Direkt zum Seiteninhalt springen

Country-level Politics around the SDGs

Analysing political will as a critical element of the Mid-Term Review of the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs

SWP Research Paper 2023/RP 07, 10.07.2023, 75 Seiten

doi:10.18449/2023RP07

Forschungsgebiete
  • The SDG Summit will take place on 18–19 September 2023 in New York. UN Secretary-General António Guterres has called it the “centrepiece” of the UN’s work this year.

  • Numerous reports for this year’s mid-term review of the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs will lament the “lack of political will” to implement the SDGs.

  • This research paper addresses the lack of analysis of country-level politics around the SDGs by assessing the political priorities of local elites in eleven countries.

  • Alongside the specific findings for these countries, we present overarching conclusions on the significance of country-level politics for SDG im­plementation.

  • Analysing political will and considering country-level constraints should be part of the mid-term review and inform the outcome of the summit.

Table of contents

1 Issues and Conclusions

2 Politics Matters! Expert Assessments of the SDG’s Political Significance in Selected Countries

Marianne Beisheim

2.1 Our focus: “It’s politics, stupid!”

2.2 Empirical foundation

2.3 Country-specific results

2.4 Overarching conclusions: How politics matters

2.5 Outlook: The 2024 HLPF Review and the 2024 Summit of the Future

3 Belarus and the 2030 Agenda: Foreign Policy Instrument and Failed Reform Driver

Astrid Sahm

3.1 Reviews as mirror of policy shifts

3.2 Belarus and UN Development Policy

3.3 SDGs as potential drivers of reforms

3.4 New strategy as turning point

3.5 Impact of political crisis

3.6 Alternative reports with focus on SDG 16

3.7 Prospects

4 Brazil’s 2030 Agenda: Drifting with Power Changes

Claudia Zilla

4.1 A history of changing political priorities

4.1.1 Political change results in disengagement

4.1.2 Civil society assessments

4.2 The way forward: Renewed commitments in a challenging context

5 China: Xi Jinping’s Global Community of Development

Nadine Godehardt

5.1 The 2030 Agenda and Chinese politics

5.1.1 China’s domestic politics and the SDGs

5.1.2 China’s global discourse on development and the SDGs

5.2 Xi Jinping’s translation of the SDGs into a Chinese-style Global Community of Devel­op­ment

5.2.1 The Global Development Initiative

5.3 Responding to Xi’s attempt to make development more Chinese

6 Egypt’s SDG Policy: A Fig‑leaf for Consolidation of Power

Stephan Roll

6.1 SDG progress – mainly on paper

6.2 Prioritizing mega-projects

6.3 Outlook

7 India: SDGs between Nationalism and Development

Christian Wagner

7.1 Hindutva: A new India

7.2 India and the Sustainable Development Goals

7.2.1 Structural challenges: Funding and data

7.2.2 SDGs and citizenship

7.2.3 Centre, states and social programmes

7.3 Prospects: Hindutva and the SDGs

8 Kenya’s Infrastructure-driven Path to the SDGs. Game Changer or White Elephant?

Karoline Eickhoff and Marcel Meyer

8.1 SDGs in Kenya

8.2 Infrastructure-driven economic growth as “game changer”?

8.3 Ruto’s “hustler nation”: A new development paradigm?

8.4 Outlook and recommendations

9 Republic of Korea: Developing a Sustainable Foreign Policy and Implementing the SDGs

Eric J. Ballbach

9.1 Integrating the SDGs into the national political agenda

9.1.1 Key institutions, mechanisms and initiatives

9.2 The emergence of a sustainable foreign policy in the Republic of Korea?

9.2.1 Integrating the SDGs in Regional Foreign Policy Initiatives

9.2.2 Integrating the SDGs into development cooperation policy

9.3 Conclusions

10 Russian Federation: No Sustainable Development in Wartime

Sabine Fischer

10.1 Contrary perspectives on SDG implemen­tation: Government and civil society

10.2 Domestic and foreign policy context of SDG implementation in Russia

10.3 Russia’s action on SDG 13 “Climate action”

10.4 Russia’s non-action on SDG 5 “Gender Equality”

10.5 No SDG implementation in wartime

11 South Africa: Good Governance a Precondition for Progress on SDGs

Melanie Müller

11.1 Systemic shocks: State capture and the pandemic

11.2 The South African energy crisis

11.3 JETPs to support implementation of SDG 7?

11.4 State capture: Good governance as a pre-condition for success

11.5 Conclusion

12 State of Palestine: No Sustainable Development in a Divided Polity under Occupation

Muriel Asseburg

12.1 De-development rather than progress

12.2 A disabling environment

12.3 A missed opportunity

12.4 Conclusions

13 Sudan: The Legitimization Strategies of Violence Entrepreneurs

Gerrit Kurtz

13.1 Political instability and Sudan’s violent entrepreneurs

13.2 The VNR’s selective treatment of development challenges

13.3 Conflict and military repression as central development challenges

13.4 Implications for donor governments

Annex

14 Abbreviations

15 The Authors

“The SDG Summit in September will be the centrepiece of our work this year and must mark significant progress. Member States must come with a clear commitment to rescue the SDGs – setting out their national vision for transformation, grounded in concrete plans, benchmarks and commitments.

An ambitious Political Declaration must recognize the far-reaching changes needed at both national and global levels. It must prioritize and mobilize investment and action across the core transitions required to achieve the Goals. The SDG Sum­mit must make our commitment to leaving no one behind a reality in law and policy.”

UNSG António Guterres
Secretary-General’s Remarks to the General Assembly Consultation on our Common Agenda/Summit of the Future”, New York, 13 February 2023

Issues and Conclusions

The 2023 SDG Summit will be held on September 18/19, as part of the opening week of the UN General Assem­bly. It will operate at the highest political level, with primarily heads of state and government speaking. UN Secretary-General António Guterres called it the “centrepiece” of the UN’s work this year.

In the run-up to the meeting, there is no shortage of reports on the status of implementation of the Sus­tainable Development Goals (SDGs). The UN Statistical Commission will provide the official data for the mid-term review of the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs. Al­ready in May, the UN Secretary-General published a special edition of the SDG progress report with a discussion of trends. The report finds that many of the SDGs are off track, some severely. The Secretary-General appeals to member states to agree a “rescue plan for people and planet”. NGOs provide their own assessments, and advocate accordingly. Experts in the sustainability community tend to focus on thematic analyses in individual policy areas, such as poverty reduction and development financing, climate policy and biodiver­sity policy. Finally, the Global Sustainable Development Report (GSDR), published every four years, as an independent report, draws together all the scattered information from existing research and serves as input for the Summit.

But there is more to SDG implementation. While studies and commentaries often bemoan the lack of political will to “transform our world”, there is little analysis of country-level politics around the SDGs. This research paper aims to fill that crucial gap. The authors assess the priorities and political interests of governments and local elites, as well as societal interests and related conflicts around the SDGs in eleven countries. The aim is to better understand what the heads of state and government, the rep­resentatives of different ministries, and social or economic actors in each country want to achieve through the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs.

The countries covered in the study are Belarus, Brazil, China, Egypt, India, Kenya, Republic of Korea, Russian Federation, South Africa, State of Palestine and Sudan. While not intended as a representative sample of all member states, they do include signifi­cant variation in terms of industrialized and emerg­ing economies, middle-income countries and least-developed countries, democracies and authoritarian regimes, conflict-affected and fragile countries. Each country study emphasizes different aspects but all share one common focus, namely, analysing the politics around the SDGs.

As well as the eleven country studies, we present eight overarching findings and conclusions on the significance of country-level politics for SDG imple­mentation:

  1. We observe an emphasis on pre-existing, top-priority political programmes. Governments try to make the 2030 Agenda and SDGs serve their domestic, regional and global political objectives, while leveraging them for greater legitimacy;

  2. The added value of the SDGs in most policy areas remains unclear and we see a significant gap between talk and action;

  3. We identify a clear focus on elites’ interests in im­plementation and less focus on the needs of marginalized groups (failure to fulfil the promise of “leaving no one behind”);

  4. Governments use the SDGs and VNRs to signal to donors their needs, interests and demands;

  5. We suggest that fundamental changes in the political domain are needed to enable transformative sustainable development;

  6. The national SDG architecture, while politically pe­ripheral, has created spaces for civil society partici­pation, but often in a selective and state-controlled manner;

  7. We find instances where SDG failures are blamed solely on external factors, such as sanctions, the pandemic, or lack of fiscal space or access to tech­nology, while ignoring relevant internal problems;

  8. The geopolitics of (sustainable) development is chang­ing, with China offering different forms of development cooperation to partner countries, also through the UN system.

Our cross-cutting analysis leads to several recommendations, some of which we highlight here. In the run-up to the SDG Summit, all stakeholders should pay more attention to, or at least be aware of, the politics sur­rounding the SDGs at the country level and how this affects negotiations at UN level. The Political Dec­la­ration – the negotiated official outcome docu­ment to be adopted at the SDG Summit – provides several points of reference. Its draft “Call to action” asks countries to develop national plans for transformative and accelerated action, combined with national plan­ning and monitoring mechanisms. On the basis of our analysis, we argue for a robust follow-up to this com­mitment, and also for capacity development. We will not see transformative change unless we encourage governments to review and revise their existing im­ple­mentation strategies. Independent civil society par­ticipation is essential in this process.

Similarly, we recommend that donors and investors ensure that their support for SDG implementation does not reinforce corrupt and exploitative politi­cal and military systems that primarily serve vested interests. The international community also needs to find new ways of dealing with conflicts and changing domestic prior­ities after political power shifts. At the 2023 SDG Sum­mit heads of state and government will reaffirm their commitment to implementing the in­divisible and interlinked 2030 Agenda in an integrated man­ner and upholding all principles enshrined in it. Pointing this out makes it possible to criticize cherry-picking and recall the importance of pro-poor, rights-based approaches. Beyond aid, donor agencies and other stakeholders should explore innovative levers and incentives for a transformation towards sustain­able development. This is particularly relevant for cooperation with middle-income and BRICS countries. Investment and other support for transformative SDG action need to be accompanied by an attractive, co­herent and compelling narrative, to build mutual understanding and trust.

Last but not least, the UN Summit of the Future, scheduled for September 2024, offers an opportunity for member states to complement the revised national SDG plans with an enabling multilateral framework that incentivizes political will at the national level. The “twin summits”, as UN Secretary-General António Guterres has called the Summit of the Future and the SDG Summit, are all about creating favourable con­ditions for member states to change course.

Analysing political will and taking country-level constraints into account should definitely be part of the 2023 mid-term review in preparation for the SDG Summit in September. These factors are highly rele­vant for the implementation of the SDGs – but they are often little-known or largely disregarded in the sustainability community, and therefore need to be brought into focus.

Politics Matters! Expert Assessments of the SDG’s Political Significance in Selected Countries

Marianne Beisheim

In 2015, the UN member states agreed the 2030 Agenda and the seventeen Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Although some of the goals are ex­tremely ambitious, they were adopted by consensus. Closing the deal required a degree of ambiguous language and typical flexibility clauses like “respect­ing national policies and priorities”.1 UN member states tend to reject any foreign intervention in their political or economic priorities and national development strategies. These priorities and strategies are, however, an important factor behind the highly divergent patterns of SDG implementation. Scrutinizing them should be an important part of the mid-term review of the SDGs’ implementation this year.

It is seen as a success that the member states decided to install a follow-up and review process for the 2030 Agenda and SDGs from the outset. The quality of this mechanism is contested but has been improv­ing over time.2 Member states and many other actors discuss progress towards the goals every year in July at the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Devel­opment (HLPF) in New York. These reviews have been held every year since 2016, their scope encompassing achievements, challenges and trends. There are two central instruments for SDG follow-up and review at global and national level. Firstly, a framework of 231 indicators – on which the Secretary-General and the UN Statistical Commission publish annual reports – builds the basis for the SDG reviews.3 Secondly, all coun­tries are invited to report on what they are doing at national level to achieve the SDGs. These voluntary national reviews (VNRs) are presented and discussed in the ministerial segment of the July meeting of the HLPF.

So far, 188 countries have conducted VNRs and 341 VNRs are available online.4 The relevant UN resolutions indicate that the presentation of the report at the UN HLPF should be preceded by a review process at the national level. While reporting is voluntary, several principles have been formulated to shape the reporting process. The global and national review pro­cesses should be inclusive, participatory and trans­parent, involve the whole of government and society, and be based on sound data-based analysis.5 The reports should pay special attention to those margin­alized groups that have benefited least from devel­opment successes in the past (leaving no one behind). For this purpose, data should be disaggregated by income, gender and other criteria, depending on the country. Reports should also place special emphasis on rele­vant linkages between different sectors, corresponding synergies and conflicts of objectives. The UN Secretary-General has developed voluntary guidelines for reporting and the secretariat of the HLPF (UNDESA) has compiled a handbook.6 While the guidelines recommend a structure for the reports as well as various process steps and components, the handbook also presents examples from previous VNRs. DESA has examined the reports with a view to the reporting itself and highlighted good practices.7 Moreover, good practices for SDG implementation are distilled from the reports and presented in a database and in reports.8 The Secretariat has to be cautious when evaluating the VNRs as many member states insist on a state-led process and reject external standards for reporting as too “prescriptive”. This is part of the global and national-level politics around SDG implementation and reporting. Civil society groups publish their own assessments of the VNRs.9

Every four years, the annual stocktaking at the July HLPF is complemented by a summit at the level of heads of state and government, which takes place at the beginning of the opening week of the UN General Assembly in September. The task of this quadrennial SDG Summit is to provide “political leadership, guid­ance and recommendations for the further implementation of the SDGs”.10 The main instrument for this is a Political Declaration that member states nego­tiate in advance.11 Again, there is a lot of politics at play before the heads of the national delegations for­mally adopt the document at the summit.

Our focus: “It’s politics, stupid!”12

In discussions around the national implementation of the SDGs, the term political will – or rather, the com­plaint that it is lacking – comes up time and again. But the debate often stops there, when the analysis should go further and deeper, asking who is committed to doing what, where the political will is lacking, and why. This is where our study comes in: We want to unpack “political will” and shed light on the underlying motives, incentive structures and other causes – in other words the politics.

For the purposes of this study, we have reviewed the academic literature for thoughts around political will and politics. While we did not endeavour to devel­op our own definition, we found the following thoughts helpful. Derick W. Brinkerhoff defines political will13 as “the commitment of actors to under­take actions to achieve a set of objectives … and to sustain the costs of those actions over time”.14 He also points out that political will and (lack of) capacity are often closely connected. While that is normally true, it is not necessarily always a given, as Shalini Randeria describes in her concept of the “cunning state” that “pretends to lack capacities and capitalises on its perceived weakness in order to render itself unaccountable to its citizens”.15 Drawing on a num­ber of country studies, Stefan Dercon, in his much-debated Gambling on Development, points out that what matters for development is domestic leadership and politics. He identifies a specific “development bar­gain” involving domestic elites with power or influ­ence in politics, in which growth and development play a central role.16

A shorthand definition of politics17 would be “domestic decision-making and structure of domestic (policy) preferences”.18 Domestic politics also impacts foreign policy decisions, which can be interpreted as “a competitive game, where multiple players holding different policy preferences struggle, compete, and bargain over the substance and conduct of policy”, hoping to “advance his [or her] conception of national, organizational, group, and personal inter­ests”.19 Brinkerhoff notes that external actors often shy from dealing with country-level politics as this requires confrontation with powerful and competing interests.

Moreover, beyond the diverging political interests of governments, the international order itself is politi­cized and politicizing. In his theory of global gov­ern­ance, Michael Zürn sees an emerging “global politics paradigm” as world politics becomes more “embedded in a normative and institutional structure that contains hierarchies and power inequalities and thus endogenously produces contestation, resistance, and distributional struggles”.20 That is very true for global sustainable development politics.

Our research question: How do political will and politics impact SDG implementation at country level?

These thoughts informed our analysis. Examining country-level politics we ask: What do the country’s (political) elites want and why are they (not) pushing for SDG implementation? What agendas are minis­terial bureaucracies pursuing? What consequences have elections, new majorities and changes in govern­ment had? What regional or global ambitions and rivalries played a role? What external factors have had rele­vant impacts in the shifting geopolitical con­text since 2015 (for example the pandemic, con­flicts and crises, economic developments, donor policies)? Which social interests are important, what frictions exist?

Empirical foundation

As indicated above, all the contributions in this research paper focus on the country-level politics around the SDGs. They do not seek to provide a com­prehensive assessment of the implementation of all 17 SDGs, 169 targets and 231 indicators in the respec­tive country (which would anyway have been far beyond the scope of the present publication). Rather, each contribution focuses on one or more aspects of country politics that the author considers relevant in the context of the SDG debate. In light of their spe­cific expertise, each author assesses the role of the 2030 Agenda and SDGs in the context of the country’s domestic politics and foreign policy approach, and, if applicable, also analyses the main drivers of SDG successes and failures.

The voluntary national review (VNR) reports submitted by UN member states are one important start­ing point for our analyses. They represent a political narrative that the authors attempt to contextualize with their assessments of internal social and domestic developments and conflicts, including regional and geopolitical (foreign policy) considerations. In this con­text, what is not mentioned in the VNR reports can also be of interest. Some of the contributions discuss the extent to which the country reports show inter­esting and convincing successes and/or contain less credible assertions or relevant omissions.

The countries covered in the study are Belarus, Brazil, China, Egypt, India, Kenya, Republic of Korea, Russian Federation, South Africa, State of Palestine and Sudan. These are individual case studies; we did not attempt to produce a systematic comparison using pre-selected variables. Nor did we seek a representa­tive sample of countries. While the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs repre­sent a universal agenda, our study mainly addresses countries in the so-called Global South; it includes all the BRICS countries, but none from the EU or G7.21 With the exception of the Repub­lic of Korea, all are non-OECD countries, many of which are seeking an alternative economic and politi­cal model to the West. Beyond this, there is consider­able diversity in the sample, both in SDG-related aspects and others, such as national income and regime type. Accordingly, the countries rank very differently in in­dices and surveys (see Table 1 in the Annex, p. 72) – which are themselves often part of the global politics surrounding the SDGs.22 Despite all these limitations, we were able to derive a number of overarching insights.

Country-specific results

The individual contributions to this study are instruc­tive, in the first place, for their country-specific find­ings. The eleven country studies can be grouped according to three main motivations for and/or bar­riers to the implementation of the SDGs at the national level.

State capture, corruption, fragility and conflict impact SDG implementation.

In several cases, the authors identify state capture, corruption, fragility and conflict impacting on SDG imple­mentation. Sudan faces some of the biggest challenges to implementation of the SDGs: political instability following decades of authoritarian rule, armed con­flict, a skewed economy in deep macroeconomic crisis, and the impact of climate change. Gerrit Kurtz shows how Sudan’s 2022 VNR serves to outline needs and highlight the leadership’s supposedly popular credentials, while distracting from lack of legitimacy and pushing for debt relief and restoration of access to international financial support (which was sus­pended after the military coup in October 2021). Spe­cifically, he finds that the VNR is designed to bolster the legitimacy of Geibril Ibrahim, the finance minis­ter and leader of the Justice and Equality Move­ment (which was a signatory of the Juba Peace Agree­ment but has very little support even in its home base in Darfur). The VNR ignores the main cause of Sudan’s lack of progress on the SGDs, which is the long dominance of the security sector in politics and the economy.

Egypt’s SDG architecture appears good at first glance. However, Stephan Roll shows how closer examination reveals that the SDGs have been used as a cover to systematically favour the military, which forms the backbone of President Abdel Fatah El-Sisi’s rule. He outlines how fundamental criticism is directed at the core element of President Sisi’s development approach, namely, megaprojects like the new capital. Sisi is focusing on large-scale infrastructure projects, ostensibly to achieve several of the SDGs at once. In March 2022, Egypt had to seek support from the IMF for the fourth consecutive time to avoid an imminent default. The costly megaprojects have played a signifi­cant role in exacerbating this vulnerability. Devalua­tion of the Egyptian currency in the wake of the debt crisis and the sharp rise in inflation are likely to have dramatically worsened the situation of the population in terms of SDG1 (no poverty).

