Concerted drive needed to close SDG gap
As global business and political leaders gather in Davos for the World Economic Forum鈥檚 annual meeting, they should ask themselves one big question: Will the world achieve the ambitious Sustainable Development Goals for 2030? Or will the SDGs 鈥 with their targets for eradicating extreme poverty, ending preventable child deaths, expanding educational opportunity, and averting a climate disaster 鈥 join the long list of enthusiastically endorsed global pledges that go unfulfilled?
Those suffering from early new-decade SDG blues might take comfort from Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker. Building on the core theme of his influential book 鈥淓nlightenment Now,鈥 and citing a familiar barrage of statistics on human progress, Pinker has offered an upbeat assessment: 鈥淧rogress toward [the SDGs] is continuing,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淚t is unlikely to do a sudden U-turn.鈥
He is right, up to a point. Since 2000, there have been extraordinary improvements in human-development indicators. Poverty has been decreasing at historically unprecedented rates.
So far so good. But here鈥檚 the catch: If progress over the next ten years mirrors that of the last decade, the world will fall catastrophically short of the 2030 targets.
Consider child survival. On current trends, there will still be over 4 million child deaths worldwide in 2030.
The vast majority of these fatalities could be prevented through improved nutrition and basic health-care interventions.
There is a similar yawning gap between current trends and the 2030 targets for education.
Although governments have committed to ensuring universal secondary schooling and improved learning, progress toward universal primary education has stalled.
In an increasingly knowledge-based global economy, a combination of restricted access to education and abysmal learning outcomes will leave 1 billion children lacking the skills they need to flourish, and that their countries need to drive dynamic and inclusive growth.
Likewise, for all the success in combating poverty, past performance is no guide to future outcomes.
The pace of progress has slowed, and the goal of eliminating extreme poverty by 2030 is drifting out of reach.
The specter of climate change threatens the SDGs just as surely as it does the receding snow line around Davos.
If the 2015 Paris climate agreement held out the promise of concerted international action to limit global warming, last month鈥檚 COP25 climate-change conference in Madrid was a case study in inertia. The emissions gap between current policies and those needed to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius is widening, and the world鈥檚 poorest and most vulnerable people are bearing the brunt of the consequences, as the recent droughts in Zambia and the Horn of Africa illustrate.
The decade of no return
This is the decade of no return for the climate emergency. Failure to price carbon out of the world鈥檚 economies, safeguard carbon sinks, and 鈥 critically 鈥 protect the world鈥檚 poor against the effects of global warming that are now irreversible will first slow, and then stall and reverse, gains in poverty reduction, nutrition, and health.
We cannot allow these challenges鈥 daunting scale to foster passive acceptance of the inevitability of the SDGs鈥 failure.
Nor should we tolerate the paralyzing complacency that now pervades gatherings like Davos, World Bank-International Monetary Fund meetings, and United Nations summits. There is an alternative.
Nothing would do more to bring the SDG targets within reach than a concerted drive to narrow the social disparities currently acting as a brake on progress.
Greater equity is the rocket fuel for achieving the SDGs. Instead of issuing vague pronouncements about 鈥渓eaving no one behind,鈥 governments should report on how quickly they are reducing inequalities.
International action has a critical role to play.
Later this month, Save the Children, UNICEF, and other partners will convene a global forum on pneumonia aimed at expanding access to life-saving interventions.
Toward the end of this year, the United Kingdom and Japan will host global summits on climate and malnutrition, respectively.
And former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, the United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education, has developed a proposal for a new international financing mechanism that could boost education spending by US$10 billion. These initiatives represent real opportunities.
Galvanizing action on the SDGs would narrow the chasm between the human condition we can achieve and the world we tolerate.
We need smart politics, new partnerships, and bold campaigning. Success is not guaranteed 鈥 but failure to act is not an option.
Kevin Watkins is CEO of Save the Children UK. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2020.
www.project-syndicate.org
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