cover image: The Case for a G20 Development Bank to Resurrect the SDGs

The Case for a G20 Development Bank to Resurrect the SDGs

11 Nov 2024

Introduction The year 2015 was a landmark year in the history of international development, with the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)— [a] the first global attempt to set universal goals for all countries and transform the global economic system. The SDGs’ predecessor, the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), were largely focused on the developing and the underdeveloped world. The SDGs were intended to realign the global development pathway with pressing issues in large parts of the developing world, such as environmental degradation, climate change, scarcity of resources, and extreme poverty. However, since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and a series of other crises, progress on SDG implementation has slowed across the globe, including in the wealthiest countries. The global average SDG index began declining in 2019, at a rate of 0.01 points per year. [1] The pandemic reversed years of progress in poverty eradication, pushing nearly 93 million additional people into extreme poverty. [2] Currently, about one in 10 people worldwide suffer from hunger, and one in three people lack regular access to food. [3] The world is also experiencing the largest number of conflicts since 1946, with nearly a quarter of the world population living in conflict zones. [4]
covid-19 india sustainable development sustainable development goals inequality unemployment g20 funding sdgs economic stimulus debt crisis global hunger conflict zones economics and finance

Authors

Nilanjan Ghosh, Malancha Chakrabarty, Swati Prabhu

Attribution
Nilanjan Ghosh, Malancha Chakrabarty, and Swati Prabhu, “The Case for a G20 Development Bank to Resurrect the SDGs,” Issue Brief No. 751 , November 2024, Observer Research Foundation.
Pages
25
Published in
India

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