Representatives of the State of Palestine have consist­ently pointed to the lack of sovereignty and the con­straints imposed by Israel’s fifty-five-year occupation regime and the blockade of the Gaza Strip as impedi­ments to SDG progress. Muriel Asseburg argues that this has even led to partial de-development. However, the intra-Palestinian division, deteriorating governance, and the trend of reductions in donor funding and transfers through the Government of Israel have also contributed to a disabling environment. All involved, she finds, are largely pursuing self-serving goals (such as maintaining power or preserving the political status quo), rather than developmental ones. Taken together, the obstacles to sustainable development in Palestine are first and foremost political, so the answers need to be political too.

South Africa’s commitment to the SDG process over the past years remains strong – in part because the SDGs align with promises made by the ANC. Melanie Müller finds, however, that there is a huge gap between these promises and their implementation, much of which is due to governance failures that have yet to be adequately addressed. The serious con­sequences of state capture can no longer be ignored, given their dramatic impact on a country where in­equality is growing. She demonstrates how corrupt prac­tices in tendering for major infrastructure projects have a direct negative impact on key sectors. At the same time, the South African case illustrates how external shocks, such as the pandemic and the global failure to address it equitably, continue to reverberate – now compounded by the economic impact of Russia’s war against Ukraine.

In the Russian Federation, the gap between the gov­ern­ment’s declared support for the SDGs and their actual implementation has widened since 2015. Sabine Fischer notes that Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022 marks a new low in this process, with Russia moving more and more towards dictatorship. There is an inherent contradict­tion between the development of the Russian regime and the goals and visions articulated under the 2030 Agenda. Fischer argues that this contradiction is un­likely to be resolved as long as the current political regime led by Vladimir Putin remains in power. The 2020 and 2022 civil society shadow reports reflect this development.

Nine Years after adoption of the SDGs political shifts at the national and international level affect SDG implementation.

Other country cases outline how political shifts and changing ideological orientations have impacted the approach towards SDG implementation. Astrid Sahm shows how the political situation in Belarus changed fundamentally between the country’s 2017 and 2022 VNRs. In the context of the first VNR there was a high level of activity and hope that the SDGs could serve as a potential driver for reform. This changed after the political protests following the 2020 elections. Independent civil society actors were excluded from the various mechanisms of the national sustainability architecture, leading to a hollowing out of these for­mally inclusive institutions, which now follow a state-centric approach. Belarus used its second VNR mainly to blame and criticize sanctions – while the opposition emphasizes shortcomings relating to SDG 16 (peace, justice and strong institutions). The case of Belarus also demonstrates that the design of the 2030 Agenda allows even authoritarian states to shine on the international stage.

Changes of power and political shifts have strongly impacted Brazil’s engagement with the SDGs. Claudia Zilla shows how the administration of Jair Bolsonaro disengaged from the international sustainable devel­op­ment agenda, while also dismantling domestic social and environmental governance structures. This led to disruptions in policies, actions and monitoring systems, reduced or exhausted budgets, shrinking spaces for civil society participation, and restrictions on public access to information. She advises assessing the prospects for future SDG implementation in light of Lula’s priorities. He has promised to promote social policies and inclusion by expanding social programmes and increasing cash transfers. Lula is trying to posi­tion Brazil as an environmental and food-producing power. However, lower state revenues, the critical macroeconomic situation and the unfavourable global economic context severely limit the govern­ment’s ability to act, especially as the coalition is made up of nine parties with different ideological orientations.

In India, the adoption of the SDGs in 2015 coincided with the landslide victory of Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 2014 elections. Modi’s campaign promoted both development issues and his vision of a new India, as Christian Wagner explains, with a stronger focus on the interests of the Hindu majority (Hindutva). In general, he argues, Hindutva views the SDGs positively, and supporters will use them to promote and legitimize their own agenda. There are, however, also instances where the SDGs become entangled in the larger political con­tro­versy over Hindutva. The first of these is SDG 16.9’s target on the provision of legal identity and the politi­cal disputes over religion being used as a criterion for Indian citizenship. The second is the dispute over Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS). This is a very typical conflict in federal states: who benefits politi­cally from welfare schemes, the central government or the state government?

Kenya aims to achieve the status of a middle-income country by 2030. Substantial progress in imple­menting the country’s SDG agenda is key to achieving this. Karoline Eickhoff and Marcel Meyer show how the SDGs have been mainstreamed into government policies and programmes under Presi­dent Uhuru Kenyatta. At the same time, however, despite Kenya’s significant economic potential and role as a regional beacon, the effectiveness and in­clusiveness of public spending on sustainable devel­opment has been constrained by successive governments’ preference for large-scale infrastructure “legacy” projects with questionable economic viabil­ity, burgeoning borrowing from various lenders, in­cluding China, and incentive and opportunity struc­tures in public procurement that have enabled rent-seeking by political and business elites. The current government under President William Ruto is grad­ually moving towards a new “bottom up” economic approach. But Eickhoff and Meyer still see shortcomings, especially with regard to the inclusiveness of the economic growth model (following the LNOB prin­ciple) and aspects of good governance (SDG 16).

SDGs may also serve to signal interest in global leadership.

Two contributions illustrate how governments utilize the SDGs as they strive for global leadership in sustainable development. China’s 2021 VNR report is a good example. As Nadine Godehardt shows, the report contains a great deal of official terminology known as tifa (提法, lit. the way something is put). These “watchwords” are crucial to understanding Chinese politics, she explains, as they characterize China’s goal of establishing a global Chinese dis­course system. China sees the global discourse on the SDGs as an opportunity to shape the meaning of “devel­opment” internationally, and to establish a strategic narrative for a Chinese-led club that pro­motes Chinese solutions and global development projects, while harmonizing parts of the 2030 Agenda with Chinese goals. She assesses this “strategic dock­ing” as part of a changing logic in Chinese foreign politics under Xi Jinping.

The political leadership in the Republic of Korea (ROK, South Korea) shares a general consensus on the importance of implementing the SDGs that cuts across ideological and party-lines. Eric Ballbach ex­plains how Seoul has developed a range of policies, measures and initiatives to integrate the SDGs directly and indirectly into its domestic and foreign policies as well as its international development cooperation strategies. He finds that South Korea is using the SDGs to promote its green credentials, as the government aims to make the country a leading exporter in the area of green research and technology. However, struc­tural and institutional deficits prevent more rapid progress in the implementation of the SDGs at home and abroad.

Overarching conclusions: How politics matters

As mentioned in the beginning, the 2030 Agenda and SDGs are in certain respects quite ambiguous – and this is intentional, to create flexibility for implementation at country level. Member states insisted on their sovereignty in choosing “how” to implement the SDGs. As the country studies show, these processes of “SDG localization” have involved significant instances of re-interpretation and modification in line with “national priorities”, as well as the usual minor fine-tuning. On the basis of our discussion of the eleven country studies, we arrived at the following eight over­arching findings and conclusions concerning the importance of national politics:23

  1. The countries in our sample chose top-down, gov­ernment-led approaches for localizing the SDGs, but placing emphasis on their – often pre-existing – top-priority political programmes. China, for example, actively reinterprets the 2030 Agenda and SDGs to suit Chinese interests. India attempts to fit the SDGs into the Modi government’s Hindutva ideol­ogy. The Russian Federation’s VNR focuses on the pre-existing twelve National Projects and reports only the absolute minimum on SDG targets where the government sees a conflict of values (for example SDG 5).24 Outside our list of countries, the lit­erature identifies this kind of value- or interest-driven “cherry-picking” in other contexts too. A study on Australia, for example, finds poor progress on goals relating to climate action and reducing inequalities.25 The Republic of Korea represented an exception in our sample, adopting the SDGs with only minor changes and adding a positive “green growth” spin to them.

    Many governments employ the SDGs to bolster the legitimacy of their policies, both internally and externally. Brazil under Bolsonaro was an outlier here, stopping all related programmes, ceasing all reference to the SDGs (which the previous governments had helped to create). In some cases, VNRs are also relevant for international status and rec­og­nition, as is the case for the State of Palestine as a non-member observer state to the UN.

  2. Despite all the talk about the SDGs, the added value of the SDGs in most policy domains remains un­clear as the principles of the 2030 Agenda hardly ever shape policies and measures, and therefore cannot contribute to making them more transfor­mative and geared towards systemic change, inte­grated and coherent, inclusive and participatory, while leaving no one behind. Hence, in line with other assessments, we diagnose a significant gap between talk and transformative action.26 At the same time, talk is a form of action, even interaction, and we use narratives to explain our actions – that should not be ignored as it signals discursive im­pact.

  3. In most countries in our sample, we see a clear elite focus in implementation and less attention paid to the needs of marginalized groups, specifically the promise of “leaving no one behind”. For example, certain countries place particular emphasis on large-scale infrastructure projects, for reasons of politi­cal legacy and/or to serve the economic inter­ests of key players (clientelism). That is true of Egypt, Brazil (under Bolsonaro), Kenya, and likely others. In Africa, this state-led infrastructure devel­opment model is supported by China as a donor and investor, through the Belt and Road and now the Global Development Initiative.27

  4. The SDGs and VNRs are used to signal to donors needs, interests and demands, for access to financial support, debt relief, or economic cooperation. That is especially true for least-developed (Sudan) and heavily indebted countries (Egypt).

  5. Questions of economic development and political governance are often so closely intertwined that fundamental changes in the political domain (end of mili­tary dominance in Sudan, end of occupation in Palestine) would be needed to spur transformative sustainable development. Some progress on SDGs is possible within the existing system, but only to a limited extent and at the risk of further entrenching the repressive and exploitative systems keeping the majority of the population poor (similar for Egypt, Belarus, Russian Federation).

    As discussed above, changes in government can lead to relevant changes in SDG implementation (as in Brazil,28 also South Africa and likely Kenya), but sometimes we also see astonishing continuity (like in South Korea). We also see changes when the same government remains in power but the circumstances change (Belarus, Russian Federation). New coalition governments often have to find new compromises. In federal systems, the central gov­ern­ment can use the process of SDG localization to influence political decision-making at the state level (as shown for India); sometimes we also see resistance to central government efforts (India and Brazil).

  6. While the SDG architecture at the national level often looks impressive, its political relevance tends to be rather low. And, as other studies have found, even new national institutions set up for SDG im­plementation tend to “reproduce existing structures and priorities”.29 But they do also create spaces for civil society participation – even if this is often selective and state-controlled.30 The more autocratic the political system, the worse this is. NGOs and think tanks close to or created by the government take the lead, as can be seen in China, Russia and Belarus. And in Russia, the transition to a full dic­tatorship has completely closed the space for inde­pendent and critical civil society groups. But even in such cases the SDGs can remain a point of refer­ence for independent civil society actors, whether still in the country or in exile.

  7. Many reports and statements discuss SDG failures in the context of – no doubt relevant – external factors. Examples include the fall-out from the pan­demic, the cost of living crisis in the wake of the war in Ukraine, sanctions, the debt crisis, lack of fiscal space or access to technology, as well as related global governance failures and donor agendas. Although significant, these challenges, should not distract governments from their share of responsibility for the SDGs at the country level. Another research paper that analyses and com­pares the institutional design for implementing the SDGs in 137 countries finds that nearly half of the governments perceive the 2030 Agenda primarily as an international agenda.31 They conclude that this raises concerns about a lack of domestic action and accountability.32

    This view of the SDGs sometimes coincides with an explicitly technocratic mode of reporting, focusing solely on indicators and data. This ostensibly creates objectivity, when in fact the validity and reliability of the data and the underlying developments often remain unclear.

    Taken together, such an approach prevents a full and unbiased assessment of the relevant internal obstacles to full realization of the SDGs. All the more so when diplomatic considerations prevent an open and frank discussion at the UN.

  8. In terms of the geopolitics of (sustainable) development, it is nothing new that China is offering dif­ferent forms of development cooperation. How­ever, doing so in the UN framework and including all interested parties (not only developing coun­tries) underlines the new self-confidence under Xi Jinping. We are now witnessing how this changes the (sustainable) development ecosystem and global politics. For example, countries adopt Chi­nese language in their (UN) speeches and reports. Some of this is good for implementing the SDGs (access to finance, South-South cooperation), some is problematic (rising debt, entrenchment of cor­rupt political systems and elites, dominant focus on infrastructure).

How could actors build on these insights to accelerate SDG implementation?

The recommendations arising from this cross-cutting analysis are addressed to various actors:

Firstly, in the run-up to the SDG Summit, UN officials in charge of preparations, leaders and all other par­ticipants should pay more attention to the politics surrounding the SDGs at the country level. Analysis of the local interests and priorities of political actors and their different perspectives on the SDGs is rele­vant not only for correctly assessing and interpreting how the SDGs are used domestically and in foreign policy, but also for identifying policy options for third parties to effectively support SDG implementation. The UN could convene expert group meetings to this end, inviting independent experts, the so-called “focal points” who coordinated the voluntary national and local reviews, as well as representatives of UN country teams and independent civil society and other stake­holder groups. While diplomats may not want to get involved in country-level politics, they should at least be aware of it.

Obviously, the Political Declaration – the nego­tiated official outcome document that has to find con­sensus before being adopted at the SDG Summit – does not discuss such politically sensitive issues. But the 2023 zero draft does offer several starting points. In its third part, the “Call to action – turning our world towards 2030”, paragraph 41 concedes “Mid­way to 2030 we are considerably off-course for the world we want”, and proclaims “but with political will, the promise of the Sustainable Development Goals remains attainable, and we resolve to fulfil it”.33 If meaningful progress is to be made in the second period (2023–2030), it will be crucial to address that political will more directly.

Our results demonstrate how essential it is that countries review and revise their national strategies in order to accelerate implementation. The zero draft of the Political Declaration touches on this in paragraph 36 (m): “We will strengthen the integration of the SDGs into our national policy frameworks and devel­op national plans for transformative and accelerated action. We will make achieving the SDGs a central focus in national planning and oversight mechanisms. We will further localize the SDGs and advance integrated planning at local and sub-national levels.” That recommendation is taken from the 2023 GSDR, which is to be officially launched at the SDG Summit in September. The team of fifteen independent scien­tists responsible for that report, recommends that member states develop “national transformation frame­works for accelerated action” and present them at the 2024 July HLPF.34 It would be useful to see mem­ber states commit to ensuring that this is fol­lowed up in a robust way. Unless we encourage gov­ernments to review and revise their existing implementation strategies, we will not see transformative change. At the same time, it is clear that maintaining the integrity of the SDG framework while respecting national priorities will remain a major balancing act.

Donors and investors need to ensure that their support for SDG implementation does not strengthen corrupt and exploitative political and/or military sys­tems that largely serve vested interests while keeping many citizens poor. As noted in the debate around Stefan Dercon’s book: “When elites fail to reach a shared vision for growth and development – they may share other visions, for example, of power and self-enrichment – the role of development partners becomes more difficult.”35 Consequently, external donors should humbly reflect their role in such con­texts, while realizing that they are political actors. Continuous monitoring, evaluation and learning processes may help. Moreover, donors could seek to play a productive complementary role, supporting national efforts with aid and technical assistance and setting incentives for better elite bargains. Dercon himself mentions extensive trade preferences and working seriously to combat illicit finance. For coun­tries lacking a development bargain, he suggests that donors should attempt to deter rogue elite bargains, prioritize the needs of the most deprived citizens, and work with those within political elites, business and civil society who desire change.

The jointly adopted SDG framework allows donors to counter accusations that they are patronizing or imposing “political conditionality”. The principles allow them to push for the full implementation of the integrated approach of the 2030 Agenda, including the environmental and social dimensions (leaving no one behind), with a human-rights-based approach and meaningful participation of civil society, as well as good governance and the fight against corruption. At the same time, countries of the Global South have the right to demand that donor countries fulfil their commitments under SDG 17.

Poverty levels naturally impact the way the SDGs are handled at country level. They also define the means that external actors possess to influence imple­mentation strategies. While development cooperation can be important, there is a lack of effective levers and incentives “beyond aid” for middle-income and BRICS countries. New modes of international cooperation, like for example the Just Energy Transition Partnerships (JETPs) with South Africa, are promising – if well-developed and implemented. Technological co­operation is another area of great interest to emerging economies.

Listen and explain to generate mutual trust, build capacities for the transformation towards sustainable development, and combine this with a convincing narrative.

The 2023 GSDR highlights “capacity building for transformation” as a key lever, and identifies specific actions to develop the capacity of key stakeholders to drive and manage sustainability transitions, such as access to scientific knowledge, innovative solutions (including the digital transformation), foresight capac­ity, building resilience, and conflict resolution skills.36 In general, geopolitical tensions may lead to further compartmentalization of foreign and development policy, and the question of what works with whom. All actors should engage in strategic discussion and continuous mutual learning on innovative means of implementation and cooperation.

As governments seek to shape the global debate by promoting their narratives on how best to implement the SDGs, Germany and Europe need to prepare for this (soft) power competition. This applies in particu­lar to the further development and international com­munication of the European Green Deal and the EU’s Global Gateway Initiative. The EU should see its Global Gateway initiative as an engagement with the Global South – and not merely a counterweight to China. Accordingly, the EU should focus Global Gateway more on addressing the concerns of the Global South – but with an explicit human-rights-based, pro-poor approach. “Listen, explain, weigh up” for “building trust; considering options; confronting dilemmas through dialogue”: that is how German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock defined the needs of twenty-first-century foreign policy, at the German ambassadors’ conference in early September 2022. Moreover, the feminist foreign and development policy approach, with its focus on marginalized groups, is in line with the 2030 Agenda’s principle of leaving no one behind. To this end, Germany and the EU should also seek more meaningful cooperation with sub-national actors (cities and regional govern­ments, stakeholder groups).

As our analyses confirm, recurring violent conflict is a major impediment to SDG implementation. Donors, governments and implementers need to identify and address “collective outcomes” in acute armed con­flicts more effectively, including humanitarian needs, development priorities and peacebuilding (the so-called HDP nexus).37 There is also a (highly politicized) discussion about how even smart and targeted sanc­tions – which seek to selectively target those who com­mit crimes while preventing hardship among civil­ians – can still hinder sustainable development. More work is needed to minimize their adverse effects on SDG implementation.38

The international community also has few tools at its disposal to deal with changing domestic priorities and strategies following changes in political power and ideological orientation. One first step would be to provide more explicit feedback on this during the VNR interactive dialogues or other sessions during the annual UN-HLPF. Supporting local governance and civil society actors (including those in exile) to act if the central government neglects its SDG com­mitments could be another option.

Outlook: The 2024 HLPF Review and the 2024 Summit of the Future

The next review of the format and the organizational aspects of the HLPF, including the follow-up and review of national-level implementation through the VNRs, is planned for early 2024. In his 2023 SDG Progress Report, the UN Secretary-General recommends an “attention shift from reporting national action to an international audience to strengthening national accountability for progress and transformation”.39 He states that this “calls for a systematic inclusion of SDG implementation efforts in national oversight systems, for more independent evaluations of national imple­mentation, for greater involvement of scientists in monitoring and review”. In this spirit, future VNRs could be mandated to also review the envisaged national plans for transformative and accelerated action for the next four-year cycle of annual HLPF meetings. That would not represent a “stick” but it would at least increase transparency. In the past, how­ever, the G77 has rejected any “hardening” of the VNRs.40

Revamped national-level commitment could be incentivized by creating an enabling international environment.

Complementing the national commitments coming out of the SDG Summit, the Summit of the Future planned for September 2024 offers an opportunity for member states to agree on a strengthened multilateral frame­work. It should be designed to support these national efforts, including incentives for policy-makers and their constituents. This year’s UN delib­erations on the Summit of the Future showed that it is more important than ever to bring the SDG com­mu­nity together with those who have a broader inter­est in the future of multilateralism.41 This is impera­tive in light of multiple conflicts and deepening geo­political divides.

The UN Secretary-General has consistently pointed out the links between the two summits. In his SDG Progress Report he outlines a series of urgent actions at the national and international level. He urges national governments “to strengthen national and sub-national capacity, accountability and public institutions to deliver accelerated SDG progress”.42 The report outlines how recommitting to the 2030 Agenda and SDGs at the 2023 SDG Summit implies action to “ad­vance concrete, integrated and targeted policies and actions … empowering the most vulnerable”.43 The international community is encouraged to “mobilize the resources and investment needed for developing coun­tries to achieve the SDGs” as well as to “facilitate the continued strengthening of the UN development system and to boost the capacity of the multilateral system to tackle emerging challenges and address SDG related gaps and weaknesses in the international architecture that have emerged since 2015”.44 For the latter he refers explicitly to the 2024 Summit of the Future.

