Economy
Sustainable development must include tackling inequality, says UN
Senior UN officials have called on the international community to address social and economic inequalities in order to achieve sustainability.
At a General Assembly debate, UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon said, “Social and economic inequalities between rural and urban areas are […] worsening.
“These inequalities are a reproach to the promise of the United Nations Charter. Social justice is a key ingredient of a peaceful sustainable world for all humankind.”
He said that an “inclusive approach” to sustainable development was required.
Ban also praised the success of the millennium development goals (MDGs), anti-poverty targets set by the UN in 2000.
A recent UN report called the MDGs “the most successful global anti-poverty push in history.”
It says that several of the targets for 2015 had almost been met. These include halving the number of people living in extreme poverty and reducing the proportion of urban slum dwellers.
However, last week the UN World Economic Survey said that rising inequalities “have made clear that a mere continuation of current strategies will not suffice to achieve sustainable development after 2015.”
The survey stressed the need to meet challenges caused by rising populations “while minimising the environmental impact and increasing natural resource use efficiency.”
Sustainable development, it says, must “take special care of the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable.”
It adds, “Strategies […] will need to systemically change consumption and production patterns, and might entail, inter alia, significant price corrections; encourage the preservation of natural endowments; reduce inequality; and strengthen economic governance.”
Further reading:
UN emphasises importance of sustainability in increasingly urbanised world
‘Global efforts’ needed to make cities sustainable
Obama calls for sustainable investment in Africa
How integrated solutions and collective action can catalyse real change