Showing posts with label World Development Information Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Development Information Day. Show all posts

Friday, 24 October 2025

World Development Information Day 2025; October 24th.



FORUM: “Charting New Directions: Shaping the Future of Sustainable Development.World Development Information Day 2025. The Commitment to Development Index ranks 40 of the world’s most powerful countries on their dedication to policies that affect more than five billion people living in poorer nations. The CDI scores countries relative to their size and economic weight to measure countries according to their potential to help. CDI Countries range from middle to high-income; to level the playing field, we have an option to income-adjust, or rank relative to income-predicted scores. Sweden takes first place. France is second and Norway is in third place. Sweden and France also top the environment component, each applying a relatively high price to carbon and Sweden has relatively low emissions per head. The US ranks 22nd, with strong contributions on security and trade, but low scores on diffusing technology and safeguarding the environment. It scores ahead of China, which ranks 36th, but behind most EU countries, who take 6 of the top 10 spots. Follow the conversations with the hashtags #DevinfoDay, #Development, #macroeconomics, #DevelopmentIndex; #24October.




EVENTS: on October 24th; A High-level event to mark World Development Information Day 2025 will be held at UNHQ by the United Nations General Assembly, the United Nations Office for Sustainable Development (UNOSD), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the United Nations Development (UNPD). Register to participate!




On the 80th anniversary of the signing of the charter of the United Nations, the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) convenes a Global Policy Dialogue, "Charting New Directions: Shaping the Future of Sustainable Development."




Here, members of the UN High-level Advisory Board on Economic and Social Affairs (HLAB) will explore different avenues for achieving and maintaining inclusive, sustainable, and forward-looking development towards and beyond 2030. In three thematic panels, leading experts will share insights on reimagining economics to foster social inclusion, identify emerging trends that will shape the decades ahead, and envision the future of sustainable development in light of global transformations. The event seeks to showcase how global cooperation can accelerate progress, strengthen resilience, and ensure that no one is left behind. This dialogue is made possible by the UN Peace and Development Trust Fund.




Thursday, 24 October 2024

World Development Information Day 2024; October 24th.



FORUM: “Strengthen international cooperation to solve trade and development problems.World Development Information Day 2024. The Commitment to Development Index ranks 40 of the world’s most powerful countries on their dedication to policies that affect more than five billion people living in poorer nations. The CDI scores countries relative to their size and economic weight to measure countries according to their potential to help. CDI Countries range from middle to high-income; to level the playing field, we have an option to income-adjust, or rank relative to income-predicted scores. Sweden takes first place. France is second and Norway is in third place. Sweden and France also top the environment component, each applying a relatively high price to carbon and Sweden has relatively low emissions per head. The US ranks 22nd, with strong contributions on security and trade, but low scores on diffusing technology and safeguarding the environment. It scores ahead of China, which ranks 36th, but behind most EU countries, who take 6 of the top 10 spots. Follow the conversations with the hashtags #DevinfoDay, #Development, #macroeconomics, #DevelopmentIndex; #24October.

Strengthen international cooperation to solve trade and development problems.



EVENTS: on October 24th; A High-level event to mark World Development Information Day 2024 will be held at UNHQ by the United Nations General Assembly, the United Nations Office for Sustainable Development (UNOSD), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the United Nations Development (UNPD).

On October 29th; You are invited to join the 2024 UN SDG Action Campaign to celebrate changemakers who are wielding the power of creativity and innovation to bring us closer to a more sustainable, equitable and peaceful world. The UN SDG Action Awards Ceremony will unveil the winners of the 2024 edition with the presence of the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation of Italy Antonio Tajani (TBC), and UN Assistant Secretary-General and Director of the UNDP Bureau for External Relations and Advocacy Susan Brown, as well as Canon Ambassador Muhammed Muheisen, Italian song writer and singer Noemi, Paralympian and Disability Advocate Jessica Smith OAM, award-winning film director and producer Farhoud Meybodi, among many others. The UN SDG Action Awards programme is made by the generous financial support of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation (MAECI) and the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ). Watch the UN SDG Action Awards Ceremony live!

CONFERENCES & WORKSHOPS

Explore the list of upcoming UN Development & Trade events and meetings!

Register to participate to the upcoming webinar series of the Center of Global Development.

INITIATIVE ;Advancing dissemination of SDGs.






