meaningful economic transforma­tion to take place, there needs to be a political transforma­tion as well. This is why Transformi­ng States will be the second thematic focus of Unu-Wider’s work program.

Capable and effective states are needed to work with the private sector to achieve higher rates of economic growth, but also to bring about a shift to more environmen­tally sustainabl­e production.

At the same time, the state has a key role to play in providing necessary public goods and in shaping the transforma­tion of societies in ways that yield greater empowermen­t — through proactive policies to help reduce marginaliz­ation of the poor and to achieve greater gender equality.

Accountabl­e states that are responsive to the needs of their citizens are an essential factor in national developmen­t. The challenge is to build capable

contexts, especially in fragile and

The third thematic focus of the new work programme is Transformi­ng Societies. Economic and political transforma­tion needs to be accompanie­d by social transforma­tion, such that every citizen can live in a socially inclusive and egalitaria­n society.

Increasing the capacities, re

- viduals and their communitie­s is a means to end poverty and to contain and reduce not only gender inequality, but other social inequaliti­es as well.

This is now a pressing concern in many societies, especially when high inequality destabiliz­es political systems, increases state fragility, and hinders the transforma­tion of economies.

The actions of both state and non-state actors (such as non-government­al organizati­ons and community groups) matter in bringing about social transforma­tion. The challenge for us is to understand the conditions under which such actions are possible, and when they can become transforma­tive.

How will we get there?

These three themes are at the very center of the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t. Much of our work will include mobilizing policy research, evidence, and action around selected goals of the 2030 Agenda as well as responding to the Agenda’s "call for increased support for strengthen­ing data collection and capacity-building in Member States."

With the three transforma­tions in mind we will start the work

- ects in 2019 — on informalit­y, women’s work, social mobility, building capable states, structural transforma­tion, and extractive­s.

As always, we welcome the Unu- Wider network to engage with us in thinking through and taking action for a more sustainabl­e and equitable future for all. How can this be practicall­y done?

Keep an eye on calls for papers and research proposals coming out throughout the year, apply for visiting scholaror PhD fellowhip in order to visit and work with us.

Right now we have an open call for papers for the next Wider developmen­t conference, being held 11- 13 September 2019 in Bangkok, in partnershi­p with Unescap. The theme of the conference is Transformi­ng Economies — for Better Jobs.

We welcome submission­s of proposals from you and I hope to meet many of you in Bangkok — it is your active participat­ion in UnuWider’s developmen­t conference­s that have made these events the successes that they are.

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