Dr. Kalsoom Sumra |
The rising income inequalities, regional disparities and gender inequalities vindicate a longstanding demand by new government to localize 2030 agenda into national and sub-national planning budget. A slowdown in emerging market economies, rising inequalities in income and migration within urban and rural populations, fragile conditions etc. the society is extending from vulnerability to terrorism, leading Pakistan to social exclusion vagueness. Pakistan failed to meet most of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) due to various socio-political and economic flouts and internal and external security concerns. One of the imperfections in implementing MDGs was the delay in localization. As in 2004, MDGs were officially recognized but the localization was started in 2010.
How Far Pakistan Has Come
Pakistan has recently secured a score of 55.6 under SDGs global index than is lower than the average of its neighbours like India (58.1) and Bangladesh (56.2). Under UN commitments, the millennium development goals of Pakistan would be measured and the parliament has adopted the national development agenda already to operate under the planning commission of Pakistan.
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What Are Sustainable Development Goals of Pakistan?
Pakistan has defined a list of SDGs to enhance its economic conditions and archiving growth in all dimensions by applying integrated approaches to achieve long-term progress.
1. Poverty
Pakistan’s first sustainable development goal is to eradicate poverty in all its forms by 2030. The SDG can be used to measure poverty and find ways to eliminate it.
2. Ending Hunger and Food Crisis
Another most crucial SDG for Pakistan is ending hunger by the year 2030 to provide relief to poor and vulnerable society regarding nutrition and insufficient food to achieve high health rare.
3. Well Being of People
An integrated approach to promote good health and wellbeing across multiple sectors of society which focus on ending epidemics like AIDS, malaria and polio.
4. Quality Education
This goal promotes lifelong opportunities for all sectors of society to achieve learning.
5. Gender Equality
Gender inequality is a severe issue in Pakistan which ranks 144 among 145 countries worldwide suffering from gender injustice, poor health and education of women. The goal aims to improve the low status of women.
6. Clean Water and Sanitation
This goals focus on the agenda of availability of sustainable management of clean water.
7. Affordable energy
Pakistan needs more infrastructure and transmission lines for more clean affordable energy.
8. Industry Innovation
This goal focuses on building the long term sustainable infrastructure to promote industrialization and bring more talented human resources to enhance innovation.
9. Sustainable Cities and Communities
This goal aims to increase the sustainable and resilient cities by sophisticated urban planning.
10. Climate Improvement
The climate of Pakistan is changing rapidly; it needs urgent actions to formulate strategies to deal with the impacts of climate in the long run.
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Analysis: How Far New Government Has to Go
Based on lesson learnt from Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the state has also realized the importance of SDGs and linked it with its Vision 2025 agenda to achieve economic progress and provide welfare to the people by building upon national strategies and international development goals. The Pakistani government has shown timely and pro-active reaction in aligning economic policies and development structure to SDGs framework. Pakistan is having a fractured socio-economic structure and flaws in planning and implementation strategies. The oriented strategy needs to be adopted to achieve SDGs. This move upholds a longstanding demand by Pakistan to emphasize on inter-governmental coordination and linkages with various government departments.
In accordance with current governance structure in Pakistan, the federal government has established national SDG Unit in the planning commission to develop and strengthen coordination with the four provincial governments’ SDGs units. In the current constituency governance, SDGs related to social sectors fall under the preview of sub-national capacities and provinces are empowered to plan and executive implementation of SDGs. This demands to overcome serious coordination issues for localization and ownership of SDGs at the lowest administrative tier is the key to SDGs achievement.
Most national and provincial policies and action plans are developed without strong political will and the current institutional capacity needs massive institutional reforms to amplify their capacity for effective implementation of the SDGs.
Pakistan’s statistical departments do not have the capacity to measure the indicators at national and sub-national levels and it needs to be strengthened with training and capacity building in resources. At local level, the data gaps for social indicators are increased and few indicators are available at provincial level. The baseline data needs extensive resources to be collected and will need extensive exercise that will require substantial financial and human resources. Pakistan has always faced difficulty to balance the distribution of resources among provinces and there is always lopsidedness in resource allocation which leads to interprovincial rivalries, fabricating alarming challenge.
Pakistan is facing a challenge to take on board all the provinces at the same step. The challenge lies in the coordination mechanism, chaos of ownership, interprovincial rivalries, and lack of coordination in inter-governmental and inter-departmental that is contingent to place SDGs at the center of national, regional and local development.
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For the most part national, provincial policies and action plans are not backed by sufficient financial resources. The presence of top down decision making has hampered the sub-national prioritization. The actions and plans of government needs to be revisited in budget allocation in social sectors, the state impede doing the blatantly, cruelly, obvious wrong plans that deepen poverty, extend degradation of ecosystems and expand inequality. Key challenge in advocacy of SDGs in Pakistan lies in insufficient availability of adequate human resources and institutional resource gap.
Social indicators remained poor over the last five decades and localizing SDGs in Pakistan is at infancy stage, it is still in mode of evolution and sub-national governments are in the phase of understanding the SDGs goals and targets from the perspective of their own planning vision.
In the current constituency governance SDGs related to social sectors fall under the preview of sub-national capacities and provinces are empowered to plan and executive implementation of SDGs.
The literacy rate in Pakistan is 58% prevailing strong inequality in different regions, 22.3% of Pakistani population was living below poverty line in 2015, 58% population is food insecure and inequality in health indicators in different regions of the country are alarming. Pakistan has been ranked the second worst country in the world for gender equality although SDGs endorse women empowerment and gender equality.
For localizing SDGs, the authorized and responsible national, sub-national and local governments entail decentralization of governance functions needs to be strong at grassroots level as the SDGs focal tier. It is unfortunate that place of local government is not well recognized in Pakistan; looking into the present situation of local government, different institutional arrangements at the local level are required to implement SDGs.
Given that Pakistan continues to be run without clear long term directions, consequently it continuous (continues) to roll along without putting in place the distinct roadmap for localizing SDGs for a promising future. Planning and development departments at national and sub national level need to formulate the reformations for governance, indicator settings, coordination and implementation mechanism and allocating financial and human resources for successful localizing of SDGs in Pakistan. Most national and provincial policies and action plans are developed without strong political will and the current institutional capacity needs massive institutional reforms to amplify their capacity for effective implementation of the SDGs.
Read more: Pakistan Economy’s Progress Card
How New Government Will Tackle SDGs?
Achieving the national sustainable development goals are not going to require a miracle, the newly elected government should be able to achieve them by 2030 if they seriously focus on achieving social, economic and environmental goals as compare to developed countries even if we compare with other developing countries. The lack of interest of policy formation by the previous governments has been the major culprit behind unsuccessful completion of projects. So the elections have brought a new government in power that can solve the dilemma of solving the stunted growth in Pakistan. The private sector should not hesitate to join hands with government because they are placed well in some areas to support government in their ventures.
Dr. Kalsoom Sumra is currently working as Assistant Professor at Center for Policy Studies, COMSATS University Islamabad Pakistan. Her current research interests focus on Local Government, New Public Management & Urban Governance, Public Policy, Social Equity, Fairness and Sustainable Management, Social Responsibility, Public Services Ethics. The views expressed in this article are author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Global Village Space.