Such well-coordinated and complementary action plans could contribute to the success of the 2023 SDG Sum­mit and the 2024 Summit of the Future. A mean­ingful package deal would need to address the factors relevant to SDG successes and the failures at the inter­national level, and stimulate the political will to change course at the country level. Where there is no genuine national leadership interest in achieving the SDGs, the UN and its member states must invest in developing effective incentives that go beyond creat­ing transparency through the VNRs. In general, mem­ber states’ fundamental reservations over sovereignty form a major obstacle to deeper cooperation at the UN.45 As a recent analysis of global governance fail­ures laments: “In particular, the destructive forces in society are clinging to national sovereignty as their rampart against interference with their selfish ways.”46 Sovereignty bargains are difficult but possible, espe­cially if additional resources can be made a part of the negotiation process.47 The two summits offer a window of opportunity to put “political will” at the centre and strike a deal that truly “turbo-charges” implementation of the SDGs.

Belarus and the 2030 Agenda: Foreign Policy Instrument and Failed Reform Driver

Astrid Sahm

Belarus has submitted two VNRs to the HLPF, the first in 2017 and the second in 2022.1 In the time between the two reviews the political situation in Belarus changed fundamentally: By the summer of 2020 the Belarusian leadership was pursuing a policy of rap­prochement with the West that was mainly motivated by its interest in reducing its dependence on the Kremlin after the Russian annexation of the Crimea in 2014 and the violent establishment of separatist republics in the Donbas. Western countries recog­nized the role Belarus played as host of the negotiations leading to the Minsk Agreements. In February 2016, the EU decided not to extend its sanctions against representatives of the Belarusian leadership, which had been introduced in reaction to the deten­tion of political opponents after the presidential elections in December 2010. However, confronted with the mass protests after the rigged presidential elections in August 2020, Belarus’s long-serving ruler Aliaksandr Lukashenka again sought the Kremlin’s support to ensure his political survival. In response, the EU and other Western countries returned to their previous sanction policy. The geopolitical confrontation intensified after the forced landing of a Ryanair plane in Minsk in May 2021 and due to Belarus’s role as a co-aggressor in Russia’s war against Ukraine since February 2022.2

Reviews as mirror of policy shifts

The two national reviews reflect the different political contexts. The 2017 VNR proudly presented the new institutional mechanisms adopted by the Belarusian leadership to promote the implementation of the 2030 Agenda and its SDGs. In the following years Belarus’s sustainable development policy clearly aimed at improving the country’s international reputation. This was backed up by the high rankings Belarus received in the annual international SDG index prepared by the Bertelsmann Foundation and the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), starting with 23rd place in 2016. Despite the increasingly repressive character of the Lukashenka regime following the August 2020 presidential elections, Belarus maintained a high ranking with 34th position in 2022.3 In line with this positive assess­ment the 2022 national review asserted that Belarus had already implemented 80 percent of the seventeen SDGs. However, the second VNR also warned that “unprecedented illegal unilateral eco­nomic sanctions” imposed by Western countries “offset the results achieved in the implementation of the SDGs”.4 This statement is part of a series of appeals that the Belarusian leadership has made to the United Nations over the past three years, urging the organization to classify Western sanctions as a violation of the UN Charter and international human rights norms.5

Belarus and UN Development Policy

Belarus has always paid great attention to its par­ticipation in UN initiatives. In the 1990s it demonstrated strong commitment to the implementation of Agenda 21, adopted at the UN Conference on Environ­ment and Development in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. Belarus was the first post-Soviet country to adopt its own national strategy on sustainable development in 1997 and published a National Progress Report on the eve of the World Summit on Sustainable Develop­ment in 2002. However, the Belarusian leadership’s interest in Agenda 21 and its participatory approach declined noticeably in the 2000s. In 2009, the Bela­rusian government decided to abolish the responsible national commission and halted further work on the already drafted new national sustainability strategy.6 Instead, the government’s attention focused on a state-driven approach towards achieving the UN Mil­len­nium Development Goals (MDGs). The second status report on achieving the MDGs, published in 2010, stated that “Belarus has generally met all of the MDGs”.7

Belarus has always paid great attention to its participation in UN initiatives.

Following the decision of the 2012 (Rio+20) UN Conference on Sustainable Development to negotiate the SDGs, Belarus began to reactivate its sustainable development policy by elaborating a new national strategy for the period until 2030, which was ap­proved in February 2015. Belarus also participated actively in the UN preparatory consultations for the 2030 Agenda. At the second session of the Open Working Group on SDGs the Belarusian representative emphasised that his country supported the intro­duction of periodic national reviews to assess progress toward achieving the SDGs “without prejudice to the choice and implementation of national development strategies”.8 This early statement already demon­strates Minsk’s intention to prevent the 2030 Agenda from being used to criticize Belarus’s authoritarian political structures and possible human rights vio­lations.

SDGs as potential drivers of reforms

The active phase of implementing the 2030 Agenda began in May 2017, when a National Coordinator on achieving the SDGs was appointed by presidential decree and the Council for Sustainable Development was set up. The first task of the newly appointed coordinator was to present the first national review on SDG implementation at the 2017 HLPF. Given the short time for preparation, the 2017 VNR was mostly an announcement about the Belarusian leadership’s commitment to implementing the 2030 Agenda. Besides highlighting institutional innovations, the report outlined plans to create a national system of indicators for monitoring the SDGs and declared the country’s intention to incorporate them into national, sectoral and regional strategies, programmes and plans. Additionally, the review focused on concrete SDG clusters that are closely related to the previous MDGs, and relied largely on state documents and international ratings. Cooperation between state and civil society was rarely mentioned. In addition, only selected aspects of the addressed SDGs were highlighted. For instance, the section on SDG 17 focused solely on public-private partnerships in connection with SDG 9 on industry, innovation and infrastruc­ture. Information for several SDGs was completely absent (7, 10–12 and 16). In fact, the lack of any information on progress towards SDG 16 is surprising, as Belarus had adopted its first National Human Rights Action Plan in October 2016. In December of the same year the Belarusian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the UN Office in Belarus organized a panel dis­cussion on “The National Human Rights Action Plan: Human Rights and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”.9

After the 2017 HLPF the National Coordinator initiated a wide range of ambitious activities, aimed at establishing Belarus as a regional leader in the implementation of the 2030 Agenda. These activities included parliamentary hearings on SDGs in Decem­ber 2017, a Regional SDG Coordination Leaders Forum in February 2018 attended by UN Deputy Sec­retary-General Amina J. Mohammed, and the first National Forum on Sustainable Development in Janu­ary 2019.10 Most of the events were financed by a spe­cial UN Project titled “Support to the National Coordi­nator on Implementation of SDGs and Strengthening the Role of the Parliament in the Implementation of SDGs”.11 The project title also implied an expectation that implementation of the 2030 Agenda would pro­mote political reforms in Belarus. Indeed, between 2017 and 2019, the National Coordinator established a complex system of interagency and multi-stake­holder collaboration around the Council on Sustain­able Development, including an open Partnership Group for all interested representatives from civil society, business, and international organizations.12

New strategy as turning point

The new national sustainability architecture clearly improved horizontal and vertical integration of sus­tainability aspects in Belarusian social, environmental and economic policy strategies. New approaches were particularly evident in the process of preparing the “National Sustainability Strategy for the period up to 2035” (NSDS 2035), which integrated the SDGs for the first time. At the initiative of the responsible Ministry of Economy, several roundtables and workshops were held in 2018–2019 to discuss future visions and pri­or­ities with relevant stakeholders, including independ­ent civil society actors.13 The strategy concept, pre­par­ed by the Ministry’s research institute with the active sup­port of its Public Council for Sustainable Develop­ment Strategies Drafting and Evaluation, was pub­lished on the Ministry’s website for public consul­ta­tions in December 2018.14

At the same time, the discussions surrounding the NSDS 2035 soon revealed the limitations of the 2030 Agenda as a driver of reform in Belarus. This became particularly evident in the handling of SDG 5. In the 2018 strategy concept, the Ministry of Economy’s research institute included a chapter on gender equality. However, this section was excluded from the strategy draft that the Ministry of Economy intended to submit to the government for endorsement in early 2020, without any open discussion. It was only thanks to objections of the UN Resident Coordinator in Bela­rus and the Partnership Group coordinators that the draft strategy was presented to the Public Council in February 2020 and public consultations organized in March 2020. As a result, certain gender-related aspects were reintegrated into the final draft version of the strategy, such as the establishment of mechanisms to combat domestic violence.15 However, the term “gender equality” was consistently avoided and the concepts of gender mainstreaming and gender scrutiny entirely omitted. Instead, only “equal rights and opportunities for men and women in all areas of life” were mentioned, while the focus remained on preserving traditional family values.16

Impact of political crisis

In retrospect, the setbacks civil society organisations faced during the finalization process of the NSDS 2035 seem like a harbinger of the political crisis that occurred after the presidential election in August 2020. In light of the crisis, the Partnership Group coordinators called on the National Coordinator to condemn the violence of the security forces against peaceful demonstrators and to engage in a genuine societal dialogue. However, these appeals remained unsuccessful. In summer of 2021, all NGOs led by the coordinators were closed down as part of a wave of prohibitions that affected several hundred organizations. Subsequently, the Partnership Group was re­organized by the National Coordinator and has since then played only a passive role. Likewise, the Parlia­mentary Group of the Council for Sustainable Devel­opment showed no further initiative. Nevertheless, the national sustainability architecture remained unchanged in formal terms and the Council contin­ued to hold meetings at least twice a year.17

Despite the political turmoil Belarus presented its second voluntary national review at the 2022 HLPF. Although the review covered all the SDGs this time, it was still not systematic and focused only on individual aspects that did not allow for an overall assessment of successes and problems in achieving the SDGs. The 2022 VNR’s main objective was – besides criticizing Western economic sanctions – to highlight the com­prehensive character of state actors’ efforts to impl­ement the 2030 Agenda. According to the review 70 percent of Belarus’s total budgetary resources are used for SDG-related measures. The basis of this claim is that the SDGs are integrated into more than twenty-five state programmes, allowing specific budgetary ex­penditures to be allocated to each of the SDGs. While the report emphasizes the general importance of part­nering with civil society, it does not name any specific contributions by non-state actors. Thus, all achieve­ments in implementing the 2030 Agenda are credited to the state.18

Alternative reports with focus on SDG 16

The office of Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who ran as a presidential candidate in 2020, submitted an alternative report to the HLPF. For her team, which was supported by a group of civil society experts and activists, the forum provided an opportunity to draw attention to the massive political repression and human rights violations committed by the Lukashenka regime. Their report claims that, in view of this situation, “it is impossible to talk about achievements of the government of Alexander Luka­shenko in implementing the SDGs”.19 By presenting its report, the Tsikhanouskaya's office sought “to pre­vent the regime … from receiving funding for the SDGs that would be used for strengthening the dicta­torship”.20

In that context, the alternative report placed spe­cial emphasis on SDG 16. While the VNR report only dealt with measures to prevent human trafficking and domestic and sexual violence, the alternative report put SDG 16 at the centre of its analysis, focus­ing on fundamental rights, judicial independence and corruption control. In addition, two separate sections address the right to receive information from state authorities, which was a particular issue during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the right to a healthy environment. Furthermore, the Belarusian Helsinki Committee prepared its own shadow report, in which all indicators of SDG 16 were systematically ana­lysed.21 One central concern of both alternative reports was a general appeal to the UN and its mem­bers that compliance with the recommendations of UN human rights committees, which have been ignored by the Belarusian leadership for a long time, should be seen as a prerequisite for real progress in the implementation of the 2030 Agenda.

Prospects

In January 2023 Belarus notified the UN Economic and Social Council of its intention to present a third VNR at the 2025 HLPF. This announcement may be linked to Belarus’s candidacy for a non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council for 2024–2025. In any case, the Belarusian leadership obviously sees the 2030 Agenda as an appropriate framework to present its achievements and to communicate concrete politi­cal messages at an international level, as was the case with the opening for limited reforms in 2017 or the criticism of Western sanctions in 2022.

Since the policy shift of August 2020, the UN’s state-centred approach and support from other authoritarian states seem to be of great importance to the Belarusian leadership. The UN resident agencies in Belarus are obliged to involve state agencies in all their activities. In addition, Russia appears to be becom­ing the primary donor for UN projects in Bela­rus. In particular, in 2023 Russia started funding a project aimed at supporting the nationalization and localization of the SDGs.22 There is a high risk that these UN projects will only strengthen the existing Lukashenka regime.

The 2030 Agenda remains one of the few international processes that involve both Belarusian officials and their Western counterparts.

At the same time, the 2030 Agenda remains one of the few international processes that involve both Belarusian officials and their Western counterparts. While most Western organisations have had to stop their activities in Belarus since August 2020, UN agen­cies are currently the most important international actors still working actively there. There is a small chance that the UN activities can (re)open new win­dows of opportunities for multi-stakeholder cooperation, and help to resolve the protracted political crisis in Belarus. But that is only realistic if the growing global geopolitical confrontation does not transform the 2030 Agenda into a political battlefield at the UN.

Brazil’s 2030 Agenda: Drifting with Power Changes

Claudia Zilla

Power changes and political shifts have strongly con­ditioned Brazil’s engagement with the sustainable development agenda, both domestically and inter­nationally. The SDGs were conceived at the 2012 UN Conference on Sustainable Development in Rio de Janeiro (Rio+20), and adopted by the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in 2015. The Brazilian National Commission for the Sustainable Development Goals (NC-SDGs) was established in 2016, under the presidency of Dilma Rousseff (2011–2016). A year later, President Michel Temer (2016–2018) signed the introductory chapter to Brazil’s first and, to date, only Voluntary National Review (VNR).1 In 2019, President Jair Bolsonaro (2019–2022) abolished the NC-SDG. Under his administration, Brazil disengaged from the international sustainable development agenda, while domestic social and environmental governance struc­tures were dismantled. Policies, actions and monitor­ing systems experienced disruption, budgets were reduced or exhausted, spaces for public participation shrunk, and restrictions were placed on public access to information.2

A history of changing political priorities

Under the first two presidencies of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (2003–2010) and the first presidency of Dilma Rousseff, Brazil made remarkable social achievements. Tailwinds from the global economy and do­mes­tic eco­nomic growth enabled not only dynamic increases in the minimum wage and pensions, but also comprehensive social programmes, mostly based on condi­tional cash transfers (CCTs).3 In addition, a series of executive decisions, congressional acts, and court rulings contributed to a progressive social and human rights agenda. The positive impact of these policies was felt by the vast majority of Brazilians, who elected a candidate from the Workers’ Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores, PT) to the presidency four times in a row. In the context of an “active and assertive foreign policy”,4 such social achievements at home served to raise the country’s international profile as a global development power:5 Brazil engaged in development assistance in Latin America and Lusophone Africa, becoming an emerging donor.6

Things began to change under Rousseff's second presidency, which ended prematurely with her im­peachment, and became even more different under the administrations of her former vice-president Michel Temer. A less favourable international and domestic economic environment, corruption scan­dals, serious political disputes and a rightward shift in the electorate contributed to the rejection of the governing party. Under President Bolsonaro, social policies became more conservative and economic policies more liberal. Environmental protection and indigenous rights were sidelined as obstacles to eco­nomic growth; civil society participation and global governance structures came to be regarded as do­mes­tic and foreign constraints on national state power. With these drastic changes, Brazil exemplifies the abandonment of public policies aligned with the SDGs, as well as the systematic weakening of gov­ernance structures and the dismantling of mecha­nisms for meaningful participation and dialogue.

Political change results in disengagement

Brazil’s retreat from the sustainable development agenda under President Bolsonaro had several dimen­sions. Ideology was a key driver, and the effects were seen in institutional and policy changes. Civil society reports lamented the impact of these changes.

President Bolsonaro’s ideology was shared by key ministers in his cabinet. He won the 2018 presidential election with far-right and populist rhetoric employing exclusionary narratives that remained unchanged throughout his administration. He championed a moralizing, socially conservative and religious agenda.7 He often expressed his doubts about the reality of climate change and his scepticism towards science and clearly prioritized economic goals over environmental and social ones.8

Institutionally, Brazil has also changed. The 2017 VNR was prepared at senior cabinet level.9 The NC-SDGs had been created in 2016, as a consultative body to internalize, disseminate and lend transparency to the process of implementing the 2030 Agenda in Brazil. Its composition was highly inclusive, with equal representation from national, regional and local governments, on the one side, and civil society, academia and the private sector, on the other. With the aim of developing a territorialized plan for the 2030 Agenda, certain federal states created committees to coordinate the implementation of the SDGs at the regional level, and some municipalities imple­mented projects related to the SDGs.10

Brazil abandoned many of its SDG commitments during the Bolsonaro presidency. In 2019, it withdrew from the list of countries reporting to the UN High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF); the SDGs ceased to be mentioned in the nation­al development plans.11 Brazil withdrew its offer to host the Conference of the Parties (COP 25) on climate change in 2019, abandoned most internation­al co­opera­tion on environmental protection, and left the UN Global Compact for Migration “in order to pre­serve national values”, as the president put it. The NC-SDG was disbanded, alongside about five hundred other multi-stakeholder institutions in different policy areas, and replaced by an inter-ministerial and inter-institutional group created within the federal government in 2021, which excluded non-state stakeholders.12

Accordingly, policies also changed. The federal gov­ernment’s 2016–2019 multi-year plan (PPA) and the SDG Commission’s 2017–2019 action plan (elaborated under the Temer administration) were in line with the SDGs. But this changed under Bolsonaro’s presi­dency. Many of the new government’s decisions im­pacted negatively on environmental protection (for example, renewed expansion of resource exploitation in the Amazon region), social policies (for example, severe cuts in health and education spending) and respect for human rights (for example, increasing violence against peasant organizations, indigenous and LGBTQIA+ communities).13 This trend can be illustrated by the government’s standpoint and (in)action in three critical areas.

Bolsonaro led a backlash in Brazil’s domestic and foreign policy.

With policies based on traditional values and religious beliefs, seeking to combat “gender ideology” and protect the “traditional family”, Bolsonaro led a backlash in Brazil’s domestic and foreign policy, putting pressure on the already fragile sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) situation.14 This affected SDG 3 (good health and well-being) and 5 (gender equality). In contrast to Brazil’s historically quite progressive stance, Bolsonaro’s government opposed the use of the term gender in documents, later also any mention of universal access to repro­ductive and sexual health services on the grounds that this could lead to the “promotion of abortion”.15

The Bolsonaro government pursued policies that harmed the protection of the Amazon: the (illegal) appropriation of public land and the indiscriminate granting of land titles, illegal mining in protected areas and indigenous territories, and slash-and-burn agriculture.16 These policies have also increased the vulnerability of indigenous communities living in these areas.17 This is in stark contrast to the 2030 Agenda’s principle of “leaving no one behind”.

Bolsonaro played down the COVID-19 pandemic and opposed containment measures.18 As a result, Brazilian federal states and municipalities launched their own initiatives (using their own resources) to mitigate the effects of the crisis.19 In contrast to the national level and the executive branch, subnational governments and the Federal Supreme Court (STF) remained in general much more committed to the 2030 Agenda.

