The problems of #sustainable #development
are arguably the most important challenges facing humankind today. They
entail intra- as well as inter-generational justice, including the
attempt to ensure a non-decreasing portfolio of productive assets to
future generations. They also involve the most important problem of
climate change. The United Nations listed 17 goals to be achieved by
2030 that would help bring the Earth on a
path of sustainable development. The goals include the usual
quality-of-life indicators like the absence of poverty and hunger, good
health and access to clean sanitation, water and energy, and on the
economic front, reduced inequalities in income and wealth along with
decent work for all. A recent attempt to measure these efforts was made
by the Sustainable Development Solutions Network and the Bertelsmann
Stiftung, who produced the Sustainable Development Goal Index and
Dashboard. The data for 2016 collected for 149 countries puts India at
110 in terms of its position towards achieving the sustainable
development goals. China is ranked at 76 and Pakistan, Myanmar and
Bangladesh at 115, 117 and 118 respectively.
This a sobering piece of evidence for India, where there is pride
expressed in having the highest rate of growth of national income in the
world. Clearly, the quality of life and environment is far from good.
Poverty and inequality along with threats to biodiversity make living
for most Indians far from comfortable and secure. India's carbon
emissions are also on the rise, and it is ranked third behind China and
the United States. The challenge is to make economic development #inclusive and #pro_poor.
This does not make the market mechanism the best way to attain
sustainable development. There are three essential requirements that
must be addressed by the State and society. The first is a growing
awareness and conviction that the economy has to be thought of as only a
part of a bigger #ecological
system of the planet. Secondly, this understanding of the system must
lead to a shared vision of a lifestyle that is substantially different
from the current crass #consumerism
noticed in India. Finally, there must be a decisiveness in government
policies that promote collaborative efforts to change lifestyles. This
will compel businesses to create products and technologies that put life
ahead of the numbers that firms refer to as their bottom lines.
[The Telegraph (Kolkata) Editorial, Tuesday, August 02, 2016]
[The Telegraph (Kolkata) Editorial, Tuesday, August 02, 2016]
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