Secretary-General's remarks to the 16th BRICS Summit;

Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,
I am grateful to participate in the 16th BRICS Summit.
Collectively, your countries represent nearly half of the world’s population. And I salute your valuable commitment and support for international problem-solving as clearly reflected in your theme this year. But no single group and no single country can act alone or in isolation. It takes a community of nations, working as one global family, to address global challenges. Challenges like the rising number of conflicts. The devastation of climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss… Rising inequalities and lingering poverty and hunger… A debt crisis that threatens to smother plans for the future of many vulnerable countries... The fact that fewer than one-fifth of the Sustainable Development Goals are on-track... A growing digital divide, and a lack of guardrails for artificial intelligence and other frontier technologies... And a lack of representation and voice for developing countries at global decision-making tables. From the Security Council to the Bretton-Woods institution and beyond. This must change. September’s Summit of the Future offered a roadmap for strengthening multilateralism, and advancing peace, sustainable development and human rights.

I see four areas for action.

First — finance.

Today’s international financial system is not offering many vulnerable countries the safety net or level of support they need. The Pact for the Future calls for accelerating reform of the international financial architecture that is outdated, ineffective and unfair. And it includes a commitment to move forward with an SDG Stimulus to change the business model to substantially increase the lending capacity of Multilateral Development Banks to developing countries. To recycle more Special Drawing Rights… To restructure loans for countries drowning in debt... And to mobilize more international and domestic resources, public and private, for vital investments in developing countries. Next year’s Conference on Financing for Development and the Summit on Social Development are two milestones to carry these efforts forward. We must also recognize the importance of South-South cooperation. It doesn’t replace the commitments and obligations of developed countries. But it is providing a growing contribution to supporting developing countries in overcoming obstacles to reaching the SDGs.

Second — climate.

Every country has committed to limit temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius. That requires dramatic action to reduce emissions now — with the G20 in the lead. COP29 is just weeks away. That starts the clock for countries to produce new Nationally Determined Contributions plans with 2035 targets that are aligned with the 1.5 degree goal. COP29 must deliver an ambitious and credible outcome on the new climate finance goal. Developed countries must also keep promises to double adaptation finance, and ensure meaningful contributions to the Loss and Damage Fund, which was not the case when it was created.

Third — technology.

Every country must be able to access the benefits of technology.
The Global Digital Compact commits to enhanced global cooperation and capacity-building. It includes the first truly universal agreement on the international governance of Artificial Intelligence to give every country a seat at the AI table. It calls for an independent international Scientific Panel on AI and initiating a global dialogue on its governance within the United Nations with the participations of all countries And it requests options for innovative financing for AI capacity-building in developing countries.

And fourth — peace.

We must strengthen and update the machinery of peace. This includes reforms to make the United Nations Security Council reflective of today’s world. The Pact for the Future includes important steps on disarmament — including the first multilateral agreement on nuclear disarmament in more than a decade — and steps that address the weaponization of outer space and the use of lethal autonomous weapons. Across the board, we need peace. We need peace in Gaza with an immediate cease-fire, the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages, the effective delivery of humanitarian aid without obstacles, and we need to make irreversible progress to end the occupation and establish the two state solution, as it was recently reaffirmed once again by a UN General Assembly resolution. We need peace in Lebanon with an immediate cessation of hostilities, moving to the full implementation of Security Council resolution 1701. We need peace in Ukraine. A just peace in line with the UN Charter, international law and General Assembly resolutions. We need peace in Sudan, with all parties silencing their guns and committing to a path towards sustainable peace. Those were the messages I have delivered to the High-Level segment of the General Assembly in September in New York. Unfortunately, they remain valid here and now. Everywhere, we must uphold the values of the UN Charter, the rule of law, and the principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence of all States. Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, The Summit of the Future charted a course to strengthen multilateralism for global development and security. Now we must turn words into deeds and we believe BRICS can play a very important role in this direction.

Thank you.

Tuesday, 24 October 2023

World Development Information Day 2023; October 24th.

FORUM: "Drawing attention on Development problems.'' World Development Information Day 2023.

The 17 SDGs are our blueprint to achieve a better and more sustainable future for all. Follow the conversation with the hashtags: #DevInfoDay, #24October, #economicDevelopment, #globalgoals.




Six pathways to sustainable development


These include: (1) food systems; (2) energy access and affordability; (3) digital connectivity; (4) education; (5) jobs and social protection; and (6) climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution. Rooted in the 17 Goals, these transitions are not a new agenda.


