SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGs): The Time for New Focus
                                                                                                          -Sajan Rai
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are the historic decision on a comprehensive far-reaching and people-centred, a set of universal goals committed to achieve in its three dimensions-Economic, Social and Environment, with a deadline for attainment of 2030.  The SDGs will be the guidelines for UN member states to frame their agendas and political policies over the next 15 years and it aims to “end poverty in all its form everywhere” by 2030. The declaration of SDGs adoption was made at seventieth UN General Assembly after several drafts over years by an intergovernmental Open Working Group (OWG) that comprised representatives of seventy countries.
The Global Goals or SDGs will replace the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), eight anti-poverty targets that the world committed to achieve by 2015. The sustainable development agendas was finalized by the UN’s 193 member states during the Rio +20 summit at the United Nation Conference on Sustainable Development held in Rio de Janerio in June 2012 (Rio +20).
As cited by Danielle Renwick (2015); UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon says the SDGs are based on six essential elements: “dignity, people, prosperity, our planet, justice, and partnership.” The 17 proposed SDGs, targets and indicators have broad and ambitious sweep of the goals. These includes-ending poverty in all its forms everywhere, ending hunger,  achieving gender equality, ensuring healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages, and ensuring access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for all.

The eight MDGs- reduce poverty and hunger, achieve universal education, promote gender equality, reduce child and maternal deaths, combat HIV, malaria and other diseases, ensure environmental sustainability,  develop global partnerships – failed to consider the root causes of poverty and made no afford on gender inequality as well as the holistic nature of development. The MDGs did not focus on human rights, natural resources, and specifically on economic development. Initially MDGs were documented to be applied to all countries but it was focused on poor countries financed from wealthy nations. Sarah Hearn, New York University’s (NYU) Centre on International Cooperation remarked, “The MDGs were about resource transfer from rich countries. The SDGs are universal—they’re supposed to apply to all countries and try to overcome the 'West lecturing the rest' dynamic”. Every country is expected to work towards achieving the sustainable development goals.
Analysts have expected the SDGs are to be costly-more costly than MDGs. Some analysts say it’d cost as much as $4.5 trillion per year in investments and to aid to meet the SDGs. Likewise,  a 2014 UN report estimated $7 trillion annually for infrastructure investments. Bjorn Lomborg, a Danish economist and director of the Copenhagen Consensus Centre attributes $200 billion of $900 billion in aid spent between 2000 and 2014 to the MDGs; he says the SDGs could direct as much as $700 billion in aid over next fifteen years.
The designs of the post-2015 development agenda, the SDGs goals have attracted widespread criticism. A handful of member states including UK and Japan feel that an agenda consisting of 17 goals is too unwieldy to implement. Speaking in New York in 2014, UK Prime Minister David Cameron said he worried there were too many goals to implement effectively. “There’s a real danger they will end up sitting on a bookshelf, gathering dust,” he said. He wants 12 goals at the most, preferably 10.
Amina Mohammed, the UN secretary general’s special adviser said it was hard fighting to get the number of goals down to 17, and it would be better if they can further reduce.
Lomborg argues that some of the SDGs targets-ending malnutrition, malaria, and tuberculosis, are “implausibly optimistic and inefficient.” He said it will result better if they invest only on 19 targets.
Jeffrey Sachs, one of the proponents of the goals and the UN secretary general’s special adviser supported that the post-2015 development planning goal serve to mobilize support and resources, create ‘peer pressure’ for political leaders to work to end extreme poverty, and other global issues that can be solved. “Global goals help to galvanize a global effort,” writes sachs.
“World leaders have an unprecedented opportunity this year to shift the world onto a path of inclusive, sustainable and resilient development,” Writes Helen Clark, UNDP Administration.


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