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Daily-current-affairs / 01 May 2023

India, its SDG pledge goal, and the strategy to apply : Daily Current Affairs

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Date: 02/05/2023

Relevance: GS-2: Government Policies and Interventions for Development in various sectors and Issues arising out of their Design and Implementation.

Key Phrases: Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), G20 Presidency, welfare indicators, Positive trends, under-five mortality, full vaccination, improved sanitation, girl-child marriage, gender inequality, optimization problem, digital infrastructure.

Why in News?

  • The Prime Minister while addressing the first meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors under India’s G20 Presidency expressed concern that “progress on Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) seems to be slowing down”.
  • Regardless of the global progress that has been made to date, the sheer population size of India means that realizing SDGs at a global scale is intrinsically tied to the success of India.
  • India has set an ambitious target to become the world's third-largest economy within the next decade, and it must ensure that this growth translates into progress in social and human development.

India’s progress is mixed:

  • The SDGs framework sets targets for 231 unique indicators across 17 SDG goals related to economic development, social welfare, and environmental sustainability, to be met by 2030.
  • A recent study assesses India’s progress on 33 welfare indicators, covering nine SDGs and providing a mixed picture of positive and concerning trends.
  • Positive trends:
    • The good news is that India is ‘On-Target’ to meeting 14 of the 33 SDGs, including indicators for neonatal and under-five mortality, full vaccination, improved sanitation, and electricity access, all of which have substantially improved in the last five years.
    • The neonatal and under-five mortality are currently both ‘On-Target’ for the country, 286 and 208 districts (out of 707 districts), respectively, are not.
    • Significant progress on access to improved sanitation excludes 129 districts that are not on course to meet this SDG indicator.
    • Indicators such as eliminating adolescent pregnancy, reducing multidimensional poverty, and women having bank accounts have improved across a vast majority of the districts between the years 2016 and 2021.
  • Concerning Trends:
    • Unfortunately, the national ‘On-Target’ designation does not apply equally across all districts.
    • For 19 of the 33 SDG indicators, the current pace of improvement is not enough to meet SDG targets.
    • Despite a national policy push for clean fuel for cooking, more than two-thirds (479) of districts remain ‘Off-Target’.
    • Some 415 and 278 districts are ‘Off-Target’ for improved water and handwashing facilities, respectively.
    • Women’s well-being and gender inequality:
      • No district in India has yet succeeded in eliminating the practice of girl-child marriage before the legal age of 18 years.
      • At the current pace, more than three-fourths (539) of districts will not be able to reduce the prevalence of girl-child marriage to the SDG target of 0.5% by 2030.
      • Unsurprisingly, other critical and related indicators such as teenage pregnancy (15-19 years) and partner violence (physical and sexual) that may be tracked back to child marriage are issues that India needs to escalate as priorities.
      • Despite the overall expansion of mobile phone access in India (93% of households), only 56% of women report owning a mobile phone, with 567 districts remaining ‘Off-Target’.

Lessons from the COVID-19 approach:

  • Optimisation approach:
    • Designing and implementing a policy response to a pressing issue is best viewed as an “optimization problem” relying on political will, responsive administration, adequate resources, and sound data.
    • India adopted an “optimization” approach to the COVID-19 pandemic and thus, it was given the focus and resources necessary to succeed.
    • There are lessons from this strategy that can inform and optimize India’s approach to its SDG targets.
  • Strong and sustained political leadership:
    • India's success with COVID-19 was largely possible because of strong and sustained political leadership supported by a responsive administrative structure at all levels, from the national to the district level.
    • Creating a similar mission-oriented ethos that is assessment-oriented and which provides adequate support for accomplishing India's district-level SDGs is now urgently needed.
  • Existing digital infrastructure and new initiatives:
    • India's success with COVID-19 was also possible because of the existing digital infrastructure, as well as new, indigenous initiatives such as the Co-WIN data platform and the Aarogya Setu application.
    • Following these examples, India must put in place a coordinated, public data platform for population health management by consolidating its many siloed platforms into an integrated digital resource for district administrators, as well as state and national policymakers.
  • Targeted SDG strategy delivered at scale:
    • A targeted SDG strategy delivered at scale must be executed with the same timeliness as India’s COVID-19 relief package.
    • As early as March 2020, the Government of India had put in place the ₹1.70 lakh crore Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana, later augmented to nearly ₹6.29 lakh crore, which included the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (₹3.91 lakh crore until December 2022) covering 800 million people.
    • Key to this relief program was a mix of spending to provide direct in-kind and economic support, as well as measures aimed at revitalizing the economy, small businesses, and agriculture.
    • This was critical in blunting the adverse effects of COVID-19, especially for vulnerable and socio-economically disadvantaged groups.
    • It also measurably demonstrated the value of a proactive, government-supported program specifically aimed at improving people’s well-being.

Conclusion:

  • India needs to innovate a new policy path in order to meet the aspirations of its people in the decade ahead — there is no historical precedence for a democratic and economically open nation on how to deliver development to a billion-plus people in a manner that is healthy and sustainable.
  • In successfully delivering a real-time response to the COVID-19 pandemic, India has proved that it is possible to deliver at scale in such an ambitious and comprehensive manner.
  • To succeed in meeting its SDG targets, especially those related to population health and well-being, basic quality infrastructure, and gender equality, a similar concerted, pioneering, nationwide effort would be the need of the hour.

Source: The Hindu

Mains Question:

Q. What is India’s progress in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)? Discuss the mixed picture of India's progress on SDG indicators and the lessons that could be learned from India’s mobilization for COVID-19 to achieve SDGs.