I. The Indivisible Goals Demand Integrated Policy

 The 2030 Agenda is the result of the most inclusive and expansive deliberation in human history. Bold, sweeping and ambitious, the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were adopted by all world leaders as essential facets of the sustainable future we want; of a world transformed for the benefit of all humanity. These goals are deeply intertwined – any action taken to achieve one may advance some others. This means an integrated policy approach is needed to achieve the SDGs – one that navigates the synergies and trade-offs in taking a certain line of action. This is akin to solving a Rubik’s cube, where a solution is impossible with a focus only on one side at a time: all sides must be considered in relation to each other if the puzzle is to be solved. Yet, dominant development practice – and in large part, our institutions, markets, investment incentives and policy processes – favour siloed approaches. As a result, disparate and competing strategies and processes proliferate, with planning, policy and regulatory frameworks unevenly aligned with the Goals. Investment schemes with limited focus on long-term sustainable patterns, suboptimal budgets, low public capacities for integration, and insufficient leveraging of technologies prevail, while increases in risk factors and intersecting poly-crises impose limitations on the ability to question “business-as-usual” solutions, entrenching the status quo. This disconnect between our 21st century ambitions and our 20th century legacy structures and processes means that SDG achievement is currently a distant aspiration. Midpoint to 2030, only about 15 per cent of targets are on track; close to half, though showing progress, are moderately or severely off track; and some 30 per cent have either seen no movement or regressed below the 2015 baseline. At current rates, only 30 per cent of all countries will achieve even SDG 1 on poverty by 2030. Hunger has increased and is back at 2005 levels. Gender equality is some 300 years away. Too much is at stake and transformation is a matter of utmost urgency. The most pressing priority for policymakers is to ensure the integrated approach goes viral so that economic models and policy processes are revamped commensurate with ambitions, and investments are galvanized at scale for SDG acceleration. 

II. Transitions for Systemic Impact 

Scholarship on the SDGs has converged on transformative entry points - or key transitions - that can have catalytic and multiplier effects across the SDGs and an outsized determinant impact for achieving the Goals. These include: (1) food systems; (2) energy access and affordability; (3) digital connectivity; (4) education; (5) jobs and social protection; and (6) climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution. Rooted in the 17 Goals, these transitions are not a new agenda. Rather, the transitions represent a useful organizing frame that can spotlight investment pathways to accelerate SDG progress within and across countries, with the prevailing country context determining the priority level and action accorded to each area. This will help ensure a better convergence among the most impactful entry points to spearhead SDG acceleration, spurring donor engagement, and improving the alignment of significant work and investments already undertaken across these areas by countries, companies, civil society, cities and local actors, with the support of development finance. Each of these key transitions requires a consideration of multiple policy levers spanning economic, social and environmental dimensions, i.e., actions that recognise the integrated nature of the SDGs and the 2030 Agenda. This helps ensure that collectively, efforts are multiplicative and that all policy actors amplify each other’s work. Moreover, since the SDGs are interconnected, so too are these six transitions. For instance, as significant contributors to greenhouse emissions, both energy and food systems are inextricably linked with climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution. As such, achieving these transitions also calls for a transformation of the dominant traditional, siloed economic models, markets, incentives, and policies within and across countries. Critically, the metrics of success for these transitions are primarily in how they deliver for all persons in our societies. These must be just and equitable transitions, with human rights, gender equality and the principle of Leaving No One Behind comprising their fundamental design elements. For instance, food systems transition can only take place if it fully and measurably redresses the food insecurity that is disproportionately experienced by women and people living in rural areas. Universal healthcoverage must be a hallmark of the transition on jobs and social protection. Only when energy is routinely available to the most disadvantaged groups can it be considered fully accessible and affordable. Transitions cannot be achieved without effective means of implementation, including radical improvements in the utilisation of science, technology, and innovation, bridging the data gap, and strengthening SDG localization. It also implies strengthening governance through transformed policy and regulatory frameworks and through enhanced national public sector capabilities to deliver and implement policy action, as well as mobilize the required investments for market-ready projects in pipelines. The latter calls for the final critical element which is a transformation of financing. With an estimated gap of some US$ 4.2 trillion per year, the SDGs require a quantum leap in finance flows – from billions to trillions. The primary financing source for countries remains the national budget, necessitating a more systematic review and alignment of the budgeting system to sustainable development financing needs through Integrated National Financial Frameworks. But public funds alone are not sufficient to deliver the goals. Additionally, national budgets in developing countries are depleted after the massive fiscal response in the last two years to offset the negative impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and the climate emergency. Remaining gaps will need to be covered by better leveraging all financing flows – public and private, national and international – including from international financial institutions, multilateral development banks, private sector, official development assistance, philanthropic foundations, remittances, and others; restructuring debt and lifting trade barriers.