Civil society assessments

The dismantling of governance structures in various policy areas has been accompanied by a decline in trans­parency. Limiting access to public information violates the commitments made in SDG 16.10. In this context, the role of Brazil’s civil society, which is well organized and vibrant, in monitoring and evaluation becomes even more important. Several NGOs and net­works are dedicated not only to assessing progress towards the SDGs, but also to providing guidance and technical support for the implementation of the SDGs by the private sector, local governments, universities and civil society organizations. The Spotlight Reports by the Civil Society Working Group on the 2030 Agenda (CSWG 2030A), published annually since 2017, provide their own assessment of the data. The sixth edition in 2022 criticizes that the Brazilian Indicators Panel for SDG lacks official data for 140 of the 245 indicators applicable to the national context, the data being mostly from 2017. It also states that Brazil was experiencing significant setbacks: “data regarding increased poverty and hunger, the loss of biodiversity, and an overall decline in the quality of life, irrefutably showcase a society afflicted by the devastating im­pacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and rising inequality”.20 It notes moreover, that 33 million people lacked access to food, and that Brazil, a global power in food production, had shamefully returned to the World Hunger Map, representing a major setback for SDG 2. The 2022 Report states that violence had increased, particularly against women and girls, quilombola communities,21 indigenous peoples, LGBTQIAP+,22 black populations and human rights defenders, and that police violence had been almost completely normalized, in the sense that it was no longer ad­dressed or adequately prosecuted. This development went hand in hand with the government’s promotion of arms and the militarization of civic spaces. The Report also shows how a lack of effective regulation for holding industry accountable for harm to human health and the planet represents an obstacle to achiev­ing the SDGs.23

The way forward: Renewed commitments in a challenging context

Against the backdrop of Bolsonaro’s presidency, there are high expectations (especially abroad) for Lula’s third term. He is feeding these high hopes by telling the international community that his government will now take environmental and climate protection seriously and that Brazil will once again become a trust­worthy partner in this field.24 He has also pledged to rebuild governance and dialogue with civil society in Brazil. As evidence of this, after Lula’s inauguration, Brazil submitted an official bid for the Amazon city of Belem to host COP30 in 2025,25 and Lula announced the reinstatement of the Council for Eco­nomic and Social Development (CDES).26

The prospects for future SDG implementation should be seen in light of Lula’s priorities. He prom­ised to promote social policies and inclusion by ex­panding social programmes and increasing cash transfers. Fighting hunger would again be a priority for his government, he said, both domestically and internationally. Lula is trying to position Brazil as an environmental and food production power, building “on the creativity of the bio-economy and the entre­preneurship of socio-biodiversity”.27 His government wants to initiate a green energy transition and to pro­mote sustainable agriculture and mining.

So far, the reorganization of certain ministries and agencies and the new personnel choices seem to be in line with these promises and priorities. However, falling government revenues, the critical macroeconomic situation and the unfavourable global eco­nomic environment are severely constraining the gov­ern­ment’s actions. A consensus on sustainable devel­op­ment will not automatically emerge in the cabinet, especially as the coalition government is made up of nine parties with different ideological orientations. It also lacks a solid majority in parliament and among state governors.

An integrated sustainable development approach is needed.

High-level German visits, most notably by Chancellor Olaf Scholz in 2023, underline the great expectations for cooperation with the Lula government – seeking support for the ratification of the EU-Merco­sur Association Agreement and new partners for sus­tainable and secure supply chains. The intensification of German and EU relations with Brazil should take into account Brazil’s needs and interests and avoid exacerbating asymmetries and adopting patronising approaches. A frank discussion of divergent views on development and global governance is needed to strengthen coordination in multilateral organizations. Given Brazil’s high poverty rate, a purely con­servationist approach to environmental protection will never be enough. An integrated sustainable devel­opment approach is needed, one that also takes the country’s development needs into account.28 Focussing on traditional commodities would reduce Brazil to the role of a raw material supplier, with fewer positive effects on job creation; resource part­ner­ships should apply a broader approach. This requires technological cooperation, investment and the expansion of value-added opportunities in Brazil and/or within a regional framework. To achieve greater horizontality in cooperation, both partners should jointly explore options for regulatory con­ver­gence, overcoming the “rule makers vs. rule takers” approach. Accordingly, exchange and nego­tiation among parties should begin in the early stages of development of standards and regulations. In addi­tion, Germany and the EU could offer support for the necessary adjustments in Brazil during the initial implementation phase of the standards.

China: Xi Jinping’s Global Community of Development

Nadine Godehardt

China’s 2021 VNR Report demonstrates very clearly how much the logic of Chinese foreign politics has changed under Xi Jinping. The report is peppered with official terminology usually known as “tifa” (lit. the way something is put). These often obscure “watchwords” are crucial to understanding the “topsy-turvy world of Chinese politics”.1 In the past, tifa were mostly used domestically, but under Xi Jinping’s leadership they increasingly characterize China’s foreign policy speech with the aim of estab­lishing a global Chinese discourse system. In the VNR report, repeated references to building “a community with a shared future for mankind” (contrasting the more widely used “international community”), “a global health community”, “a community of shared future and development without hunger”, providing “Chi­nese solutions” to various global problems, or “build­ing a beautiful China” and “a beautiful world” under­score the Communist Party of China’s (CPC) goal of transforming the meaning and practices of global development by introducing their own development speech to the global community. Thus, the global discourse on “the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Devel­opment” represents an opportunity for Beijing to pro­mote China’s development model to the world.

The 2030 Agenda and Chinese politics

The structure of the VNR report indicates China’s ambition of becoming a leader in global development. It presents the country’s achievements in specific SDGs (such as poverty reduction, food security, global health, climate, infrastructure connectivity), but more importantly goes on to present China’s experience as an opportunity to offer specific “Chinese solutions” to others. The notion of Chinese solution (Zhongguo fang’an) was introduced by Xi Jinping during the 95th anniversary of the founding of the CPC. Based on China’s specific development path and its achieve­ments in recent decades, “Chinese solution” marks the end of following Western countries’ proposals. Instead, it emphasizes the leadership’s readiness to put forward distinct Chinese knowledge and solutions to address global issues.2 Mention of various Chinese global cooperation platforms, partnerships and funds in the VNR report is another indicator of this new self-understanding of China as a provider and reformer of global development.

China’s domestic politics and the SDGs

The prioritization of specific SDGs (particularly SDG 1 and 2) is already obvious in China’s first position paper on the 2030 Agenda published by the Ministry of For­eign Affairs (MFA) in April 2016.3 It indicates firstly that the Chinese leadership looks at the SDGs through the lens of its domestic socio-economic development targets; secondly that China’s global language on devel­opment is very much an extension of its internal policies. In this context, it is also crucial to analyze China’s Five-Year Plans (FYP), in order to understand the extent to which global themes and domestic goals are connected. Although the 13th FYP (2016–2020) mentions only an abstract commitment to “actively implement the 2030 Agenda”, it more importantly lays out the different layers and objectives of domes­tic development, which are in line with most of the achievements mentioned in the 2021 VNR report.4 This mainly refers to the objective of ending poverty, which has indeed been a long-term goal of the Chi­nese leadership. But Xi Jinping connected the fight against poverty closely with the fulfilment of the “China Dream”, or in other words the “rejuvenation of the Chinese nation”. Shortly after Xi took charge of the Communist Party and was named chairman of the Central Military Commission in 2012 he announc­ed goals for the “two centenaries” to achieve the “China Dream”. The first centenary goal – to build a “moder­ately prosperous society in all respects” without absolute poverty and hunger – was supposed to be achieved by 2021 – one hundred years after the found­ing of the CPC in 1921. Ending absolute poverty was the precondition for the second centenary, to devel­op China into a modern, sustainable and beauti­ful socialist country by the one-hundredth anniversary of the People’s Republic in 2049.

The 14th FYP (2021–2025) therefore highlights the necessity to achieve a “new stage of development”, focussing on domestic innovation and technology-driven development, that is also more sustainable and green.5 China’s turn to “quality development” is also necessary to reduce dependency on foreign industry and technology.6 This shift of emphasis has also been reflected in China’s foreign policy since 2021, and can be tracked in important documents such as the 2021 White Paper on China’s International Development in the New Era or the 2023 White Paper on Green Development, and also in the announcement of new global initiatives like the 2021 Global Development Initiative (GDI).

In general, analysis of central domestic documents such as the FYPs helps us to differentiate China’s take on development from European stances.7 With­out delv­ing too far into the long history of the Chi­nese development model, the 13th and 14th FYPs both already underline central components of a Chi­nese con­cept of development built mainly around innova­tive, infrastructural, digital and technical solu­tions. It also endorses a state-led understanding of development which only includes outside agencies when they are needed to achieve a particular target.

China’s global discourse on development and the SDGs

Although China’s international statements on devel­op­ment cooperation and foreign aid have long been regarded as “externalization of China’s development agenda”8, the coherence of internal and external language has reached a new level under Xi. China’s external relations are increasingly viewed as an exten­sion of domestic politics, which also means that style, language and instruments are increasingly aligned. Accordingly, the Chinese leadership has sought to advance the SDGs both domestically and within Chi­nese-led international cooperation mechanisms.

The Chinese leadership identifies the UN SDGs as anchor points for transforming the idea of global development in a Chinese way.

Since 2016, this has mainly happened through the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), where the Chinese tried to link up with relevant UN agencies. For instance, in April 2016 they signed a letter of intent with the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) “to jointly plan con­crete actions to promote both BRI interconnectivity and strategic policy docking” and a memorandum of understanding with the UN Development Program (UNDP) “on jointly promoting the construction of the Belt and Road”.9 As host of the 2016 G20 Summit, Xi Jinping promoted implementation of the SDGs by initiating a G20 Action Plan on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Other milestones are the two Belt and Road Forums (BRF, 2017/2019), which put forward plans on related topics such as energy cooperation (2017)10 and green development (for ex­am­ple establishing the BRI International Green Devel­opment Coalition in 2019). This culminated in the comment by UN Secretary-General António Guterres at the second BRF that “the United Nations is poised to support the alignment of the Belt and Road Ini­tiative with the Sustainable Development Goals”.11 Guterres’s speech represented a great political success for the Chinese government, especially regarding all the efforts that were made to globalize the scope of the BRI. These examples and the very detailed 2022 Progress Report of the Belt and Road Initiative in Sup­port of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustain­able Development entitled “Partnering for a Brighter Shared Future” highlight the Chinese goal of making the SDGs compatible with the BRI.

Xi Jinping’s translation of the SDGs into a Chinese-style Global Community of Devel­op­ment

In Xi Jinping’s first address to the UNGA in September 2015 he introduced the (awkwardly-named) concept of a “community with a shared future for mankind”. This phrase was written into the party constitution in 2017 and a year later into the state constitution. As the principal goal of China’s foreign policy to this day, it positions “China simultaneously as one among many developing countries, treating all as equals, and as a major world leader that exerts influence over other states and the international system”.12 The attempt to establish this “global community” should not be mistaken for China trying to institute a paral­lel international system. Rather, it stands for another “Chinese solution” to transform and reform the exist­ing order. It also highlights that China, as a country in the Global South, has gained enough power and knowledge to assert its own understanding of global governance in the world, mainly through its unique concept of global development.

China as a country of the Global South has gained enough power and knowledge to assert its own under­standing of global governance to the world.

One of the major instruments used to build the Chinese-style global community has been the BRI, including attempts to connect UN agencies with the BRI, as in the case of the SDGs.13 Although the BRI still exists, it has lost momentum and financial back­ing due to the socio-economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.14 Moreover, all the different (but also not very sustainable) attempts to link the 2030 Agenda and the BRI listed in the above.mentioned 2022 Pro­gress Report cannot hide the fact that BRI has not become established as a Chinese narrative (or tifa) for global development.

The Global Development Initiative

Xi announced the Global Development Initiative (GDI) at the General Debate of the 76th Session of the UNGA in September 2021, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the changing geopolitical environment. He highlights development as the key to “build a better world” and, consequently, the GDI as the key facilitator to achieve the SDGs. In contrast to the BRI, which essentially emerged from the regional to the global level and never defined a responsible agency, the GDI now represents the overarching global frame­work that is to integrate all other Chinese development-related mechanisms.

At the UN, China established the “Group of Friends of the Global Development Initiative” which seeks, as the Chinese side noted, “greater complementarity between the GDI and the 2030 Agenda”.15 The “Global Development Report” published by the Chinese Cen­ter for International Knowledge on Development (CIKD)16 in June 2022 highlights central challenges to global implementation of the SDGs, including extreme poverty, global food insecurity and the global digital divide (or the lack of digital connectivity). The report then presents the GDI as the Chinese proposal for dealing with these global problems, and indicates that the “GDI seeks synergy with existing mechanisms and calls on all parties to build a global community of devel­opment”.17 Most platforms mentioned in the report are regional or sub-regional organizations in Africa and Asia (such as AU, ASEAN), China+X mecha­nisms such as the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) and BRICS, or multilateral mechanisms such as the UN, APEC and the G20.

The Chinese leadership hopes that the GDI will estab­lish the strategic (and global) narrative for a Chi­nese-led club promoting Chinese-style global devel­op­ment projects, while harmonizing parts of the 2030 Agenda with Chinese goals. The Chinese regard “de­vel­opment” as a key selling point to the world, and in particular to the Global South. This is deeply linked to China’s own experience as a developing country and its socio-economic successes. But it is also in line with China’s growing self-perception as a lead­ing power in the Global South and the world more broad­ly. Xi reiterated this recently when he explained that “Chinese-style modernization breaks with the myth of ‘modernization=westernization’ … [and] expands the choices for developing countries to mod­ernize and offers a Chinese solution for a better social sys­tem for mankind”.18

Responding to Xi’s attempt to make development more Chinese

China under Xi Jinping represents a global power and a crucial part of the existing – fragile – international system. Understanding today’s China as Global China acknowledges the country’s increasingly global activ­ities, linkages and world-wide presence, and highlights the Chinese leadership’s intention to transform global norms and rules.

With regard to the 2030 Agenda, China is actively working to enhance the compatibility of the SDGs with CPC targets because development is key to the Chinese path to modernization under Xi’s leadership. The recently announced GDI quite directly translates Chinese domestic development priorities for the glob­al context. China is not only actively seeking to shape the meaning of global development, but also creating what I would call a “global development club” within the existing UN Development System. This approach of “strategic docking” has already been applied in the many BRI formats, where acceptance of the overall for­mat (for instance by signing MoUs) has usually been the prerequisite for access to any BRI benefits (such as credits, loans, etc.). With the GDI the Chinese leadership is now manifesting this practice in the UN system.

The analysis yields three conclusions for German and European policy-makers in their dealings with China, and in particular concerning China’s take on global development. First, the competition over meanings and approaches to global development seems to cul­minate in a battle of narratives. Here China is again ahead of its liberal competitors in its use of what is referred to in Party-speak and scholarly publications as discourse power (huayuquan). Applying this sort of power involves playing a proactive and persistent role on the global stage with the long-term goal of grad­ually reshaping the language and structure of world politics. It is crucial for the German and European side to accept this strategic challenge without simply rejecting Chinese initiatives outright. Rather, German and European actors need to be very precise when dis­cussing to global development, the SDGs or any other related European initiative (such as Global Gateway), in particular highlighting the human-rights-based approach and concepts like civic space and “leaving no one behind”. This implies continuous training of German and European policymakers and administrative staff to boost strategic communication capacity especially – but not exclusively – towards China.

Second, if China is regarded as a crucial part of the existing and future international system, then part of the strategic reality of dealing with China is embrac­ing contradictions. Consequently, while the Chinese GDI (which is accepted, if not welcomed by several UN agencies) might not be acceptable to European politicians, this should not preclude Chinese and Euro­pean development actors working together on the ground. Europe also need to start formulating its own model for global development.

Third, enhancing global development and achiev­ing the SDGs is very much about the so-called Global South and South-South Cooperation. China under Xi clearly sees itself as a leader and like-minded partner of these countries. The European Union must acquire a realistic understanding of how these countries see China and seek to better understand their agency in their relationship with China.

All three arguments imply that it is high time for Germany and the European Union to develop a suc­cess­ful political narrative for their sustainable devel­op­ment activities. Accordingly, the Global Gateway should not be presented simply as solving “our China prob­lem” but rather as an opportunity to identify and address development concerns of the Global South as com­mon challenges. Referencing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the SDGs – as com­mon goals and targets agreed by all UN member states – would provide a good starting point.

Egypt’s SDG Policy: A Fig‑leaf for Consolidation of Power

Stephan Roll

The Egyptian government appears to be maximally committed to achieving the SDGs, at least judging by the many policy documents published and institutions established in recent years. Right after the mili­tary seized power in Cairo in the summer of 2013, the new political leadership under (former defence minister) President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi began working on a national sustainable development strategy (SDS).1 As a result, the country was well prepared when the UN General Assembly adopted the 2030 Agenda in 2015. Shortly thereafter, the government launched Egypt Vision 2030, which is supposed to be aligned with the SDGs and serves as a framework for their implementation.

The framework for implementing the SDS was successively expanded in the following years, with particular reference to the SDGs.2 By the end of 2015, the National Committee for Monitoring the Implementation of the SDGs had been formed, sectoral strategies had been developed in individual ministries, and dedicated SDG units had been established. At the beginning of 2022, the Egyptian parliament established a Supreme Council for Planning and Sus­tainable Development,3 chaired by the President of the Republic, to develop sustainable development policies at the highest state level and coordinate their implementation.

Above all, the political leadership in Cairo never tires of emphasizing its political will to implement the SDGs. Hala al-Said, the minister of planning and economic development, has been particularly promi­nent, and has generally become one of the key play­ers within the government in recent years. She played a central role in the inter-ministerial coordination of the SDGs, and was also the minister in charge of pre­paring the Voluntary National Reports (VNRs).

In 2021, the Egyptian government published its third VNR report. In international comparison, Egypt thus appears particularly committed to voluntary SDG self-reporting. The validity of these reports, how­ever, is more than doubtful, as will be shown. This raises questions about the motives behind Egypt’s SDG policies.

SDG progress – mainly on paper

The Egyptian government sets high standards for its reporting, as outlined in the introduction of its latest VNR report. That document states that the VNR is a “country report and not a government report” and that employing a participatory approach and a thor­ough quantitative analysis “ensures an accurate and real portrayal of the SDGs situation”.4 Doubts have been raised about this. In her analysis of the 2018 VNR, the Egyptian professor of public administration Laila El Baradei concluded that “[a] lot of information is lacking and there is a clear interest in not reporting accurately, or at all”.5 Although Baradei’s remarks refer to reporting about SDG 16 (Peace, justice and strong institutions) her conclusions seem relevant to other SDGs as well.

One of Egypt’s policy priorities is poverty eradication (SDG1 “No Poverty”). The 2021 VNR highlights major achievements in this regard. It claims that the poverty rate, “which had been rising even during periods of high growth, has declined for the first time in 20 years in 2020 to 29.7% down from 32.5% in 2018”.6 Thanks to rapid response measures, even the COVID pandemic had not reversed this trend, it asserted. Closer scrutiny casts doubt over these assertions.

With regard to the official Egyptian poverty figures, the first question is whether the government statistics presented are reliable at all. The country’s data transparency is extremely poor,7 and the authori­tarian, police-state environment significantly hinders independent data collection. In that context, it is telling that the VNR repeatedly refers to an external analysis by a US-based research institute – in an apparent attempt to lend more credibility to the figures cited in the VNR.8 In fact, the cited analysis is not publicly available, and the institute had previously published a flawed report on Egypt’s SDG performance, which gave the impression that it had been censored by the Egyptian government.9

Secondly, statements about changes in poverty over time, as made by the Egyptian government, are methodologically problematic to say the least. Since the definition of the poverty rate changes, the official poverty figures are not comparable over time.10

Egypt’s VNR presents grossly misleading conclusions.

Moreover, it appears that the VNR deliberately presents grossly misleading conclusions. At several points, the report implies that the poverty rate de­clined despite the COVID-19 pandemic. The data, how­ever, had been collected in 2019, before the start of the pandemic.11 The report even concludes that the pandemic “is expected to slow down the progress in reducing poverty rates over the short term, although thankfully not causing a reversal”.12 When the report was written, the Egyptian government was already aware of very different calculations. In May 2020 the Institute of National Planning, which is part of the Ministry of Planning and Economic Development, published three scenarios on the impact of the pan­demic on the country’s poverty rate. Even the opti­mis­tic scenario projected an increase of more than 5.5 percentage points, with the worst-case scenario projecting an jump of more than 12.2 percentage points.13 Surveys by the national statistics agency CAPMAS told the same story. More than 70 percent of surveyed households expected their income to fall in the spring of 2020 as a result of the pandemic.14 This data exposes the conclusions in the 2021 VNR report as highly unlikely and thus misleading (if not out­right deceptive).

Prioritizing mega-projects

As the above analysis indicates, the Egyptian gov­ern­ment is telling a success story that has little to do with reality. Yet, at the same time, it is obviously not seeking to deny development deficits altogether. Rather, the VNR’s findings are intended to suggest that the country, and thus the political leadership, is well on its way to achieving the goals.

