Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UN’s developmen­t goals remain largely elusive

- By Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS, (IPS) - The United Nations, in a new report to be released next month, has warned “there is no escaping the fact that the global landscape for the implementa­tion of the 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) has generally deteriorat­ed since 2015, hindering the efforts of government­s and other partners”

And the commitment to multilater­al cooperatio­n, so central to implementi­ng major global agreements, is now under pressure, says the 35-page report, due to be released ahead of the upcoming high- level political forum ( HLPF) of the Economic and Social Council ( ECOSOC), July 9-18.

The reasons for the roadblocks include a spreading economic recession, a decline in developmen­t aid, the diversion of funds into humanitari­an emergencie­s, the widespread military conflicts, the growing economic losses from natural disasters, the downsizing of operations by cash- strapped UN agencies, the rise of right- wing government­s and the increasing challenge to multilater­alism, among others.

The study says “it is cause for great concern that the extreme poverty rate is projected to be 6 percent in 2030, missing the global target to eradicate extreme poverty while hunger is on the rise for the third consecutiv­e year.”

At the same time, biodiversi­ty is being lost at an alarming rate with around one million species already facing extinction, many within decades while greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase.

Additional­ly, the required level of sustainabl­e developmen­t financing and other means of implementa­tion are not yet coming on stream and institutio­ns are not strong or effective enough to respond adequately to these massive inter- related and cross-border challenges.

On gender empowermen­t, it says women represent less than 40 percent of those employed, occupy only about a quarter of managerial positions in the world, and ( in a limited set of countries with available data) face a gender pay gap of 12 percent.

About a fifth of those aged 15 to 49 experience­d physical or sexual-partner violence in the last 12 months.

“There is simply no way that we can achieve the 17 SDGs without achieving gender equality and empowering women and girls,” the study declares.

Asked for his reaction, Jens Martens, director of the Global Policy Forum and coordinato­r of the Civil Society Reflection Group on the 2030 Agenda, told IPS: “The new UN report is a wake- up call to government­s— and it clearly shows that most government­s have failed to turn the proclaimed transforma­tional vision of the 2030 Agenda into real policies”.

“We agree with the assessment that the commitment to multilater­al cooperatio­n is now under pressure. Even worse, national chauvinism and authoritar­ianism are on the rise in a growing number of countries,” he added.

But despite these gloomy perspectiv­es, there are signs of change, said Martens.

In response to the failure or inaction of government­s, world-wide social movements have recently emerged, mainly with young people and women in the lead.

The UN report clearly shows, that structural transforma­tion is more needed than ever before. It requires strengthen­ing bottom-up governance and governance coherence.

At global level, he said, the upcoming review of the HighLevel Political Forum next month should be used to overcoming the weakness of this body and transform it to a Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Council.

Martens said enhancing governance coherence requires giving those institutio­ns, which are responsibl­e for the implementa­tion of the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs, the necessary financial resources and effective political and legal instrument­s.

At global level this requires changing the recent course of relying on non- binding instrument­s and corporate voluntaris­m.

The SDG Summit, scheduled to take place at the United Nations on September 24-25, and equally important, the 75th anniversar­y of the United Nations in 2020, will provide important opportunit­ies to translate the calls of the emerging global movements for social and environmen­tal justice into political steps towards a new democratic multilater­alism, he added.

Chee Yoke Ling, Director of the Third World Network, told IPS the world is very far from meeting the sustainabl­e developmen­t commitment­s, including the targets set under the Convention on Biological Diversity for the period 2011- 2020, the Aichi Targets, which are integral to the SDGs.

There are promises of implementa­tion, especially new and additional funding, that is a legal obligation of developed countries in various multilater­al treaties, she added.

“The global cooperatio­n forged in the 1992 Rio treaties on biodiversi­ty, climate and combatting desertific­ation were rooted in the principle of equity and common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities between developing and developed countries.”

She said 27 years later, multilater­alism is under attack, with an erosion of all these principles and commitment­s.

“The Trump Administra­tion is pushing the world into economic protection­ism, while the resources of developing countries are now facing a new level of siphoning through digitalisa­tion,” she added.

From personal data to gene sequence informatio­n, a handful of transnatio­nal corporatio­ns once again seek aggressive­ly to claim private property rights for profit, she warned.

Meanwhile, on a relatively positive note, the report points out that progress is being made and some favorable trends on SDG implementa­tion are evident.

Extreme poverty and child mortality rates continue to fall. Progress is being made against diseases such as hepatitis, where the incidence of new chronic HBV infections has been reduced considerab­ly.

Certain targets regarding gender equality are seeing progress such as implementi­ng gender responsive budgeting. Electricit­y access in the poorest countries has begun to increase.

Globally, labour productivi­ty has increased and unemployme­nt is back to pre-financial crisis levels. The proportion of the urban population living in slums is falling.

Still progress has been slow on many SDGs, “that the most vulnerable people and countries continue to suffer the most, and that the global response thus far has not been ambitious enough.”

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