III. Engine Room Actions by the UN Development System 

The reforms of the UN development system have transformed its ability to support countries with the implementation of the SDGs. Under the leadership of the Resident Coordinators (RCs), UN country teams (UNCTs) are now optimally positioned to act as catalysts to propel progress on the six transitions, building on the existing optimal entry points that stem from their respective country-contexts. The lens of the six transitions – and the critical mass of integrated policy expertise behind each – will enable RCs and UNCTs deliver better together to help countries unlock the rapid and deep transformations needed to achieve the Goals by 2030. As neutral and trusted arbiters, RCs can harness the expertise and networks of the entire UN development system and convene governments and all stakeholders in concerted partnership to accelerate SDG progress. This means that UNCTs are now uniquely able to connect the relevant entry points to national ambitions and priorities, while ensuring that the UN’s collective and entity-specific programming responses enable policy and financing partnerships to make these a reality. Evidence-based and data-driven “CommonCountry Analyses” and “UN Sustainable Development CooperationFrameworks” already reflects this revitalisation, with a reinvigorated ability to help countries address complex, interconnected SDG challenges. Within each area, UNCTs will enable and deliver four 'engine room' actions at the country level, both building on and supporting regional and global efforts. First, RCs and UNCTs will drive the shifts across policy and regulatory frameworks, going beyond the standard sectoral approaches. Second, RCs and UNCTs will facilitate the identification and development of pipelines of bankable and market-ready national projects with participation of both public and private sectors, including by providing access to world-class expertise. Third, RCs and UNCTs will convene all relevant actors to attract the needed financing from all sources – traditional donors, development banks, capital markets, philanthropic foundations, and remittances, to help develop the ‘deal room’ – a financing mix with innovative instruments – for each of the transitions. Fourth, RCs and UNCTs will commit to capacity-building at scale to support public institutions and civil society in this process, ensuring a steady increase in capacities over time to reinforce and sustain these investments. At the global level, the Joint SDG Fund has been transformed to accompany these transitions, incubating and capitalizing new windows of financing. Such catalytic support to UNCTs will be critical for results at the country level. Additionally, regional intergovernmental mechanisms and strengthened UN coordination platforms are enabling multistakeholder policy dialogues around these key areas, and collaborative and coherent responses to country priorities and needs. The 2023 SDG Summit – the half-way mark to 2030 – represents a vital opportunity to put the SDGs back on track and secure the breakthroughs and collective commitments needed to drive SDG acceleration and help deliver the future we want. The UN development system remains the world’s best asset to support countries in this process and is committed to continuous improvement to accelerate momentum.




WEBINARS & WORKSHOPS







Sunday, 23 October 2022

World Development Information Day 2022; October 24th.

FORUM: " From Crisis to Sustainable Development: the SDGs as Roadmap to 2030 and Beyond." World Development Information Day 2022.

The Commitment to Development Index ranks 40 of the world’s most powerful countries on their dedication to policies that affect more than five billion people living in poorer nations. The CDI scores countries relative to their size and economic weight to measure countries according to their potential to help. CDI Countries range from middle to high-income; to level the playing field, we have an option to income-adjust, or rank relative to income-predicted scores. Sweden takes first place. France is second and Norway is in third place. Sweden and France also top the environment component, each applying a relatively high price to carbon and Sweden has relatively low emissions per head. The US ranks 22nd, with strong contributions on security and trade, but low scores on diffusing technology and safeguarding the environment. It scores ahead of China, which ranks 36th, but behind most EU countries, who take 6 of the top 10 spots. Follow the conversations with the hastags #DevinfoDay, #Development, #macroeconomics, #DevelopmentIndex; #24October.


PUBLICATION: From Crisis to Sustainable Development: the SDGs as Roadmap to 2030 and Beyond. Sustainable Development Report 2022.