However, the choice of policies and instruments and their concrete implementation has been heavily criticised by civil society actors, journalists and researchers. Two types of criticism are salient. The first is implementation issues, as in the case of the Haya Karima-initiative, which is intended to improve the situation in rural parts of Egypt, or Takaful and Karama, a cash transfer programme intended to make the subsidy-based social support system more tar­geted. While these programmes are not questioned in principle, they are criticized for poor operationalisation and shortcomings in embedding them in a com­prehensive social protection system.15

The second is more fundamental criticism directed at the core element of President Sisi’s development approach: boosting megaprojects.16 Sisi’s government is focusing on large-scale projects such as creating a new capital, constructing Egypt’s first nuclear power plant, expanding the rail network, building social housing and developing the Suez Canal Corridor, ostensibly to achieve several of the SDGs at once.17 Egyptian officials describe the mega-projects as “blue­prints for long-term growth”18, while the almost en­tirely state-controlled19 mainstream media refers to them as “the guaranteed path” to the future.20

Critics complain that completely misplaced political priorities have led to inordinate overspending. While reliable data on cost is lacking, the figure of US$10.34 billion stated in the 2021 VNR appears un­realistic.21 Depending on which major projects are included, the costs are likely to be many times higher. Against the background of dramatically increasing national debt, these projects place an enormous bur­den on the public budget – which has been in dif­ficulty for years due to the country’s debt service costs. In 2021, around half of state revenues had to be spent on debt servicing.22 In that context, the lack of transparency and comprehensible cost-benefit analyses is very concerning.

The construction of Egypt’s new administrative capital endangers several SDGs.

The example of President Sisi’s flagship project, the construction of a new administrative capital to the east of Cairo, demonstrates the internal contradictions of this approach particularly well. While Sisi emphasizes its importance for Egypt’s sustainable development, initial independent analyses come to exactly the opposite conclusion: the project is en­viron­mentally and socially problematic.23 Instead of fostering the implementation of the SDGs, it endan­gers several of them. Apart from over-exploitation of scarce water resources and the lack of affordable hous­ing, the immense cost of the project raises the question of whether this is the best investment for sustainable development – especially if the 2030 Agenda’s principle of “leaving no one behind” is taken into account. Observers estimate that the cost could rise as high as $59 billion.24

The project of the new administrative capital spot­lights the question of who benefits most from such mega-projects. The big winner is not the private sec­tor but the Egyptian military, which can use them to further expand its economic footprint. Traditionally, the military has always played a strong role in the Egyptian economy, and its economic activities have expanded further under President Sisi.25 In the case of the new capital, the armed forces control the majority of the Administrative Capital Urban Development Com­pany (ACUD), which controls the building land and acts as the general contractor. Through ACUD the military will be able to generate significant revenue even after the construction work has been completed, as it will be able to lease office space to government institutions. So while the benefits of the new capital for achieving the SDGs are more than questionable, the armed forces are likely to continue to benefit massively from the project.26

Outlook

It is becoming increasingly difficult for the Egyptian leadership to persuade its own population or the ex­ternal donor community that its commitment to the SDGs is credible. The narrative of positive devel­op­ment dynamics, created by demonstratively em­bed­ding the SDGs in the national development strategy and presenting supposed development achievements in the VNR, is increasingly unconvincing against the backdrop of the country’s dramatic socioeconomic crisis.

In March 2022, Egypt had to request additional IMF support to prevent an imminent default. The coun­try’s significant borrowing in recent years has left it vulnerable to external shocks, such as the pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war. The costly megaprojects have also played a significant role in exacerbating this vulnerability. Even the IMF, which had been ex­tremely uncritical of Egypt’s development model,27 now says that “spending on public projects, including national investment projects, has contributed to pressures on the current account”.28

The currency devaluation caused by the debt crisis and the sharp rise in inflation, which reached over 32 percent in March 2023, close to an all-time record, are likely to have dramatically worsened the situation con­cerning SDG1.29 Nevertheless, a voluntary change of course by the Sisi government cannot be expected. The misguided state development planning is not an accident resulting from a lack of professional competence. Rather, it is the deliberate decision of a politi­cal leadership that prioritizes its own power interests over the benefit for society as a whole. Here, the government’s proclaimed SDG orientation was helpful in distracting attention from the focus on mega-projects, which primarily benefited the mili­tary, as the backbone of President Sisi’s rule.

For external actors such as Germany and its European partners, it is therefore important to understand that in an authoritarian state such as Egypt, declara­tions of intent and the establishment of institutions are by no means sufficient conditions for successful implementation of the SDGs. In such a political en­viron­ment, the usefulness of “self-reporting” in the form of the VNRs must therefore also be questioned.

To ensure that Egyptian government spending is directed towards projects that align with the SDGs, the focus should be on securing binding commit­ments to SDG-compatible spending policies. Compliance should be regularly monitored as a prerequisite for receiving new financial assistance. Such monitor­ing must rely on independent analyses rather than those of the Egyptian government. The most crucial aspect, however, is to exert pressure for improvements in the political framework including a mini­mum of separation of powers, an independent civil society and freedom of the press. Successful implementation of the SDGs is unlikely in Egypt, as long as the country lacks any checks and balances in its political system.

India: SDGs between Nationalism and Development

Christian Wagner

The launch of the SDGs in 2015 came immediately after the landslide victory of Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 2014 elections. In his campaign Modi propagated development issues in conjunction with his vision of a new India prioritiz­ing the interests of the Hindu majority (Hindutva). Modi’s strategy of combining nationalism and devel­op­ment has been successful: he was re-elected in 2019 with an increased majority. Successful socio-economic development is a pre-requisite for Modi’s larger politi­cal goal of making India into a developed nation by 2047, one hundred years after independence.1

India’s Hindu nationalism since 2014 embraces SDGs for its own agenda.

Accord­ingly, the SDG agenda was easily incorporated into the broader Hindutva narrative. Even if the SDGs seem to be absent from public discourse, they are omni­present in the daily lives of large segments of the population in the form of welfare programmes such as Banking for All, Clean India, the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act.2

But there are also structural impediments to the implementation of the SDGs, including a lack of resources and data. In a few instances SDG targets have become part of the larger political controversy over Hindutva. These include the question of citizen­ship and the dispute between the centre and the states over Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS).

Hindutva: A new India

Modi’s new India builds on the concept of Hindutva (Hindu-ness). The idea of India as a Hindu nation (Hindu Rasthra) can be traced back to the writings of V. D. Savarkar and M. S. Golwalkar in the 1920s and 1930s. They were inspired by the Hindu traditions and the nationalist movements in Europe. Their goal was to revive the glorious Hindu Nation that had sup­posedly been destroyed by outside invaders, especially the Muslims and the British. Golwalkar described a Hindu nation unified by geography, race, culture, his­tory and language.3 Hindutva has been characterized as a loose ideological construct based on “othering” outsiders and including forms of retribution for past injustices.4 Golwalkar’s criteria contextualize some of the actions of the BJP after 2014, within the frame­work of Hindutva nation-building. The question of race or descent/ancestry surfaces in the controversies over the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). In the field of culture and history there have been attempts to treat mythologies like the Mahabharata and the Ramayana as historical events, to rewrite textbooks and to make Hindi the only language.

India and the Sustainable Development Goals

India supported the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) of 2000, and a period of strong economic growth in the 2000s resulted in a notable reduction in poverty. According to the UN, India lifted 271 million people out of poverty between 2006 and 2016.5

The United Progressive Alliance (UPA) under the leadership of the Congress Party negotiated the SDGs for India in 2014/15, but implementation coincided with the election of Narendra Modi as prime minister. The central organization for the SDG process is Niti Aayog, replacing the Planning Commission which was dissolved in 2014 after Modi took office. Imple­mentation of the SDGs is monitored through the National Indicator Framework.6 The government has collaborated with a range of actors from international and civil society organizations (CSOs) “in articulating policies and methods of SDG implementation”.7 But the curtailment of CSO activities under the Modi government may also restrict their capacity to moni­tor the implementation of SDGs.8

The implementation of the SDGs has initiated a debate about successes, problems and challenges.9 Even official documents like the Voluntary National Review (VNR) mention challenges and shortcomings in the implementation of the programmes.10 India has a long history of development programmes, which have suffered problems including lack of politi­cal will, inadequate funding, mismanagement, lack of proper data and policy coordination, and cor­ruption. Then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi declared in 1985 that only 15 paise of every rupee from devel­opment programmes reached the poor segments of society.11

Recent innovations in governance have improved the delivery of social programmes. The introduction of the Aadhaar Card in 2009 allows direct transfers to eligible persons and has reduced the role of inter­mediaries in state transfers.12 The Modi government has intensified efforts to establish e-governance. The trinity of a free bank account (Jan Dhan), a personal identification number (Aadhaar card) and a mobile phone,13 initiated in 2015, is often referred to as a major step towards improving the delivery of welfare programmes.14

Structural challenges: Funding and data

Implementation of the SDGs faces two main challenges: proper funding and the lack of reliable data. The first VNR in 2017 admitted that “India is unlikely to gather sufficient revenues for achieving the SDGs”.15 In 2019, a report by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) stated that India would have to spend 10 percent of its GDP to achieve the SDG goals by 2030.16 The eco­nomic setback of the pandemic has further constrain­ed India’s financial possibilities. The government has initiated various reforms to attract foreign direct in­vestment for infrastructure as a prerequisite for the SDGs.

Progress of SDGs hampered by lack of funding and poor data.

In 2015 experts pointed out that India’s data sys­tems were not adequately equipped to deal with the requirements of the upcoming SDGs.17 Civil society groups have noted the lack of an accurate SDG tracker to monitor progress.18 India has improved its position in the SDG index 2020–21 but methodological changes such as dropping the Gini Index as an indicator of inequality have been viewed critically.19 The data problem has been further aggravated by the postponement of the 2021 census because of the pan­demic. The census data is an important resource for many welfare programmes, such as the Public Distri­bution System (PDS) which covers 75 percent of the rural and 50 percent of the urban population.20 The publication of other official data sets, for instance on health management and maternal mortality, has also been delayed.21 In the meantime, the question of the census has become politicized in connection with con­troversial issues like the National Register of Citi­zens which has sparked large scale protests (see below). Political observers suggest that the gov­ern­ment wants to avoid renewed nationwide protests and may postpone the census until after the national elections in 2024.22 But the lack of census data will also have far-reaching effects on social programmes and hence the SDGs.

SDGs and citizenship

Target 16.9 of India’s National Indicator Framework calls for the provision of “legal identity for all, in­cluding birth registration”.23 In states like Bihar and Uttar Pradesh less than 70 percent of births are prop­erly registered.24 But “legal identity” can also touch on the question of citizenship, which became one of the most controversial issues after 2014.

The background to this controversy is the changes in India’s citizenship law from the principle of place of birth (jus solis) to ancestry (jus sanguinis).25 The BJP decided in 2003 to set up a National Register of Indian Citizens (NRIC) based on a National Population Register (NPR). The debate escalated after 2014 after a 2013 ruling by the Supreme Court requiring an up­date of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in the state of Assam. In 1985 the Congress state govern­ment had signed an accord to address the question of illegal immigration mostly from Bangladesh. The updated NRC for Assam published in August 2019 declared 1.9 million people stateless. The issue gained nationwide importance for several reasons. First, Home Minister Amit Shah encouraged other states to set up their own NRCs. He also called for a nation­wide NRC. Second, because many of the stateless per­sons in Assam were Hindus, the BJP pushed through a controversial Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) in December 2019 which allowed easier naturalisation of persecuted religious minorities from neighbouring countries – including Hindus and Buddhists but ex­cluding Muslims. The legislation triggered coun­try­wide protests. Muslims opposed the law because they felt (further) discriminated. Lower castes and tribal groups protested because they feared that they would not be able to supply the required documents for a proper registration. The protests were joined by liberal groups who saw the CAA as a violation of the constitution because religion was included as a criterion for citizenship. The outbreak of the pan­demic in spring 2020 brought the protests to a halt but the issue lingers on.

Centre, states and social programmes

A second area in which SDGs clash with the Hindutva agenda is the controversy between the centre and the states over welfare programmes. The autocratic ten­dencies of Hindutva include a concentration of power at the centre. The government has made several moves that infringe on the constitutional competences of the states. These include the dissolution of the state of Jammu and Kashmir into two Union territories in 2019, the failed attempt to reform the farm laws in 2019/20, and disputes over the role and powers of the governors, who are nominated by the centre, vis-à-vis elected state governments.

Modi introduced the idea of a cooperative and com­petitive federalism to promote development and to tackle the imbalances between the states. The 14th Finance Commission gave the states 42 percent of the resources from the divisible pool.26 But the 15th Finance Commission, set up in 2017, changed tack, tying financial transfers to the states to the implemen­tation of national welfare programmes, the so-called Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS). These CSSs became the main bone of contention.27 The political intention seems to have been to penalise state gov­ern­ments that operate their own welfare programmes.

The CSSs are planned by the centre without con­sulting the states. This “one size fits all” model has often been criticized, because state governments may have different priorities on welfare programmes. More­over, CSSs are often directly monitored by the Union government.

The political implications are obvious, as both the centre and the states would like voters to give them credit for the benefits of welfare programmes. In the case of CSS, the benefits would be attributed directly to Prime Minister Modi. They include flagship welfare programs like the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) (SDG 1) and the Swachh Bharat Mission for better sanitation (SDG 6).28 Studies have shown that people tended to give credit to the Union government for the CSSs, which therefore contributed to Modi’s re-election in 2019.29

Prospects: Hindutva and the SDGs

The success of the SDGs at the global level will depend largely on the extent to which India, with one-sixth of the world’s population, is able to achieve its goals. The protagonists of Hindutva will also have an interest in implementing the SDGs, which will sup­port their own agenda for development. At the same time, the political sensitivity of certain issues may delay progress on the respective SDG targets.

India’s overall success in achieving the SDGs will depend on the government’s ability to overcome structural constraints. Given the financial constraints, more reforms are needed in order to attract FDI and to increase economic growth as a prerequisite for better infrastructure. And in order to provide sound data on the progress of the SDGs, it may be necessary to depoliticize the census by separating it from other projects on the Hindutva agenda.

Kenya’s Infrastructure-driven Path to the SDGs. Game Changer or White Elephant?

Karoline Eickhoff and Marcel Meyer

Kenya aims to become a middle-income country by 2030. That will require significant economic devel­opment reflected in a stronger GDP growth, social development to improve quality of life for all citizens, and policy reforms to increase the effectiveness and accountability of government services.1 As reflected in the country’s Voluntary National Reviews, the coun­try’s SDG targets are aligned with these national development goals. However, despite Kenya’s signifi­cant economic potential and regional importance, the effectiveness and inclusiveness of public development spending has been impaired by the preference of suc­cessive governments for prestige infrastructure proj­ects and burgeoning borrowing, and the incentive and opportunity structures in public procurement.

SDGs in Kenya

In many ways, Kenya is a poster child for SDG imple­mentation. Its former permanent representative to the UN co-chaired the working group that developed the SDGs, while the previous government channelled the SDGs into policies and strategies, implemented multi-stakeholder consultation and localization mecha­nisms, and created dedicated institutions for SDG coordination and liaison. Unlike many other coun­tries, Kenya is well on track to meet its climate targets and is one of Africa’s best performers in terms of data availability and reporting.2 Kenya has also adopted an SDG acceleration strategy.3

Nevertheless, the country faces major challenges in relation to SDGs that are critical to achieving the “leave no one behind” (LNOB) principle, namely ending poverty (SDG 1), eradicating hunger (SDG 2), providing basic health services (SDG 3), access to safe water and sanitation (SDG 6), and reducing inequalities (SDG 10).4 In this vein, one of the key challenges highlighted in the second Voluntary National Review in 2020 is the increase in the number of Kenyans living in poverty over the prior decade and the con­tinuing lack of social and economic opportunities for large sections of the population.5 Recent World Bank figures support this assessment, showing that poverty and inequality remain among Kenya’s key develop­ment challenges.

In addition to population growth, national stakeholders point to external factors such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine, the effects of cli­mate change, and insufficient funding.6 However, the lack of economic and social benefits for the wider popu­lation also raises questions as to the inclusiveness of the longer-term economic growth model pur­sued by Kenyan governments over the last 15 years and the governance of public procurement. Accordingly, Kenya has made very limited progress regarding SDG 16 (peace, justice and strong institutions), mainly due to the lack of enforcement of anti-corruption laws.7

Infrastructure-driven economic growth as “game changer”?

In 2008, President Mwai Kibaki launched “Kenya Vision 2030”, a development blueprint aimed at trans­forming the country into a newly-industrializing middle-income economy. While the vision has eco­nomic, political and social pillars, priority was given to economic growth, treating infrastructure development (SDG 9) as a key enabler with a multiplier effect on other sectors.8 High priority was given to the de­vel­opment of economic infrastructure along regional corridors: – roads, bridges, railways, fibre optic cables.

To speed up delivery, many of Kenya’s Vision 2030 flagship infrastructure projects were implemented through external borrowing from various sources, such as sovereign Eurobonds,9 amid allegations of cronyism, corruption and mismanagement of public finances.10 In addition, the government’s prioritiza­tion of infrastructure coincided with China’s advance into Africa through the Belt and Road Initiative, under which various large-scale projects were financed and implemented. Examples include the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR), Kenya’s most expensive infrastructure project, and the port of Lamu.11 Other donors and development partners also prioritized infrastructure development to facilitate trade and transport. As a result, a disproportional 32 percent of official devel­opment assistance (ODA) to Kenya has been invested in economic infrastructure and services.12 The Kenyan government’s focus on major infrastructure investment has contributed to the country’s public debt ris­ing to nearly 70 percent of GDP.13 Today, debt service obligations limit the government’s discretion in setting funding priorities.14 At the same time, public investment in social sectors such as basic healthcare has declined and remains below international and regional recommendations for minimum levels of social expenditure.15

However, the benefits of economic infrastructure investments have not yet reached the general public, and especially not marginalized groups. The limited effectiveness of these investments is also reflected in the very moderate progress on SDG 9 (resilient infra­structure), where major challenges remain.16 Studies on the socio-economic impacts of infrastructure proj­ects in Kenya have produced mixed results, highlight­ing modest increases in employment opportunities for residents living near infrastructure schemes on the one hand and crowding-out effects, especially of vulnerable groups, on the other.17 Recent government priority projects such as the Nairobi Expressway have been widely criticized for benefitting citizens in well-off neighbourhoods while largely failing to meet the mobility needs of low-income citizens.18 Similar dy­namics can be observed in the wider region. Research on development corridors in East Africa has highlight­ed the risks of failing to deliver on the social dimension of the SDGs due to trade-offs between eco­nomic growth on the one hand and reducing in­equality and poverty on the other.19

Rent-seeking by political and business elites continues to influence government decision-making on priority programmes.

In Kenya, doubts about the validity of the prevail­ing economic growth model are compounded by risks arising from the incentive and opportunity structure embedded in public procurement. Rent-seeking by political and business elites, including government contractors and international construction companies, continues to influence government decision-making on priority projects and programmes. Public procurement is particularly prone to misappropriation of funds: the Mombasa–Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway project is just one prominent example that has drawn widespread criticism from the public and the courts for opaque tendering, inflated costs, and alleged kickbacks for government officials, in which Chinese investors have also been implicated.20 Al­though difficult to prove, it is estimated that around one third of Kenya’s annual budget is lost to graft.21 While Kenya’s score in Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index has improved marginally over the past decade (ranked 123 out of 180 countries in 2022), the country still suffers serious levels of pub­lic sector corruption, with 45 percent of public service users reporting having paid a bribe during the pre­vious year.22 The European Union recently raised con­cerns about the government’s limited efforts to tackle corruption, particularly in public procurement.23 The dynamics suggest that the interests of the elites tend to prevail over the public interest in investment decisions, resulting in poor outcomes for the coun­try’s LNOB agenda.

Ruto’s “hustler nation”: A new development paradigm?

