Caribbean faces challenges in funding sustainable development: UN report

A new United Nations report says lack of funding is among the biggest challenges for the world’s 47 least developed countries (LDCs), including some in the Caribbean, in their implementation of the UN’s sustainable development targets.

“While we continue to see mixed progress for this group of countries, there is tremendous potential to close the gaps and achieve momentum toward their investment needs,” said Fekitamoeloa Katoa ‘Utoikamanu, the newly-appointed High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States, on Wednesday.

Under-Secretary-General ‘Utoikamanu urged these governments to work with development partners, civil society and the private sector to alleviate poverty, cut inequality and save the environment.

Launching the 2017 edition of the State of the Least Developed Countries report at the UN Headquarters in New York, she noted that the LDCs are among the most vulnerable countries in the world with large segments of their population living in extreme poverty, with few prospects to improve their situation.

This year’s report, compiled by her office (UN-OHRLLS), focuses on the financing of the Istanbul Program of Action (IPoA), which charts out the vision and strategy for the sustainable development of LDCs through 2020, on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which were adopted by all countries in 2015 with a view to create a peaceful, inclusive world free of poverty by 2030.

Achieving the goals of IPoA complements efforts to achieve the SDGs, she stressed.

However, due to large gaps in investment, including for sustainable energy and information communications technology (ICT), the report notes that access to all modes of financing needs to increase for LDCs.

The average gross domestic product (GDP) growth for LDCs remained low at 3.8 percent in 2015, the lowest rate in the past two decades and well below the seven percent target set by the Istanbul Program, according to the report.

The LDCs share of total trade continued to decline, from 1.09 per cent in 2014 to 0.97 per cent in 2015, making it difficult to reach the 2 percent target, the report says.

Despite the significant challenges, the report also highlights progress in a few key areas, including in the transport sector, and access to electricity, which rose from 32.3 percent of the population in 2010 to 38.3 percent in 2014.

In addition, the report urges that a greater share of the total amounts of climate finance flowing from developed to developing countries needs to be allocated to LDCs, especially for adaptation projects that result in reduced vulnerability.

In June 2017, Equatorial Guinea graduated from the group, bringing the number of LDCs to 47, the report says.

It says nine LDCs reached the graduation thresholds in 2015, while several others aspire to graduate by 2020 or shortly thereafter.