Explore the interactive maps showsing the performance of countries on each of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals. Visualize countries' current performance or visualize trends to see which countries are on track. Dig into each of the 120 indicators covered in the report. EXPLORE MAPS!




The Sustainable Development Report 2022 features a dedicated profile page for each UN Member State, showing performance and trends by SDG and by indicator. By clicking on a goal or indicator, you can view historical timeseries (when available) and detailed indicator metadata in the side panel. ANALYSE COUNTRY PROFILES!







Visualize and track countries' performance on each of the 99 trend indicators included in the Sustainable Development Report 2022. The Data Explorer features up to 22 years of historical data for countries, between 2000 and 2022, if available. You can display all countries at once or select specific countries to compare. TRY THE DATA EXPLORER!





EVENTS: The Global observance of World Development Information Day 2022 will be held at UNHQ on October 24th. Register to participate to the upcoming webinar series of the Center of Global Development.










Sunday, 24 October 2021

World Development Information Day 2021; October 27th

                                      



Forum: Understanding the role of ICT tools in growth and problem-solving. World Development Information Day 2021.

The United Nations marks the World Development Information Day on 24 October, the same day as the United Nations Day. On this day in 1970, the International Development Strategy for the Second Nations Development Decade was adopted by the UN. In 1972, the United Nations General Assembly observed the occasion for the first time to create awareness about development issues and the need for greater international cooperation to solve them. The day also aims to mobilise public opinion and increase global cooperation efforts to promote growth and development.



Understanding Sustainable Development.

1. Economic, Environmental, and Social Trends

Driven by technological advances and global integration, the strong economic growth experienced over the last century has been accompanied by gains in material welfare in all parts of the world. World GDP is projected to expand by 75% between 1995-2020, bringing with it increased pressures on environmental and social resources. Governments pursuing sustainable development face the challenge of discerning how best to balance the challenges and opportunities of growth and to decouple economic growth from environmental pressures. Given the global nature of many of the most pressing development challenges such as climate change it is imperative that countries build strong coalitions to address issues of common concern, and that they adapt institutions and decision making processes to ever-increasing globalization. This chapter provides an overview of some key economic, environmental and social trends important to sustainable development and discusses the challenges they pose for the wellbeing of current and future generations.

2. Key Features and Principles

Seeking to link and prioritise among aspirations pertaining to human welfare, the sustainable development perspective stresses the long-term compatibility between the economic, environmental and social dimensions of development, while acknowledging possible competition across these areas in the shorter term. Addressing the objectives of sustainable development necessitates the institutional and technical capacity to assess the economic, environmental, and social implications of development strategies and to formulate and implement appropriate policy responses. This chapter describes the key features and principles of sustainable development, examining the concepts of need, capital, and productivity. It also looks at the role of technological progress, resource substitution, alternate capital valuation, and better provision and pricing mechanisms of public goods in enhancing the productivity of existing assets. With corrected market signals and incentives to modify behaviour in line with sustainability, policy makers can secure more efficient resource use, meaning higher overall welfare and equity today and in the future.

3. Measurement

The broadness of the sustainable development agenda, combined with the difficulty of calculating such things as the potential satisfaction of future needs or the future impact of current actions, poses a significant challenge for measurement. The transnational dimension of key threats to sustainability, which renders monitoring difficult, further complicates this problem. Two basic questions inform this discussion: What is meant by needs? And what is required to ensure that these are being met? This chapter attempts to describe the role of measurement in answering these questions, examining various accounting and analytical frameworks used to organise data on sustainable development. In doing so, it addresses the need for an integrated information set on long-term sustainability issues in the formulation and monitoring of policy. The preliminary set of indicators elaborated here should serve as a basis for the further development of measurement frameworks that can adequately account for the multidimensional elements of sustainable development.

II. Enhancing Sustainable Development in OECD Countries

 4. Institutions and Decision Making

An integrated framework of effective institutions is essential for sustainable development. Building this framework requires coherent integration of policies across the economic, social, and environmental spheres; significant participation of civil society in policy making and implementation; co-ordination between national governments and international organisations; and strong political commitment to a long-term perspective. In particular, NGOs play an important role in promoting transparency, efficiency, and co-operation in all phases of the sustainable development agenda (including decision-making, skills training, policy implementation and assessment). Improving relationships between international organisations and developing countries is also crucial for enhancing the legitimacy of sustainable development. The OECD, which possesses expertise in a wide range of policy areas, is uniquely placed to contribute to this process of institutional integration and co-ordination. This chapter addresses institutional challenges from both a domestic and international perspective, examining the role of organisations and the stakeholders who interact with them in implementing the goals of sustainable development.