William Ruto became president of Kenya in September 2022. His campaign targeted Kenya’s “hustlers”, the informal micro-businesses and small traders, as opposed to the “dynasties” of the country’s political elites. Amidst the rising cost of living, the growing fiscal burden of debt servicing and ongoing severe drought, Ruto signalled a turnaround on government spending, advocating a “bottom up” economic model that seeks fiscal consolidation while promoting eco­nomic growth.24 His economic advisor David Ndii argues for a shift away from infrastructure-led devel­op­ment to focus on agricultural productivity instead, following the example of Latin American countries with vast land resources.25

As the government shifts its economic approach, pitfalls remain, in particular regarding the inclusivity of the growth model.

However, as the government gradually shifts its economic approach, pitfalls remain, in particular regarding the inclusivity of the growth model. First, while the government has started to scale back mega-projects planned by its predecessor, several central projects from Kenya Vision 2030 are likely to remain on the agenda. Questions of national prestige are there­fore likely to remain important in spending decisions. Second, the government is increasingly turning to private-sector financing to drive economic growth. But private investors are unlikely to address the resource gap in the social sectors, as their invest­ments are profit-driven. Third, to promote entrepreneurship and economic growth in the manufacturing sector, the government is, among other things, incen­ti­vizing citizens’ access to credit (most notably through the so-called “Hustler fund”, whose funding mechanisms remain ambiguous). Critics warn that this is simply another form of debt, shifting the risks to pri­vate individuals. In effect, people would “mortgage their future income”26 to finance basic social services such as healthcare, while public development spend­ing remains insufficient to meet basic needs. Last but not least, the credibility of the president’s pro-poor cam­paigning has been questioned over his moves to raise payroll taxes and abolish fossil fuel and food sub­sidies during his first days in office, as well as propo­sals to reduce support for social protection programmes.27 Overall, while the growth model is postu­lated as a “bottom up” approach, the impact of these measures on Kenya’s LNOB progress is ques­tionable, as indicated by continued public protests over the rising cost of living.

Outlook and recommendations

Kenya’s development trajectory over the past decade shows that basic social services, including food secu­rity, healthcare and social housing, and the efficient use of public funds are the most promising “game changers” to improving overall development per­for­mance for all citizens – regardless of whether the government favours a “trickle down” or “bottom up” logic. As the new government shapes its economic transformation model, transparency and inclusiveness of investment decisions will be key to reaching wider segments of the population, for example in the digital space (in the context of the “Digital Superhighway”28). At the same time, the prolonged drought exacerbates social and economic inequalities and may necessitate further rethinking of government prior­ities, particularly with regard to wealth distribution and regional disparities.

The European Union and its member states should prioritize government action to tackle poverty and inequality, especially in the area of infrastructure devel­opment, which is a priority of the EU’s Global Gate­way Initiative.29 Infrastructure development is a sector where investors risk becoming embroiled in elite-driven “white elephant” projects.

As the most prominent external actor in infrastructure development, China’s stance on these issues is likely to be crucial. Kenyans’ views on the utility, trans­parency and economic viability of these invest­ments are an important measure not only of their government’s ability to deliver to its citizens but also of China’s development promise to the region.

Republic of Korea: Developing a Sustainable Foreign Policy and Implementing the SDGs

Eric J. Ballbach

The Republic of Korea’s (ROK, South Korea) estab­lished commitment to sustainable development forms an important foundation for the implementation of the 2030 Agenda. This dates back to the country’s democratization in 1988 and especially the Rio Sum­mit in 1992. Crucially, there is an overall consensus on the significance of implementing the SDGs, span­ning ideological and party lines, despite differences in specific approaches and policy priorities.1 Alongside the required institutional infrastructure, Seoul has de­veloped a series of policies, measures and initiatives to integrate the SDGs directly or indirectly into its domestic and foreign policies and international development cooperation strategies, using the SDGs to boost the country’s green credentials as the govern­ment aims to make the country a leading exporter in the area of green research and technology. Yet substan­tial deficits in implementation of the SDGs remain. The Republic of Korea is among the largest emitters of CO2, and the share of renewables in energy production remains low. Current policies are not sufficient to reach the legally mandated target of carbon neutrality by 2050. Moreover, structural and institutional deficits hamper progress in implement­ing the SDGs.

Integrating the SDGs into the national political agenda

The government of the Republic of Korea quickly began the process of integrating the SDGs into its national agenda, following their adoption in September 2015. One crucial step was the establishment of the Korean Sustainable Development Goals (K‑SDGs) in 2018.2 Although not without its critics, the establishment of the K-SDGs was a comparatively participatory and in­clusive process, building in many ways on the coun­try’s successful Agenda 21 processes, which were char­acterized by broad local social engagement through civil society organizations (CSOs).3

Key institutions, mechanisms and initiatives

At the national level, the Republic of Korea charged specific institutions and actors with implementing the SDGs. The government relied largely on an insti­tutional and legal framework for implementing sus­tainable and development-related goals that had already been established before the adoption of the 2030 Agenda.

The key government institutions involved in imple­menting the SDGs and integrating them into national policy are; the Office for Government Policy Coordination (OGPC), the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA), the Ministry of Environment (MOE), Statistics South Korea, the Committee for International Development Cooperation (CIDC), and the Korean International Co­operation Agency (KOICA). While the OGPC is tasked with ensuring that policies, laws, and regu­lations enacted at each ministerial level create a conducive environment for SDG implementation, Statistics South Korea’s main task is to prepare an annual stand­ardized SDG indicator assessment, which forms the basis for periodically assessing the relevance of national development frameworks to the SDGs. The CIDC is the main organization tasked with ensuring that the Republic of Korea’s development assistance policies remain aligned with the SDGs. In addition, the National Assembly established the “UN-SDG Forum”, a consultative group of leading parliamen­tarians seeking to promote the development of prac­tical tools and initiatives to realize the SDGs within the Republic of Korea and abroad.

The National Strategy for Green Growth (2009–2050) and the Five-Year Plan (2009–2013) provided a first comprehensive policy framework for green growth covering both the short and long term. While the National Strategy aims to promote new eco-friend­ly growth engines, enhance quality of life and contrib­ute to international efforts to fight climate change, the Five-Year Plan outlines government actions and detailed tasks for ministries and local government entities as well as specific budgets such as a US$30.7 billion stimulus package to support the Republic of Korea’s green ambitions.4 To facilitate realization of the Five-Year Plan, a Presidential Commission on Green Growth was established in 2009 and a Frame­work Act on Low Carbon Green Growth enacted in 2010. These created a legislative framework for mid- and long-term emissions reduction targets, cap-and-trade, carbon tax, carbon labelling, carbon disclosure and the expansion of renewable energy.5

South Korea incorporated the SDGs into key domestic and foreign policy initiatives and its international development strategy.

More recently, the SDGs have been incorporated – mostly indirectly – into key government initiatives. The Korean New Deal, a US$122 billion national devel­opment strategy (2020–2025) launched by the Moon Jae-in administration (2017–2022) in July 2020, has direct implications for SDG 13 (climate change) through its Green New Deal pillar, whereas the Digital New Deal and the Human New Deal have implications for the SDGs related to socio-economic development. Moreover, the Basic Plan for Sustain­able Development, published every five years (and most recently revised in 2021), identifies detailed policy tasks for each goal, and thus also provides a central roadmap for integrating the SDGs into the Republic of Korea’s national framework.

The emergence of a sustainable foreign policy in the Republic of Korea?

The Republic of Korea has taken successive steps in recent years to integrate the SDGs into the country’s foreign and international development strategy and thus to promote the development of a sustainable foreign policy.

Integrating the SDGs in Regional Foreign Policy Initiatives

The SDGs have found expression – usually indirectly – in South Korean foreign policy, for example through the country’s regional strategies. Both the New South­ern Policy formulated by the Moon ad­min­is­tration and the Indo-Pacific strategy of the current Yoon administration strive to expand relations with coun­tries in the region, placing special priority on sus­tain­able development in the areas of economic growth, infrastructure development and education. One key component of these efforts is the promotion of “green diplomacy”, aiming to contribute to global efforts to protect the international environment, promote sus­tainability and unlock business opportunities in the field of green development. Seeking to lead global cooperation in the green sector, sustain the momentum for a green transition and boost international efforts, the ROK government has pledged US$300 mil­lion for the Green Climate Fund (GCF) through 2027. Moreover, a Green New Deal Fund will support con­sulting and financing for green industry activities in developing countries in five major Green New Deal areas (energy, transportation, smart city, water management and sanitation, and agriculture) and expand cooperation with the Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI).6

Moreover, the above-mentioned New Deal also reflects the interplay between national initiatives and their immediate foreign policy implications. While the Korean New Deal involves an ambitious economic development plan, the success of which will ultimately depend on “the involvement and cooperation between Korean civil society, the private and the public sec­tors”, the government also aims to create a national base to make the country a global leader in green initiatives, for example in the energy sector. This requires both national efforts and contributions from and cooperation with global actors – and thus active South Korean participation in diplomatic affairs with developed and developing nations. For example, the green transition is a crucial topic between the EU and the Republic of Korea, with cooperation focusing on a clean energy transition and energy security, enhancing the emissions trading system, and promoting eco-friendly industries. The two sides are currently explor­ing the prospect of establishing an EU-ROK Green Partnership.

Integrating the SDGs into development cooperation policy

Joining the OECD in 1996 and its Development Assis­tance Committee (DAC) in 2010 were important steps in the Republic of Korea’s remarkable journey from recipient of post-war aid to global development co­operation partner. After joining the OECD DAC, the government enacted the Framework Law on International Development Cooperation to improve policy coherence and aid effectiveness. The Republic of Korea’s development cooperation focuses on least devel­oped countries and low- to middle-income coun­tries in Asia and Africa. The majority of its ODA is provided through bilateral cooperation, with govern­ment loans representing a significant share.

The Republic of Korea has recently made consider­able efforts to reform its ODA policy in order to ad­vance the implementation of the SDGs and SDG 17 in particular. One of the most important developments in this regard is strengthening the institutional frame­work to improve coordination among relevant minis­tries and agencies, most notably through the estab­lish­ment of the Office of International Development Cooperation (in the Prime Minister’s Office), which has greater capacity to support the International Devel­opment Cooperation Committee overseeing the Republic of Korea’s development cooperation. More­over, development assistance projects must now spe­cifically state which SDGs their respective projects contribute to. The Republic of Korea also stepped up its monitoring of ODA programmes by the relevant national agencies for international development co­operation, to ensure that ODA projects are comple­mentary and consistent with the SDGs. All national agencies in the Republic of Korea are now required to conduct biannual evaluations of their development projects and make efforts to strengthen their projects’ alignment with the SDGs.7 To increase the inclusive­ness of its ODA, the Republic of Korea has promoted the involvement of non-state actors in various ODA projects, for example through the Development Action Programme as a platform promoting public-private partnerships, and the Business Partnership Programme, in which private and public actors devel­op synergies, propose innovative solutions for devel­op­ment financing, and devise inclusive business models.

The Republic of Korea’s ODA is also more directly linked to national initiatives. For instance, the CIDC announced a “Green New Deal official development assistance” strategy, which seeks to expand green ODA. It is planned to increase the proportion of ODA going to the green sector from 20 percent (2015–2019 average) to above the OECD average (28.1 per­cent) by 2025.8 In addition, the strategy also increases the Republic of Korea’s contributions to relevant international institutions including the Green Cli­mate Fund and the Global Green Growth Institute, whose main objectives are to share green growth experience with developing countries and to dis­seminate its green development model globally, expanding partnerships with UN agencies and multi­lateral development banks as well as with partner countries.9 However, while the increasing importance given to environmental issues in the Republic of Korea’s ODA programme can help facilitate implementation of the SDGs in terms of international co­operation, the country still lacks overarching legis­lation and a comprehensive strategy for its ODA policy and for targeted implementation of the SDGs at home and abroad.

Conclusions

Early and proactive engagement by the government and civil society has created a favourable environment for implementing the SDGs in the Republic of Korea. The establishment and modification of the necessary institutional infrastructure, the adoption of key national initiatives and linking them to the country’s central foreign policy initiatives and inter­national development cooperation strategy are worth­while achievements. Like virtually all OECD coun­tries, the Republic of Korea has already achieved most of the SDGs related to securing basic needs and im­ple­menting the policy instruments and frameworks iden­tified in the 2030 Agenda. It is considered to have achieved most progress in implementing Goals 1 (No Poverty), 3 (Health and Well-being), 4 (Quality Edu­cation), 8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth), 9 (In­dustry, Innovation and Infrastructure), and 11 (Sus­tain­able Cities and Communities).

Despite such progress, however, key challenges remain. Deficiencies are identified in particular in the context of promoting inclusion and reducing inequal­ities (within Goals 1, 5 and 10), in the implementation of Goal 14 (Life Underwater) and 15 (Life on Land), as well as SDGs 5 (Gender Equality), 13 (Climate Action) and 17 (Partnerships to Achieve Goals). The scope for improving environmental performance remains par­ticularly large, notwithstanding intensified efforts. In contrast to its global image as a major player in foster­ing a green transition and a green innovator, the Republic of Korea remains among the largest emitters of CO2 and the average exposure of the urban population to airborne particulates is almost three times the WHO target.10 Moreover, the share of renew­ables in energy production is the second-lowest in the OECD. While improved emissions targets in­clude a 40 percent reduction below 2018 levels by 2030, with a legally mandated target of carbon neu­trality by 2050, current policies are not deemed suf­ficient to achieve the targets. Against this backdrop, some observers attest the South Korean government only moderate commitment to achieving the SDGs.11

In addition, severe structural problems persist. These range from insufficient long-term fiscal com­mit­ments, expressed most visibly by the fact that the SDGs are not mentioned in the national budget, to a lack of policy coherence and coordination. While progress has been made in strengthening the insti­tu­tional structure to support the implementation of the SDGs, coordination deficits remain prevalent both between ministries and governmental institutions and in particular regarding the involvement of civil society organizations in the processes of imple­ment­ing the SDGs. Against this background, specific institutions such as the Committee for Sustainable Devel­opment should be strengthened, an integrated gov­ernance structure for the coordination of cor­responding investments should be established, and the SDGs should be integrated even more directly into the implementation of key national policy initiatives. Also, the Republic of Korea’s relatively low SDG 17 score, despite its active engagement in global devel­op­ment issues and institutions, is an indication that the country needs to adopt a more comprehensive approach to global partnerships and take adopt meas­ures to further increase its contribution to effective multilateralism. Building new global energy governance structures at the multilateral level, for instance, offers a huge opportunity for both the Republic of Korea and the EU. Building on their common inter­ests in energy security and carbon neutrality, the EU and the Republic of Korea can further deepen their cooperation on strengthening global energy and climate governance through the G20 and the UNFCCC processes. The EU-ROK Green Partnership currently under discussion could be an important step forward.

Russian Federation: No Sustainable Development in Wartime

Sabine Fischer

When the Russian Federation (Russia) declared its commitment to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015, it was already evident that its domes­tic and foreign policy pointed in a very different direction. It was no surprise that Russia obstructed strong, clear formulations during the negotiations of the SDGs and 2030 Agenda, given its steady deterioration in respect for human rights and dignity, the rule of law, justice, equality and non-discrimination, diver­sity and equal opportunities there Since 2015, the gap between Russia’s declarative support and actual imple­mentation of the SDGs has only widened. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022 marks an all-time low in the process. There is an inherent contradiction between the development of the Rus­sian state and the goals and visions formulated in the 2030 Agenda. It is unlikely that this contradiction can be resolved while the current political regime under the leadership of Vladimir Putin remains in power.

Russia has never launched its own national sus­tainable development strategy or agenda. Instead, Russian SDG implementation rests upon a range of strategic documents from different periods over the past thirty years. The only official document to ex­plicitly address sustainable development is the Con­cept for the Transition of the Russian Federation to Sustainable Development, which dates from 1996.

When the UN resolution on the SDGs was adopted in 2015, Russian government structures were still working on implementation of the so-called May Decrees, signed by Vladimir Putin in 2012. These identified more than two hundred goals in areas such as quality of the public sector, social policies, invest­ment climate and infrastructure, to be achieved by 2020.1 When Putin was reelected in 2018, the May Decrees were replaced by the so-called Twelve National Projects designed to bring about improvements in the areas of demography; healthcare; edu­cation; housing and urban environment; ecology; infrastructure and road safety; labour productivity and employment; science; digital economy; culture; small and medium sized enterprises and individual entrepreneurship; and international cooperation and export.2 Their goals were ambitious: “to take Russia into the top five largest economies; ensure sustain­able natural population growth; increase life expec­tancy from 72 to 78 years (in 2024, 80 years by 2030); ensure sustainable growth of real wages; cut poverty in half; improve housing conditions for at least 5 mil­lion households annually; and establish conditions and opportunities for the self-realization of each citi­zen.”3 In addition to these general development plans, there are a number of strategies for specific policy fields.

In a nutshell, the Russian government has pro­duced a hotchpotch of official documents over the years that have later been linked to the SDG commitments – but the SDGs never really formed the basis for all these strategies. The result was a legis­lative vacuum and a lack of mechanisms to coordinate SDG-related activities by various state and non-state actors, or to nudge them towards more effective implementation.4 Add to this the poor implementation record of a Russian state that is struggling with serious governance problems. None of the govern­ment strategies mentioned above have ever been fully realized; many remained only on paper.5

Contrary perspectives on SDG implemen­tation: Government and civil society

The Russian government delivered its first Voluntary National Review (VNR) on SDG implementation in 2020.6 The overall assessment of progress between 2015 and 2020 is optimistic: “Russia has demonstrated positive results in each SDG, most successful of them being SDG 1 ‘no poverty’, SDG 4 ‘Quality education’, SDG 8 ‘Decent work and economic growth’”.7 It con­cedes that a more active policy is required in other areas without, however, specifying which ones.

A shadow report presented at the 2020 HPLF by the Coalition for Sustainable Development in Russia, a group of independent civil society organizations and activists, comes to radically different conclusions.8 It points out that in the National Projects “a total of 131 goals and targets contain only 57 of the 169 SDG tar­gets. Meanwhile, SDG 13 and SDG 14 were not includ­ed in the policy paper at all”.9 The civil society observers point to a lack of awareness at the state and non-state level of the existence of the SDGs and Russia’s obli­ga­tions. They identify corruption, com­plicated bu­reau­cratic procedures, underfunding and the degra­dation of the political climate and state-society-relations as major obstacles to the SDG agenda. Their overall diag­nosis is that Russia lacks an “integrated approach … that combines the three aspects of sustainable devel­op­ment: social, environmental and economic”.10 According to the shadow report, the SDGs have not taken root in Russian state policy and society. Never­theless, in 2020 the authors of the civil society report were still cautiously optimistic about state-society-cooperation: “Despite the fact that some civil society representatives are currently sceptical about the possibility of dialogue with the state on the implementation of SDGs in the country, we believe that this review can serve as a starting point for renewed cooperation.”11 However, developments since then have crushed any hopes of the Russian state taking a more productive approach to SDG implementation in the future.

Domestic and foreign policy context of SDG implementation in Russia

The Russian political system has undergone a process of constant autocratization over the past twenty years.12 Whilst authoritarian elements existed through­out the 2000s, the trend became more pronounced when Vladimir Putin returned to the Kremlin in 2012. It accelerated after the beginning of the war against Ukraine in 2014, and again from early 2020. It was this latest period in particular that closed the window of opportunity for constructive cooperation on SDG implementation at the national and international level. The reform of the Russian constitution in the first half of 2020 provided Vladimir Putin with the possibility to stay in power until 2036. It cements the vertical structure of the political system, thus further weakening all other state and non-state institutions und undermining the capacity of the Russian state to efficiently implement any reform policy or strategy. The new constitution also enshrines traditionalist values and reflects nationalistic attitudes, which have increasingly determined state policy over the past decade. Moreover, the Russian constitution now gives national legislation precedence over international law. All this speaks to a lack of political will on the part of the Russian political regime to implement the SDGs as the integrated package they were intended to be.

Political autocratization was accompanied by a degradation of state-society relations. The situation deteriorated throughout the 2010s, with more and more independent CSOs coming under pressure, being labelled foreign agents and persecuted for their activities. Until 2022 this trend affected CSOs in different ways: human rights, feminist and LGBTIQ* activists had been suffering harsh repression for years; people working on “less politicized” issues were less exposed – not least because the state relied on them to take over some of its tasks, for instance it the social policy area.13 In other words SDG-related activities took place in very different political con­texts. But even in the less hostile environments the probability of a state-society partnership on SDG implementation was rapidly shrinking.

