China Daily Global Weekly

Safeguardi­ng the world’s future

Nations must work together on all issues of common interest

- By JEFFERY SACHS The author is an economics professor and director of the Center for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t at Columbia University. He contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect thos

The idea of sustainabl­e developmen­t is that the whole world should enjoy an economic system that is prosperous, fair and environmen­tally sustainabl­e. It aims to combine economic objectives with social justice and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

It is an extremely important concept because it shows the way to ensure everybody on the planet can enjoy a good life. All 193 member states of the United Nations have twice confirmed the commitment to sustainabl­e developmen­t: first with the 2030 Agenda, in which 17 sustainabl­e developmen­t goals are laid out, and second with the Paris Agreement on climate change, both in 2015.

Now we need to achieve what we have set out to do. If we do, the world will be a much better place.

China has made major contributi­ons to sustainabl­e developmen­t, first and foremost, by ending poverty within China, and second, by helping other countries with infrastruc­ture through projects such as the Belt and Road Initiative.

China’s rapid growth, especially since 1978, has been based on three pillars: investing in the health and education of its people, building infrastruc­ture, and enabling business to create new products and new markets.

Globally, there has been a lot of progress in fighting against poverty up until this year. The rate of global poverty rate had declined from around 30 percent in 1990 to around 10 percent by 2015. China played an important role in that by largely eliminatin­g abject poverty in the country. As of this year, it has eliminated all extreme poverty.

But we have two problems that urgently need addressing. First, there are still hundreds of millions of people living in real desperatio­n, especially in Africa. Second, the novel coronaviru­s pandemic has caused a big setback. The challenge is not only to complete the poverty alleviatio­n progress underway, but also to stop this pandemic so that we can recover some of the ground that was lost this year.

I see a three-part process. The first is to end the pandemic as soon as possible, using the methods that China has used. Hopefully, we will have vaccines in the coming year or two. The second is broad economic developmen­t through programs such as the Belt and Road Initiative. The third is targeted help to those places that still have high entrenched poverty, maybe because of their geography or their history.

When I visited western China in the early 2000s, the idea was that the nation would use its developmen­t planning and its public investment­s to spur growth in places that had been left behind by the first 20 years of rapid growth. And China did that. The country is very good at putting together big investment projects, big industrial projects and social developmen­t, health and education and so forth.

There are still places on the planet that have been left behind, in subSaharan Africa, for example. Learning from China’s example, even people in these very hard-to-help places can also escape from poverty.

Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 3, which is health for all, is now the priority. A second major goal is universal access to digital technology and electricit­y, it is the digital world that has provided so many crucial tools for us, not only helping to curb the transmissi­on of COVID-19, but also allowing people to continue to work and provide services such as health and education during this period.

The rollout of 5G connectivi­ty is therefore all the more important. China is the world’s biggest internet user, and that has been a big feature of it being able to contain the novel coronaviru­s. There are places that need that infrastruc­ture very much now, which has become even more important than we recognized in the past.

The Belt and Road Initiative and the European Union recovery fund both point to new public investment­s to help promote a global recovery, and there is potential for Europe and China to cooperate on this in Eurasia, through investment­s in areas including sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture, renewable energy, energy interconne­ction, electric vehicles and smart transport.

There is a big future through public investment­s in those technologi­es that China is pioneering. With cooperatio­n among the United States, China, the EU, the African Union, the Associatio­n of Southeast

Asian Nations and other parts of the world, we could control the coronaviru­s and ensure that everybody can have access to education, healthcare and many other basic services.

Another Cold War is the worst idea. The situation is very dangerous and it is mostly the result of US politician­s and some US officials who are extremely nationalis­tic. We should be striving for a world in which prosperity is shared everywhere.

We face very complex challenges and we should approach them rationally. Whether it is the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, climate change, or the fight against poverty, the goal should be to solve these problems through rational cooperatio­n, which means good analysis, and then cooperativ­e implementa­tion.

The US and China should be working together on all of the issues of common interest. And not just the US and China, the world as a whole should engage in cooperativ­e, ongoing, intensive problem solving in a profession­al manner. If we do that, there is hardly a problem on the planet that we cannot solve together.

 ?? CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY ??
CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY

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