UNDP unveils a new development blueprint for the 21st century
Summary
The plan identifies six “signature solutions” against which UNDP will now align its resource and expertise, to make a real impact on poverty, governance, energy access, gender equality, resilience and environmental sustainability.
The UN’s development agency, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), on Tuesday launched a new and ambitious blueprint for development in the 21st century.
“This is a new plan for a new era,” said Achim Steiner, Administrator of UNDP, at the Executive Board meeting of the agency at the United Nations headquarters in New York. “The dramatic changes we see in the world have occurred on such a scale and at such a pace that our institutions are struggling to keep up. More is being demanded of us.”
President of the Board H.E. Ib Petersen, Permanent Representative of Denmark at the UN, said: “UNDP’s new strategic plan marks a welcome new direction for the Organisation to support the realisation of the 2030 Agenda.”
The new plan anchors in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, committing to the principles of universality, equality and leaving no one behind. It sets out a vision for the evolution of UNDP over the next four years, responding to a changing development landscape and the evolving needs of partners. Building on UNDP’s 50 years of experience, it describes how UNDP will support countries to achieve the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals and related agreements.
“This plan has been designed to be responsive to the wide diversity of the countries we serve,” Steiner continued. “This diversity is reflected in the three broad development settings described in the plan: eradicating poverty; structural transformations; and building resilience. It also describes how our two new platforms; country-level and global, will enable UNDP to deliver our support in a more effective way.”
The plan identifies six “signature solutions” against which UNDP will now align its resource and expertise, to make a real impact on poverty, governance, energy access, gender equality, resilience and environmental sustainability.
As well as formally endorsing the plan, the Board approved UNDP’s integrated resources plan and integrated budget estimates 2018-2021.
UNDP’s Executive Board is made up of representatives from 36 countries and provides inter-governmental support to and supervision of UNDP activities, ensuring that the Organization remains responsive to the evolving needs of programme countries.
Related
-
Can Africa overcome these three threats to its security and stability?
Security -- physical, water, food and cyber -- is likely to be one of the defining challenges in 21st century Africa.
-
UN says COVID-19 recovery efforts should accelerate SDG actions
The UN said the world was off track in achieving the SDGs even before the COVID-19 crisis erupted.
-
SDG 8 and Nigeria’s economic development
The SME sector is increasingly being recognised to be crucial to the national economic development of all nations across ...
Sustainable Development Section Sponsor
Most Popular
- ILO adopts landmark treaty on gig work
- Low-tech longevity investments could unlock $6 trillion worldwide – WEF
- Why is Europe’s economy falling short? Part 1
- Afreximbank President visits African Medical Centre of Excellence, Abuja
- Farmers worldwide report income strain and climate losses – survey
- IFC launches $2bn green bond as investor demand surges to record levels