In Russia’s hyper-personalized political system political action depends almost exclusively on whether or not Vladimir Putin puts an issue on the political agenda.

Between 2015 and 2022 progress on SDG implementation varied across issues and areas. In Russia’s hyper-personalized political system political action depends almost exclusively on whether or not Vladi­mir Putin puts an issue on the political agenda. Past developments around SDG 13 “Climate action” and SDG 5 “Gender equality” illustrate how this plays out: While the first case provides an example of fleeting political momentum, even that was absent in the second case. Since February 2022, however, Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine has destroyed even the modest progress that had been achieved in some SDG-related areas.

Russia’s action on SDG 13 “Climate action”

Russian policy on SDG 13 “Climate action” provides interesting insights into the workings of the Putin regime. For many years, climate change was completely off the political agenda in Russia. The coun­try’s heavy dependence on fossil fuel exports and lack of economic modernization and diversification pre­vented a policy shift in this direction. Vladimir Putin questioned the anthropogenic origin of climate change on various occasions.14 Civil society actors in the ecological field were more focused on local en­viron­mental issues like waste management.

The political context started to change towards the end of the 2010s: the European Union’s Green Deal 2019 brought it home to Moscow that the policy change in the European Union, the biggest customer of Russian energy exports, was real and would have serious economic repercussions. Moreover, summer heat waves, thawing permafrost and forest fires in Siberia made it more and more difficult to deny the existence of climate change.15 In the autumn of 2019, Vladimir Putin conceded for the first time that cli­mate change was a man-made fact, and that Russia needed a political response to it (SDG 13.2). In Sep­tember 2019, Russia joined the 2015 Paris Agreement. The government adopted the “National Action Plan for the First Phase of Adaptation to Climate Change for the period up to 2022” (SDG 13.1). A Special Presi­dential Envoy on Climate Issues (Ruslan Eldegeriev) was nominated in 2019, and in 2020 Anatoly Chubais was appointed Special Representative of the President for Relations with International Organizations to Achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. The Rus­sian government set up an interministerial working group on questions of climate change and sustainable development. This relatively sudden policy change at the top opened a window of opportunity for climate-related activities in the state structures and civil soci­ety, as well as cooperation with international actors.16 In December 2020, the EU Delegation in Moscow and the Russian government held a conference on climate change and sustainability with high-level official participation from both sides.17

However, with geopolitical tensions on the rise throughout 2021 and autocratization accelerating at the domestic level, the window closed quickly. The follow-up to the EU-Russia conference on climate change envisaged for November/December 2021 never occurred. As a result of Western sanctions in reaction to Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Russia has lost access to important sources of technological innovation in the area of decarbonization. The Russian economy is entirely subordinated to the war effort. The war itself increases greenhouse gas emissions in many ways.

In the meantime, Russian delegates continue to take part in international climate events. They call for a “de-politicization of climate action” in the hope of preserving access to climate finance and technology and bypassing sanctions on low-carbon products. Russia’s war of aggression has closed the green agenda, probably for as long as the current political regime is in power. And environmental CSOs have come under even more pressure.

Russia’s non-action on SDG 5 “Gender Equality”

In 2017 the government adopted a National Strategy for Action in the Interest of Women 2017–2022. It outlines goals for improving the situation of women and realizing equal rights in all spheres of life. The Strategy refers to Russia’s constitution as well as obligations under international law. The goals stipu­lated in the Strategy overlap with the targets of SDG 5, but there is no explicit reference to the Agenda 2030.

Data indicates that Russia has made little progress on implementing its own Strategy. Instead, the situa­tion of women has deteriorated significantly over the past decade and a half. The shadow report by the Coalition for Sustainable Development points out that, in relation to SDG 5.1, “in 2006, the Global Gender Gap Index placed the country in the 49th posi­tion, in 2016 it was ranked 75th, and in 2020, 81th among 153 countries. Regarding SDG 5.5, Rus­sia’s positions have worsened in terms of ‘Economic Participation and Opportunity (2nd in 2006 com­pared to 33rd in 2020) and ‘Political Empowerment’ (108th in 2006 compared to 122nd in 2020).”18 The gender pay gap and the pension gap between men and women have been widening. Women are under­represented in the political and economic sphere. They remain legally banned from one hundred occu­pations that the Russian state classes as too heavy for women.

Violence against women (SDG 5.2) is a particularly controversial topic in Russia. It emblemizes the gen­eral regression in the area of gender equality. Russia has not signed the Council of Europe’s 2011 Istanbul Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence. In 2017 (the year of adoption of the National Strategy) the Russian State Duma adopted a law that changed the legal treat­ment of first instances of domestic violence from felony to misdemeanour. The perpetrators are almost never punished, the protection of victims is under­developed, and there is no systematic law enforcement or effective monitoring of violence against women. Concerning their physical security, women in Russia face a legal vacuum. Their protection and empowerment is not a priority for state policy. Inter­estingly, the regression of state policy had a mobilizing effect on Russian society. After 2017, domestic violence became a much-debated topic, often pro­moted by feminist activists and CSOs across the coun­try. They did not have to wait long for the response. Feminist and LGTBQI* activists were targeted by re­pres­sive state policies and attacked by non-state actors. They are disproportionally affected by the foreign agent law.

Russia’s war of aggression is having catastrophic effects on sustainable development in Ukraine, Russia and beyond.

As Russia’s statements during the SDG negotiations demonstrate, SDG 5 clearly clashes with the so-called conservative family values and patriarchal attitudes promoted by the Russian regime and propaganda and enshrined in the 2020 Russian constitution. Aggressive hyper-masculinity has become an integral part of the Russian dictatorship’s ideology and a key source of legitimacy of the Putin system.19 Russia’s full-scale attack against Ukraine is aggravating the situation of women in all respects. Their economic situation is worsening. The positive influence of progressive for­eign companies on the professional situation of women has waned as these companies ceased oper­ating Russia. The traumatizing effects of the war are likely to increase the level of violence and misogyny in Russian society for years, perhaps for generations to come.20 The Russian government never embraced the spirit of SDG 5 and under current circumstances there is no chance of realizing gender equality.

No SDG implementation in wartime

Russia’s war of aggression is having catastrophic effects on sustainable development in Ukraine, Russia and beyond. The costs in terms of human lives, traumatization of society, and economic and environ­mental destruction in Ukraine are as yet impossible to assess. The war also has a grave impact on global food security and has contributed to the current cost-of-living crisis that affects vulnerable populations world­wide. The war has accelerated defence spending across the world, while international arms control regimes continue to erode rapidly.

The Russian dictatorship is no longer interested in pursuing international cooperation on SDG imple­mentation. It is significant that Anatoly Chubais was the only well-known Russian government official to resign his post and leave the country after February 2022. It is unlikely that he will be replaced any time soon.

The activists of the Coalition for Sustainable Development in Russia continue their work in exile. In 2023, they published a second shadow report on SDG implementation in Russia in light of the war. It is telling that they have only one recommendation to the Russian government: “the cessation of all military operations on the territory of Ukraine and the return of the Russian army to the territory of the Russian Federation within the 1991 borders. Only after that will it be possible to reestablish the dialogue with the Russian authorities on achieving the SDGs.”21

South Africa: Good Governance a Precondition for Progress on SDGs

Melanie Müller

South Africa’s rhetorical commitment to the SDG pro­cess remains strong. It helps that the SDGs are aligned with promises made by the African National Congress (ANC) when democracy replaced the apartheid sys­tem. For example, some of the key aspects of the SDGs – such as the right to a healthy environment, health and clean water – are also incorporated into the South African constitution1 as well as in South Africa’s development agenda. Yet there is a huge gap between these goals and their implementation, much of which can be attributed to governance failures that have not been adequately addressed.

Many analyses of SDG implementation in South Africa – and the government’s VNR from 2019 – concentrate on the implementation of individual SDG targets. While this is important for understanding progress in specific areas, it is also essential to inves­tigate the interconnected structural challenges2 that potentially prevent South Africa from advancing its SDG agenda.

The present assessment focuses on state capture and failures of governance as the core challenges. It concentrates in particular on the implementation of SDG 7 – access to affordable and clean energy – and recent developments in the electricity sector, where South Africa is currently facing a major crisis. To suc­cessfully achieve its SDG targets, South Africa will have to focus strongly on implementation of SDG 16 and “build effective, accountable and inclusive insti­tutions at all levels”.

Systemic shocks: State capture and the pandemic

South Africa’s 2019 SDG Report was published shortly after Cyril Ramaphosa took over the presidency from Jacob Zuma. At that time, the impact of state capture by Zuma and his network of supporters inside and outside the ANC was not yet visible to the extent that it is now, four years later. Today, the grave repercussions of this state capture and earlier governance chal­lenges can no longer be ignored. According to reports by the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into State Cap­ture, also known as Zondo Commission, cor­rupt prac­tices in major infrastructure tendering had a direct negative impact on key sectors (including trans­port, energy, water).3 It must be assumed that some of the developments described in the 2019 report will show a negative trend in the next review.

The COVID-19 pandemic aggravated the country’s socioeconomic situation. Economically, South Africa’s tough lockdown was felt most severely by low-income and informally employed parts of the population who lacked savings. Government support programmes came late and were sometimes unable to reach the groups that most needed assistance.4 It is therefore un­surprising that key SDG indicators have deteriorated: according to Statistics South Africa, the unemployment rate was 30.1 percent in the first quarter of 2020 and increased to 32.7 percent in the last quarter of 2022. Youth unemployment grew from 59 percent in 2020 to 61 percent in 2022. In 2022, around 18.2 million South Africans (out of 60 million) were living in extreme poverty, with less than US$1.90 per day.5

The South African energy crisis

This tense socioeconomic situation encountered a severe home-made electricity crisis, which President Cyril Ramaphosa declared a “state of disaster” in February 2023. Although the ANC has succeeded in massively improving the energy infrastructure (SDG 7.1) since the end of apartheid, the government’s failure to implement reforms in the power utility Eskom led to targeted power cuts (“load shedding”) to prevent a nationwide blackout.6 Experts had already warned of an impending energy shortage in the early 2000s. According to Eskom management, 2007 marked a critical turning point. That was when the government decided to massively expand coal mining and coal-fired power generation. It chose to build two high-grade coal-fired power plants with elevated efficiency, “Kusile” and “Medupi”. The objective was for these facilities to cover the base load and provide enough electricity to take older coal-fired power stations off the grid, thus decreasing CO2 emissions while creating energy security (SDGs 7.3 and 13.2).7

The German government’s decision to grant export credit guarantees for these power stations has proven to be fallacious. Firstly, construction of the power plants has further cemented South Africa’s fossil fuel path-dependency, despite the country’s commitment to reducing CO2 emissions. Worse, corruption at Eskom, in national ministries and at the local level has prevented timely completion of the power plants, which are still not fully connected to the grid. As a consequence, older reactors have not yet been de­com­missioned. In addition, construction of the Kusile and Medupi power stations and the expansion of coal mining have had direct negative impacts on affected communities as well as on the implementation of other SDGs (such as SDG 6.1 on access to clean water and SDG 11.6 on clean cities).8 As these are long-term infrastructure investments – both plants will have to run until 2050 to be profitable – path-dependent sus­tainability challenges arise.

JETPs to support implementation of SDG 7?

South Africa is paying for its failure to invest earlier in renewable energy – despite the positive prospects. Currently, coal accounts for around 70 percent of the energy supply.9 In a study from 2020, IRENA predicts that the country could “realistically and cost-effec­tively, supply 49% of its electricity from renewables by 2030, nearly a third higher than the share to be expected from current plans and policies”.10 Meanwhile, the electricity market in South Africa is seeing dynamic change. In 2021, the Department of Mineral and Energy Resources (DMRE) raised the threshold for Independent Power Producers (IPPs) from 1 MW to 100 MW, allowing them to feed more electricity into the grid without a licence. At the beginning of 2023, the South African removed the requirement to hold a licence completely. In the meantime, many com­panies and private households that can afford to do so are already converting to photovoltaic. The gov­ern­ment has announced investment programmes to sup­port this private transition. However, this is will not help the majority of South Africans – especially the lower-income strata – who will not be able to cover the costs privately. They rely on the government to ensure a reliable (and sustainable) power supply.

In 2021, at COP26 in Glasgow, a consortium of multi­lateral donors (Germany, France, the United Kingdom, the European Union and the United States) pledged investment packages for South Africa’s ener­gy transformation. The South African “Just Energy Tran­sition Partnership” (JETP) is the first of its kind and is now being discussed as a model for other countries such as Indonesia, Vietnam, Senegal and India.11 The investment plan, which the South African government presented at COP27 a year later, sets three prior­ities for 2023–2027: firstly, the phase-down of coal-fired power generation in South Africa and the expan­sion of renewable energies; secondly, the expansion of the production of electric vehicles, initially for export and, in the future, also for domestic use; and thirdly, the expansion of hydrogen production.12

The dimension of social justice is a central element. The JETP investment plan recognizes “the direct and indirect impact that the energy transition has on livelihoods, workers and communities”.13 While South Africa’s investment plan has a very strong – and important – focus on job creation, it missed the opportunity to include the more holistic approach of the 2030 Agenda and SDGs, including “leaving no one behind”. It does include concrete plans to implement structural change in the coal-mining region of Mpumalanga – and thus to com­pensate for the job losses expected as coal is phased down. The chapters on electric vehicles (EVs) and hydrogen production also focus on job creation. How­ever, the investment plan neglects other SDG targets. For example, the production of EVs focuses in par­ticu­lar on individual transport whereas SDG 11.2 calls for “access to safe, affordable, accessible and sustain­able transport systems for all … notably by expanding public transport, with special attention to the needs of those in vulnerable situations, women, children, persons with disabilities and older persons”.

State capture: Good governance as a pre-condition for success

Reforms of the state-owned enterprise Eskom are urgently needed and a central prerequisite for a sus­tain­able energy supply. Here, the fight against cor­rup­tion is fundamental, both in the relevant ministries and in Eskom itself, (SDG 16.5). This is in line with one of the proposed policy interventions in South Africa’s 2019 VNR report, to “decisively deal with the effect of state capture in the country’s vial public insti­tutions”. The current government under Cyril Ramaphosa has taken certain steps to fight corruption in recent years. But progress on reforming Eskom in particular has been slow, as demonstrated by the resignation of Eskom CEO André de Ruyter (who had accused Eskom and government officials of corruption). He confirmed what South African newspapers had already pointed out repeatedly: corrupt structures within the ANC itself are a significant problem. A number of ANC politicians have been actively trying to prevent an energy transformation in recent years, partly because they have stakes in mining or the downstream industries.14

Great concern about job losses in the coal-mining regions makes it particularly easy to politicize the issue of energy transformation, abusing the legitimate concerns of the poor to protect the vested interests of major industries and the beneficiaries of South Africa’s so-called mineral energy complex.15 But the failure to implement major structural reforms risks increasing the social divide even further. The next national elections are scheduled for 2024, when it is likely that the ANC will lose its absolute majority for the first time since the end of apartheid. While the prospect of a coalition government offers an oppor­tunity for healthy party competition and a more mature democratic system, this development is un­likely to improve political stability. The experience with coalition governments at the local level points to great instability and power struggles rather than co­operation and fair competition for meaningful political solutions.16

Such a development would be extremely dangerous, given that the energy sector is just one example of how state capture and corruption prevent com­pre­hensive SDG successes. The same problems can be seen in other sectors, such as water, transport and the health sector.17 Granting political priority to good governance would be a key requirement for building a reliable infrastructure that in turn forms the basis for successful implementation of the SDGs.

Conclusion

The South African case illustrates the importance of national and local governance issues for the successful implementation of the SDG agenda. At the same time, external shocks like the pandemic – or more precisely, the failure of global governance to manage the pandemic equitably – had negative impacts that continue to reverberate. This is the case not only for South Africa, but for many other African countries, which are still struggling with the aftermath of the pandemic18 – and are now additionally being hit by the economic impact of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine. There is great concern in these coun­tries that international donors’ attention will be primarily focused on the conflict in Europe in the coming years.

Even if donors avoid doing so, it is no easy task for external actors to directly influence good governance in partner countries. German development coopera­tion is already supporting South Africa’s National Anti-Corruption Strategy, which was adopted in 2020, and is also active in supporting the transparent and responsible use of public finances.19 Civil society organizations play an integral part in these arrangements and should also be supported.

In recent years, many civil society organizations and critical journalists have investigated corruption in South Africa, and have also contributed to a broader understanding of the lack of implementation of the SDG agenda in various sectors. While their role is crucial, they face a variety of challenges. A report of the South African civil society working group criti­cizes that “all levels of government lack awareness about how the right to information contributes to the implementation of the wider SDG agenda. Additionally, some departments regard access to information as a threat, not as an exercise of right”.20 In order for civil society organizations to fulfil their watchdog func­tion, these issues should be given special attention by international donors when supporting South African institutions.

Germany and other countries must take the Zondo Commission’s findings seriously and support prosecution in these cases.

With regard to the successful implementation of the JETP, the consortium of donors should focus on con­tinuous monitoring and evaluation in order to ensure that funds are used adequately. Local government’s susceptibility to corruption should be given special attention. And, as in any SDG partnership, donors must also take a critical look at companies in their own countries. Investigations of state capture have shown that German and other international companies have also profited from corruption. Germany and other countries must take the Zondo Commission’s findings seriously and support prosecution in these cases. They must also draw lessons from these experi­ences and implement safeguards for future cooperation.

State of Palestine: No Sustainable Development in a Divided Polity under Occupation

Muriel Asseburg

The State of Palestine’s engagement with the SDG process, including the VNR, illustrates the central dilemma facing the Palestinian leadership. While it seeks to join international conventions, organizations and processes in order to achieve recognition and show­case its statehood, its lack of sovereignty and con­trol over territory, borders, and resources and its dependence on transfers and donor aid leave it strug­gling to live up to the ensuing commitments. There­fore, rather than underlining Palestinian statehood, the Palestinian leadership’s approach to the SDG process highlights Palestinian ambitions and at the same time reveals the constraints to sustainable devel­opment that result, first and foremost, from the Israeli occupation regime.

While Palestine has registered some progress in improving development indicators, such as maternal and infant mortality rates, literacy, school enrolment (not to be confused with quality of education), vacci­nation rates, etc., it is by no means on a trajectory to sustainable development. In fact, in recent years, Pales­tinians have witnessed de-development in a num­ber of crucial areas, particularly in the Gaza Strip. Palestinian officials have rightly pointed to the lack of sovereignty and the restrictions imposed by Israel’s fifty-six-year occupation and the blockade of the Gaza Strip as obstacles to progress. Yet, the intra-Palestinian divisions, deteriorating governance and a trend of reducing donor funding and repeated with­holding of transfers have also contributed to a dis­abling environment. It is absolutely clear that the hurdles to sustainable development in Palestine are first and foremost political. At the same time, all actors involved (above all, the Palestinian Authority, UN agencies and the donor community) have sought to stabilize the status quo rather than focusing on a transformative approach to development.