 5. Policy Instruments

Bringing together the economic, social and environmental dimensions of sustainable development coherently and efficiently requires establishing appropriate framework conditions and implementation tools. This chapter reviews, in policy-oriented terms, a selection of key framework conditions and the practical tools needed to implement them. It focuses on the principal goals of improving the policy framework through a more effective, transparent and efficient regulatory system as well as correcting market and intervention failures by removing distortionary subsidies, introducing green tax reforms, and creating markets for pollution control and resources management. Common to all of these approaches is the need to realise the interdependent yet complementary nature of policy interventions. Wide stakeholder participation and international co-operation are other critical elements in building a successful policy framework for sustainable development. Finally, these framework conditions will produce results only if implemented with a long-term perspective and strong, continuous political will.

 6. Technology

Innovation and technology play an increasingly significant role in economic growth. Investment in innovation and technology is rising, with OECD expenditure on research and development (R&D) at more than 2.2% of OECD-wide GDP. In addition, R&D has become more market oriented and research cycles have shortened and become more closely tied to business strategies. Making innovation and technology contribute to sustainability requires internalising the dynamics of innovation-led growth, and integrating sustainability into the economic and research systems. Although the current socio-economic system does not provide sufficient incentives for sustainable innovation and technological change, governments and businesses have begun to adopt innovative public policy and corporate initiatives to diffuse cleaner technologies and enhance environmental performance. Because relevant process and product innovations often encompass networks that extend beyond specific firms and sectors, innovations require a transdisciplinary and intersectoral approach to problem solving. Public policy has an important role to play in this process in addressing market failures and systemic difficulties, as well as promoting integrated R&D.

7. Experience in OECD Countries

How do countries succeed in conducting cost-effective and consistent policies pertaining to the environment and natural resource use? By way of response, this chapter provides overviews of a number of special chapters of the OECD Economic Surveys on enhancing environmentally sustainable growth in selected OECD countries, and highlights important themes common to these studies. In particular, it discusses the need for policy co-ordination and the use of economic instruments, describing some specific mechanisms that countries have put in place to improve these, including cost-benefit analysis. It then examines the use of economic instruments, namely taxes and tradable permits, highlighting areas where their use could be extended or improved, along with ways of removing barriers to their implementation.

 III. Globalsation and Sustainable Development

 8. International Trade and Investment

Trade and international investment stimulate competition, improve resource allocation, and facilitate the international distribution of technology. They also contribute to alleviating poverty and can directly enhance environmental protection as well as indirectly promote demand for better quality of ambient air, water and other media. Liberalisation of trade and international investment has been a major contributor to economic growth and hence one of the cornerstone policies in promoting sustainable development. Yet despite gains made over the last decade, there is still much room for strengthening sustainable policies and practices at the national and international level. Further progress can be achieved through greater policy coherence, fuller use of market-based economic instruments, removal of barriers to international trade and investment, more accurate assessment of social and environmental impact of trade policy, and increased corporate responsibility.

9. Strategies for Non-member Countries

Developing countries, with 80% of the world's population, will assume a central role in ensuring sustainable development in the 21st century. What occurs in developing countries will have a significant bearing on critical issues like preserving global peace and political stability and maintaining the viability of global commons, notably the earth's atmosphere and biological resources. In addition, growing global economic interdependence means that the socio-economic prospects of OECD countries will be ever more tightly linked to that of developing and transition countries. Non-member countries will play a critical role in expanding the global economy, combating poverty and achieving sustainable environmental and population balances. Although facing such issues as rapid population growth, food security and desertification, as well as destabilising health trends like the spread HIV/AIDS, non-member countries must seize the opportunities brought by globalisation, (for increased trade and investment linkages, more efficient resource use, and the transfer of capital, technology), and find sustainable means for dealing with its challenges. Central to the success of developing countries is the establishment of strong policy frameworks to help attract trade and investment and ensure that these flows benefit society. For many countries achieving these goals will require external assistance.