De-development rather than progress

The Palestinian leadership has faced significant chal­lenges in making progress on basic SDG indicators. As the relevant documents show,1 the Palestinian Author­ity (PA) has failed to reduce poverty, hunger and stark inequalities (in particular between the West Bank and Gaza),2 boost economic growth and em­ploy­ment, provide adequate basic services such as energy and water, and build strong institutions and a peace­ful environment. On the contrary, the relevant SDG indicators point to de-development rather than pro­gress, especially in the Gaza Strip.3

To give just a few examples: Poverty (SDG 1) has risen,4 with food insecurity (SDG 2) increasing in par­allel.5 Basic services, such as water and energy (SDGs 6 and 7), have not improved. Water is still scarce in parts of the West Bank. Worse still, some 96 percent of the water pumped from the Gaza aquifer is un­drinkable6 and only 4 percent of Gaza’s households have access to safe drinking water.7 While employment (SDG 8) has recovered somewhat since the pan­demic, overall unemployment has not been reduced. This has particularly affected Palestine’s large and growing young population.8 Palestinian women have one of the lowest labour force participation rates in the world9 despite having one of the highest primary and secondary enrolment rates in the MENA region. Due to the lack of sustainable growth, Palestinians remain highly dependent on international aid.10

The worst developments have been in the field of peace, justice and strong institutions (SDG 16). Pales­tinians experience serious human rights violations by Israel, the PA and the de facto government in Gaza. Palestinian governance has deteriorated further in recent years due to presidential measures that have dismantled checks and balances on executive power and restricted the space for civil society engagement, democratic participation and dissent.11 Increasing violence by Israeli settlers and the Israeli military has also hit the Palestinians hard. Neither the PA nor the de facto government in Gaza is able to protect Pales­tinians from these forms of violence and displacement. Also, the Palestinian security forces lost control of cities in the northern West Bank in 2022, as new armed groups emerged outside the established Pales­tinian factions.12 2021 saw renewed armed conflict in Gaza (as well as in Jerusalem and Israel’s mixed cities); 2022 turned out to be the deadliest year in the West Bank since the end of the Second Intifada. Late 2022 ushered in an Israeli coalition government intent on asserting Jewish supremacy, long-term civil­ian control of the West Bank (annexation in all but name), and winning “the battle for Area C” (i.e. the 60 percent of the West Bank under direct Israeli control) by accelerating the settlement enterprise.13

A disabling environment

The Palestinian leadership has emphasized that pro­gress towards achieving the SDGs has been hampered primarily by the effects of the Israeli occupation regime and related policies. These include the frag­men­tation of Palestinian territory, the blockade of Gaza, the denial of access to resources in Area C, restric­tions on movement and trade, construction of the separation barrier deep inside the West Bank, and Israel’s demolitions (both war-related and puni­tive) of Palestinian infrastructure, housing and development projects.

Occupation policies are the main, but by no means the only, impediment to sustainable development in the Palestinian territories.

Indeed, a body of research shows that occupation policies are the main impediment to sustainable devel­opment in the occupied Palestinian territories. For example, a 2013 World Bank report projected Palestinian GDP to increase by as much as 35 percent, or US$ 4.15 billion, if Palestinian businesses (particularly in agriculture, minerals, mining, construction, tourism and telecommunications) were allowed to develop in Area C.14 A study prepared by UNCTAD estimated the cost of closures and other Israeli occu­pation measures in the West Bank between 2000 and 2019 at $58 billion.15 In the Gaza Strip, the Israeli closure regime has led to economic decline and de­industrialization, with recurring armed conflict caus­ing additional direct damage and loss to the population and economy.16 International humanitarian assistance, including through UNRWA, can tempo­rari­ly alleviate the social impact of such losses, but can­not substitute for a robust and sustainable development path.

Palestinian reliance on transfers from Israel – which make up 65–75 percent of the Palestinian budget – and international aid has also constrained the PA’s ability to spend on development.17 Inter­national donations have fallen significantly in recent years, and Israeli transfers have repeatedly been stopped or reduced to put pressure on the PA.18 The outcome is a fiscal crisis that has forced the PA to dra­matically reduce (or partially withhold) public-sector salaries and cut development spending.19 UNRWA, which plays a crucial role in providing services and work opportunities for Palestinian refugees, has also had to cut salaries and assistance in the face of reduced funding.

The situation has been further exacerbated by the division of the Palestinian territories into two entities with different governments in the aftermath of the 2006 parliamentary elections and the ensuing infight­ing between the main factions, Fatah and Hamas. There are now two competing authoritarian governments in Ramallah (the Fatah-led PA) and Gaza City (the Hamas-led de facto government), both focused primarily on maintaining their own power rather than pursuing a sustainable development agenda or a needs-oriented approach. The combination of a lack of achievements (most notably an end to the occu­pa­tion), increasingly repressive policies, and a perception of pervasive corruption and cronyism has been devastating to the legitimacy of the Palestinian leader­ship. The social contract between the PA and the Pales­tinian population has steadily eroded as Pales­tinians who had hoped that the PA would form the nucleus of a Palestinian state now see it mainly as a tool to prevent Palestinian sovereignty. Polls show that Palestinians overwhelmingly perceive the PA as a subcontractor of the occupation regime rather than an entity that speaks for Palestinians and defends their rights.20

A missed opportunity

Participants in the Palestinian national team estab­lished in 2016 to follow up on SDG progress for the VNR reports broadly agree that the body has clear terms of reference and a useful structure, including key ministries involved in SDG implementation as well as representatives of civil society and the private sector. In addition, a working group encompasses grassroots organizations was established for each of the SDGs. The SDG consultation mechanism could thus have served as a channel for devising inclusive, participatory and transformative policies and build­ing a responsive institution.

However, cooperation has been hampered by a lack of trust between officials and civil society rep­resentatives as well as a lack of strategic and trans­formative development thinking on the part of all involved. The actors have all pursued their own agendas, which have been geared towards retaining power (PA) or preventing destabilization (UN agencies, donors) rather than focusing on transforming the dis­abling political context and the approach to develop­ment. Also, while the PA did integrate the SDGs into Palestine’s 2017–2022 National Policy Agenda, it has lacked the level of disaggregated data required for strategic thinking and measuring progress. The VNR pro­cess has thus turned out to be a missed opportunity for an inclusive, participatory and results-oriented approach to policy-making and reporting.21

Conclusions

As the 2022 UN Common Country Analysis emphasizes: “The most direct route to achieving the 2030 Agenda and the SDGs remains a negotiated solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the end to the Israeli occupation.”22 This route is today effectively blocked, firstly by an Israeli government that rejects a two-state settlement and has taken steps tantamount to annexing the West Bank,23 and secondly by the per­sistence of intra-Palestinian divisions. Even limited progress towards sustainable development is unlikely in the current context of intensifying conflict dynamics and as long as the principal donors prioritize main­taining the status quo – a one-state reality with un­equal rights24 and the Gaza blockade – rather than addressing the key barriers to progress on the SDGs, which are occupation policies that violate inter­national law and infringe on the Palestinians’ right to development; the intra-Palestinian division; and the PA’s increasingly autocratic rule. That also means that the PA will continue to lack the good governance, effective institutions and basic human rights guarantees required for successful implementation of the 17 SDGs.

Similarly, the US and European no-contact policy towards Hamas prevents it from contributing effec­tively to overcoming the intra-Palestinian divide and addressing the de-development of Gaza and govern­ance issues there. As long as the international donor community continues to prioritize “returning an inter­nationally-recognized Palestinian government to the Gaza Strip”25 instead of focusing on ending the collective punishment of Gaza’s population, not even modest progress should be expected there.

Progress can only be achieved if all actors involved focus on dismantling the political barriers to achieving the SDGs.

With key donors continuing to invest in the status quo, even increased funding will not enable the Pales­tinian leadership to embark on a path of sustainable development. The only approach that can possibly generate progress is one where all involved (from the Palestinian leadership to UN agencies to international donors) centre their approaches on transformational development and focus on dismantling the political barriers to achieving the SDGs.

Sudan: The Legitimization Strategies of Violence Entrepreneurs

Gerrit Kurtz

Sudan faces huge challenges to implementation of the SDGs: political instability following decades of authoritarian rule, armed conflict, a skewed economy in deep macroeconomic crisis, and the impacts of climate change. Consequently, Sudan is among states making the slowest progress towards the SDGs, with an SDG index ranking of 159 out of 163.1

Sudan’s VNR report from 2022 does not pretend anything different. It acknowledges the country’s significant development shortcomings, the lack of suf­ficient current data and the state’s very weak im­plementation capacity in virtually all relevant areas. This apparent honesty is both selective and strategic, however. It omits the single most important factor keeping the Sudanese poor, namely the domi­nance of the security sector in politics and the econo­my. Appear­ing to care for the civilian population is a deliberate legitimization strategy on the part of the authors of the report, which was compiled by the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (MoFEP). Its head, Sudan’s Minister of Finance Geibril Ibrahim, is a former rebel, an Islamist and a supporter of the military coup of October 2021. Any international support for sustainable development in Sudan thus needs to adopt an adaptive approach that includes peacebuilding and diplomacy.

Political instability and Sudan’s violent entrepreneurs

Pretending to promote broad-based development when actually engaging in politics that undermine it has a long tradition in Sudan, particularly among its armed movements. Peace agreements are full of nor­mative language, as are the pronouncements of elite negotiators purporting to serve the interests of mar­gin­alized populations in the periphery. Power- and rent-sharing arrangements are the core objectives of Sudan’s violent entrepreneurs.2 These include regular security forces, paramilitary forces, irregular militias and armed movements, who compete or cooperate on the basis of temporary shared interests.3

SDG implementation came to a halt in recent years as Sudan experienced considerable upheaval and lacked effective government. The breakdown culmi­nated in military conflict in April 2023. Country-wide demonstrations in 2019, provided the motivation for a palace coup that ousted Omar al-Bashir after nearly thirty years in power. A civilian-military transitional government took the reins in August 2019, led by the former UN official Abdalla Hamdok. The military and security forces retained influence in the Sovereign Coun­cil (the collective presidency) and in security-related cabinet portfolios. In October 2020, the gov­ernment signed the Juba Peace Agreement (JPA) with thirteen armed movements across the country. They joined the government in February 2021, and Geibril Ibrahim became minister of finance.

Having supported the military in sidelining civil­ians, he and fellow JPA signatories remained in office when security forces arrested Prime Minister Hamdok and some of his ministers on 25 October 2021.

Since the coup, Sudan has had no fully functioning government. The military did not replace civilian min­is­ters who resigned, instead promoting undersecretaries to become acting ministers. General Fattah Abdel al-Burhan, the head of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and chair of the Sovereign Council, claimed that he had seized power only to “correct” the path of the popular revolution that started in December 2018.4 When the military realized they could not succeed, Burhan announced he would be ready to hand over power to a civilian government that was either elected or created by “consensus”.5 On 5 December 2022, after months of behind-the-scenes negotiations, a framework agreement was finalized between the military and a coalition of civilian groups. Geibril and his allies rejected the framework agree­ment because it included a review of the earlier peace agreement, which guaranteed them their positions.6 Negotiations on outstanding issues for a final agree­ment escalated into armed conflict between the SAF and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) shortly before a planned handover to a civilian gov­ern­ment in April 2023.

The VNR’s selective treatment of development challenges

The preparation of Sudan’s second VNR fell in the period after the October 2021 coup.7 This put the draft­ers in the interesting position of describing the achievements of a transitional government for whose demise their military allies were responsible. The fact that Sudan decided nevertheless to submit the VNR in such a volatile situation points to the main purpose of the report: courting international favour for an ille­gitimate government. The government also wanted to restart international financial support and debt relief, as highlighted in the VNR’s opening statement and again in the conclusion.

The main purpose of the report lies in courting international favour for an illegitimate government.

The report includes an initially perhaps surprisingly open acknowledgement of Sudan’s development chal­lenges. It describes Sudan’s three-digit inflation and negative economic growth and mentions the escala­tion of “tribal and intercommunal violence”.8 Given that the process was still ongoing when the report was submitted, it can only acknowledge that “consul­tations with assistance from the international and regional partners to resolve the political crises and con­tinue the path towards peace and democratic transition” were taking place.9

The report’s description of Sudan’s (lack of) achieve­ments in ending extreme poverty (SDG1) demonstrates important characteristics that apply across its treatment of the Agenda 2030. It acknowledges the dire situation, citing data where available. On poverty, the only source is a projection based on the government’s last national household budget and poverty survey from 2014/15, which was prepared in the con­text of the transitional government’s work with the IMF and the World Bank on a poverty reduction strat­egy paper. According to the VNR, poverty in­creased to 64.2 percent in 2020, up from 46.5 percent in 2009.10 Even that could be an undercount according to the director of the then new Social Security Commission in 2020, who spoke of 77 percent of the population living on less than US$1.90 per day.11

The disparities in the poverty count underline the lack of reliable current data. The VNR report acknowl­edges that gap and notes that the lack of disaggregated current socio-economic data makes it very difficult to identify those most affected by the lack of develop­ment and thus ensure that no one is left behind, a core objective of the Agenda 2030.12

The absence of regionally disaggregated economic data is not simply a consequence of the lack of state capacity, but is rooted in wilful government policy going back to colonial times. The British colonial administration wanted “to avoid publishing numbers about Sudan’s economy for fear of making regional inequities obvious to the public. Rather than buck this trend, subsequent post-independence regimes fol­lowed suit”, write Matthew Benson and Musan Alneel on the basis of their study of Sudan’s tax system.13

The transitional government had identified a strat­egy to reduce poverty, which the VNR presents as a response to the dire situation. The heart of that gov­ern­ment’s development strategy – prepared in con­junction with its international partners – was aboli­tion of the fuel subsidy and floating of the Sudanese currency. The short-term pain was to be alleviated by a broad cash-transfer programme funded by donors. The Sudan Family Support Programme or Thamarat was to provide up to 80 percent of the population with the equivalent of US$5 per month. Its roll-out was delayed because the US government first needed to delist Sudan from its list of State Sponsors of Ter­ror­ism. Under enormous economic pressure, the Sudanese government cut the subsidies – resulting in huge price rises for transport and food. A pilot of the Thamarat project was launched in February 2021, but quickly stopped after the European Union, the United States, Germany and the World Bank halted their funding following the October coup, depriving 9.2 million registered beneficiaries of future assis­tance.14

As well as send a message to the coup leaders, donors wanted to prevent misuse of funds. Inter­national funding had flowed through a multi-donor trust fund into the coffers of the Sudanese Central Bank. The influx of foreign currency stabilized Sudan’s reserves, allowing the government to finance imports of food and other commodities, and thus stabilized the fragile transitional government. Abort­ing funding for the trust fund and thus for the Thamarat programme was intended to avoid propping up the coup author­ities, whose ministry of finance also controlled the Central Bank.

The government’s narrative ignores the most significant obstacle to in­clusive and sustainable development: the dominance of the security sector.

In short, the VNR describes Sudan’s dire situation relatively accurately, in a way that serves the interests of the government and in particular the armed move­ment–led ministry of finance.15 The report locates the causes of the problems in the long rule of the for­mer Bashir regime, against which the armed move­ment fought and which the coup government pur­ported to overcome in accordance with the Sudanese revolution. The programmes and projects of the tran­sitional government of 2019 to 2021 are presented as still providing a response to this legacy. This narrative might suggest that all that is needed is for Sudan’s international partners to resume their funding. That, however, would be to ignore the most significant ob­stacle to inclusive and sustainable development: the dominance of the security sector, and the political sys­tem it has created to serve its interests.

Conflict and military repression as central development challenges

Sudan has been ruled by authoritarian military lead­ers for most of its post-independence history. Suc­cessive governments created an exploitative sys­tem based on the extraction of resources from the periph­eries for the benefit of urban elites in the centre.16 Where populations resisted such extraction, governments deployed significant force to maintain the sys­tem. Sudan has experienced armed conflict for most of its history, with fighting and violence against civil­ians located almost exclusively in the peripheries.17

The Sudanese Armed Forces and other security actors became strongly engaged in the economy. This impeded the development of the private sector, but allowed the military to control vast swathes of the country’s resources and productive economy. Key stakeholders were appointed to positions of authority in exchange for their loyalty.

One of the armed movements formed in response to state violence was the Justice and Equality Move­ment (JEM), led by Geibril Ibrahim from 2012. Once a considerable military force, JEM largely disintegrated over peace talks with the government and was defeated by government forces and expelled from Darfur in 2015. After that, it had only a few hundred troops in South Sudan and Libya.18 The JPA gave JEM and other signatories a new lease of life.

Against this background, Sudan’s 2022 VNR report serves a clear purpose. Both the coup government and Geibril personally have an incentive to emphasize their supposedly popular credentials, while distracting from their lack of legitimacy. Indeed, Geibril’s own support base is now so narrow that he travelled to Darfur in January 2023 “under heavy protection” for fear of attacks from his own Zaghawa tribe.19 Any international aid would allow him to bolster his lead­er­ship ambitions, both across Sudan and within Darfur.

Implications for donor governments

Ensuring effective international support for accelerated SDG implementation is immensely challenging in a situation of armed conflict and state capture by vio­lence entrepreneurs. Donors need to ensure that their aid does not strengthen – even inadvertently or in­directly –the extremely exploitative and extractive system keeping most Sudanese poor. At the same time, a highly risk-averse approach would essentially shift the burden to humanitarian aid. Some communities, for example in IDP camps, have received food aid for decades, keeping whole generations aid de­pend­ent.

Since the October 2021 coup, international devel­op­ment partners have started to reorientate. Inter­national officials repeatedly warned the military government that time was running out to access the funds and programmes that had been granted to the transitional government but were blocked after the coup.20 Sudan’s debt relief process under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC) was effec­tive­ly halted, as was progress on Sudan’s poverty reduc­tion process agreed with the World Bank and IMF.21

Even if a civilian government is finally formed, its absorption and implementation capacity will remain very limited. In the past, donors found it difficult to get the detailed applications and reports needed to fulfil their funding requirements. As a result, it was easier to plan around the state structures. While such a procedure allows projects to proceed for the benefit of civilian populations, it undermines the govern­ment’s ownership and capacities. Any new government would need to revise or at least update the existing development planning documents.

Finally, the security sector will remain a significant impediment to any civilian government and to inter­national donors willing to fund implementation of the SDGs. Supporting basic service delivery removes the government from its responsibility in that core area to some extent, especially when projects are implemented beyond government structures. Inter­national funding of schools, hospitals and utilities allows the government to continue spending large amounts of its own budget on the security sector and to maintain fiscal practices benefitting military-owned companies. Moreover, it is likely that the military will resist giving up its control of a large section of state-owned companies to a new civilian government; this was already a major sticking point during the 2019–2021 transitional government. Com­panies, banks and other entities owned or con­trolled by the paramilitary RSF may be even harder to transfer to civilian control. There is no transparency about their budgets and profits. As an indication of their wealth, the IMF reported a “non-transparent con­tribution of $2 billion from security sector owned companies” into the state budget in 2020.22

The 2030 Agenda recommends more integrated approaches to sustainable development. In Sudan this would be a development approach that includes peace­building and humanitarian concerns (the “triple nexus”) and is guided by an adaptive political strat­egy.23 An adaptive approach acknowledges complexity and uncertainty and thus allows for continuous moni­toring, evaluation and learning processes above and beyond conventional project-based programming cycles. It could include, for example, small pilot projects with state-level or local governments, which could quickly be expanded or adjusted if they prove successful.

Recent research calls for a more fundamental re­think of development cooperation in conflict settings in general. Specifically, donors should take the exist­ing coping mechanisms, perceptions and relationships of local communities more seriously in their programming decisions.24 Unpacking the political economy of conflict-affected countries’ SDG reporting should be part of such reflections.

Annex

Table 1 – Countries covered in this research paper


Country


VNRs
(year)a


SDG Index Ranking b

2022 2023

Statement on SDGs by head of state b

2021/22 2022/23

Percentage of adults “very / somewhat familiar” with the SDGsc

World Bank Income Group d

Varieties of Democracy e

Regime Type  Liberal
2021 Democracy  Index (of 179)

Fragile States Index f

Score Rank
(of 120) (of 179)

Belarus

2017, 2022 (2025)

34

34

UMIC

Electoral autocracy

175

69.9

84

Brazil

2017

53

50

no

yes

32 %

UMIC

Electoral democracy

59

74.5

71

China

2016, 2021

56

63

yes

yes

52 %

UMIC

Closed autocracy

172

65.1

101

Egypt

2016, 2020, 2021

87

81

no

yes

LMIC

Electoral autocracy–

144

81.6

50

India

2017, 2020

121

112

no

no

LMIC

Electoral autocracy

93

74.1

73

Kenya

2017, 2020

118

123

no

yes

LMIC

Electoral autocracy+

83

87.8

35

Republic of Korea

2016

27

31

yes

yes

19 %

HIC

Liberal democracy

17

31.5

159

Russian Federation

2020

45

49

no

no

UMIC

Electoral autocracy

151

80.7

53

South Africa

2019

108

110

yes

no

27 %

UMIC

Electoral democracy

49

72.0

78

State of Palestine

2018

Electoral autocracy

136

87.9

34

Sudan

2018, 2022

159

160

LIC

Closed autocracy

157

106.2

7