 IV. Cross-sectoral Issues

 10. Natural Resource Management

Natural resources are those parts of the earth's biological and mineral endowments from which societies, directly or indirectly, derive value. Improved productivity, technological developments, new sources of supply, availability of substitutes and increased efficiency in resource-using production processes have contributed to maintaining the natural resource base. Many ecosystems are nonetheless under stress. Despite the virtual absence of evidence indicating overall scarcity in the supply of natural resources, optimising the rate at which local resources are depleted and minimising resource degradation are important issues. This chapter discusses natural resource management in OECD countries as well as some of the policy challenges related to natural resource management, including ownership and access rights, resource degradation, and the provision of ecosystem services. Making the generally positive trends in the economic efficiency of natural resource use fully sustainable will require removing market distortions such as subsidies and price controls.

 11. Climate Change

Global climate change will challenge sustainable development in the 21st century. Recent evidence indicates that human-induced global warming is already occurring. In particular, changes in atmospheric temperature, sea levels, and precipitation patterns will impact the natural environment, agricultural activities, human settlement and health. Climate change is inter-linked with other global, national and local environmental problems and development challenges such as loss of biodiversity, deforestation, stratospheric ozone loss, desertification and freshwater degradation. Long time horizons and the uncertainty surrounding possible climate futures also add to the dilemma facing politicians and policy-makers, as governments are asked to provide leadership and take action that incurs costs today to reap global benefits for future generations. Inaction risks imposing significant costs on future generations and possibly widening future economic disparities among developed and developing regions of the world. The central challenge in dealing with climate change is to set objectives and design climate change policies to properly balance social benefits and costs, in the context of equity concerns and real-world constraints. Particular attention must be given to the developing countries that are most vulnerable to climate change because of weak institutions and severely limited access to financial resources, technology, and scientific expertise.
Section V. Sectoral and Territorial Approaches

12. Energy

In the face of increasing global demand for energy and pressures on the global environment, policy makers have acknowledged that the choice is no longer whether to participate or not in discussions about sustainable development but rather how. Energy remains a strategic commodity, as energy and the services it provides remain necessary to fuel economic growth and social development. At national and sub-national levels, governments face the challenge of assuring sufficient energy for economic activities and universal access to energy services to support the provision of housing, food, and health and educational facilities. And governments must do so while avoiding direct ownership and micro-management of energy operations that can diminish efficiency as well as co-ordination failures that have detrimental environmental impacts. At the global level, governments need to develop policies to address the projected 60% increase in the predominantly fossil-fuel based global energy demand over the next 20 years, and also take action to modify longer-term trends in greenhouse gas emissions. In formulating policies and initiatives, governments must, moreover, take into account that the energy demand of non-OECD countries will soon surpass that of OECD countries, and that already high levels of energy demand in developed countries will continue their upward trend. Overall, energy supply needs to be further decarbonised and diversified and the energy intensity of economic growth reduced. The principal challenge for energy policy makers is to establish framework conditions that promote well-functioning markets and incentives to diversify energy use and investment in research and development.

13. Transport

Transport makes a fundamental contribution to a prosperous economy. The transport sector provides substantial benefits to users but there is concern about the impacts of current and future transport operations. Significant improvement can be achieved in the short to medium term in the environmental performance of current transport arrangements. However, demand for transport is projected to increase as a result of increased trade and tourism, as well as population and economic growth over the period to 2020 and beyond. Demand increases are likely to more than offset the gains that can be expected from improvements in transport and vehicle technology in relation to some environmental impacts. Governments, industry and communities must act to ensure transport becomes more Â' not less Â' sustainable. Governments need to take the lead in addressing sustainability concerns and catalyse actions involving other parties. Industry and communities have critical roles to play in ensuring that transport contributes fully, along with other sectors, to sustainable development outcomes.

14. Agriculture

Collectively, the agricultural sectors of OECD countries have managed to achieve unprecedented growth in the output of food and non-food commodities since the middle of the 20th century. This growth has been achieved with fewer workers and on slightly less land, but using more water, chemicals and machinery. However, agricultural growth has often been accompanied by increased levels of pollution, as well as by greater homogenisation of the landscape and destruction of wildlife habitat. Agriculture and the ecosystems in which it forms a part control or interact with a large number of natural capital stocks of value not only to the agricultural sector but to the rest of society as well; therefore the way in which the agricultural sector manages these stocks is crucial to sustainable development. Proper market signals, policies, and management can enhance agriculture's positive contributions to the overall welfare of society, while reducing its negative impact. Whereas the risks of delaying reforms can only grow as pressures on agriculture increase in line with rising populations and competition for other uses of the resources on which agriculture depends. This chapter explores those concerns, along with the key requirements for achieving increased agricultural output in a sustainable way, including the implementation of appropriate policies in tandem with markets, and the adoption of best practices by farmers.

15. Manufacturing

Over the past two decades, the manufacturing sector in OECD countries has made considerable progress in reducing its impact on the environment. These gains have come primarily from plant modernisations, product mix changes, pollution prevention and control measures, as well as from changes in the sectoral composition of manufacturing. OECD industries are now more proactive in addressing sustainable development concerns, a trend that can be reinforced through government policies and efforts to enhance eco-efficiency among businesses. On the part of industry, environmental management systems that include adequate reporting mechanisms are essential to the development of more sustainable practices. Well-designed environmental, policy packages, when combined with technology and innovation policy, also provide crucial tools for achieving further progress.

16. Territorial Development

The territorial organisation of economies and societies is today undergoing dramatic change. Globalisation, technological innovation, sectoral adjustment, migration, and population ageing make it increasingly difficult to predict the future of places. This chapter considers why and how territorial policy can contribute to the goals of sustainable development. Chief among objectives of territorial development policies are the reduction of disparities, the promotion of conditions favourable to endogenous development, and a better balance between urban and rural area. Unsustainable patterns can result from ignoring large differences among territories which national trends often conceal. Many of the problems related to sustainable development should also be identified and analysed at local and regional levels since this is the level most conducive to setting priorities and designing effective, publicly supported solutions. In other words, progress toward sustainability will require change in the organisation of cities and regions, in the management of their natural resources, including their demand for energy and in land-use patterns.




Information and communications technologies (ICT), such as the internet and smartphones, have the potential to provide new solutions to developmental problems. However, the digital divide between countries at different levels of development in terms of accessing ICT tools can hamper progress in several fields such as governance and education.

The coronavirus pandemic has further highlighted the global disparity in terms of access to ICT tools.

Here’s a look at some ways countries can overcome the digital divide among them

Innovations in ICT tools:

Increasing internet access for previously marginalised groups. The use of smartphones is a great example of how the digital divide can be overcome. More advancements in the field can further increase access to ICT tools across the world.

Investment by governments:

By investing more in human capital through education and training in digital skills, governments can include a greater portion of the population in the digital arena. Governments also need to invest in making new technologies more affordable to people and increasing accessibility of ICT tools in remote areas and among marginalised groups.

Improving affordability of ICT tools:

Countries can provide subsidies and eliminate monopolies in the market for ICT tools. By encouraging affordability through policy decisions as well as increasing the infrastructure for such technologies, the digital divide can be overcome to a large extent. Countries should ensure that ICT tools are used for the benefit of their populations rather than making huge profits.


Thursday, 24 October 2013

World Development Information Day 2013, 24 October

United Nations development efforts profoundly affect the lives and well-being of millions of people throughout the world. They are based on the conviction that lasting international peace and security are possible only if the economic prosperity and the well-being of people everywhere is assured.

The General Assembly in 1972 instituted World Development Information Day to draw the attention of world public opinion to development problems and the need to strengthen international cooperation to solve them (resolution 3038 (XXVII)).  The Assembly decided that the date for the Day should coincide in principle with United Nations Day, 24 October, which was also the date of the adoption, in 1970, of the International Development Strategy for the Second United Nations Development Decade.
 The Assembly felt that improving the dissemination of information and the mobilization of public opinion, particularly among young people, would lead to greater awareness of the problems of development, thus, promoting efforts in the sphere of international cooperation for development.



 Transformative solutions for 2015 and Beyond : A report of the Broadband commission Task force on Sustainable Development.



 Doubling Digital Opportunities : Enhancing the inclusion of women & girls in the Information Society.



 The State of Broadband 2013 : Universalizing Broadband.




 The Word in ICT (2013).



 Measuring the Information Society 2013.

General Assembly resolutions designating UN Development Decades

  • Fourth UN Development Decade (1991-2000) (A/RES/45/199, 21 December 1990)
  • Third UN Development Decade (1981-1990) (A/RES/35/56, 5 December 1980)
  • Second UN Development Decade (1971-1980) (A/RES/2626 (XXV), 24 October 1970)
  • First UN Development Decade (1960-1970) (A/RES/1710 (XVI), 19 December 1961)



Join the discussions  : World Development Information Day - October 24