As written, SDG No. 17: Strengthen and revitalize the global
partnership for sustainable development clearly refers to the U.N. process of
developing the global sustainable development agenda. A process which stretches
back to Johannesburg in 2002 and beyond, with the contribution of the Rio
conference and the Rio+20 process and more.
It recognizes that in addition to having a multi-stakeholder
process for articulating goals and aspirations, which is important, there has
to be effective implementation of change on the ground. Some lessons were
learned during the implementation of the Millenium
Development Goals, but the writers of these 17 new sustainable development
goals know there is much more to be done, and with global warming, time is of
the essence.
When it comes to making changes in how humans live in
developing countries today, private business is a critical force shaping lives.
Private firms are making massive inward investments to developing countries,
providing goods such as soap, medicines, mobile phones, computers and services
such as consultancy, accountancy and legal advice. And of course, there is the
Internet. International and local companies are doing a huge amount for the
development of poor countries through free market initiatives.
However, their role in the sustainable development
partnership is still pretty peripheral — it remains dominated by governments,
NGOs, special identity groups and academics. While formally considered a
stakeholder by the U.N. system, business does not have a presence in the
partnership process commensurate with its power and influence on the ground.
This is in part business’ fault as it is such a diverse
sector, both in size and focus of activities, multinational and local
ownership. Consequently, effective representation and engagement is difficult
and, indeed, many businesses are not interested in the SDGs anyhow. But the way
the U.N. works makes it difficult to engage with business. It is a club of
governments, some of which are pretty unappealing in terms of their policies
and practices — but they still get into the club.
Beyond the club membership, the U.N. invented the term
"non-governmental organisation" (NGO) to categorize the non-profits
and lobby group outsiders it had to deal with. It learned ways of bringing them
to the discussion table because, like governments, they too serve the people.
The NGOs and special interest groups serve them with a passion and dedication
beyond many government agencies, but businesses are in the for-profit sector,
and they therefore serve profit.
Consequently, business makes uncomfortable bedfellows for
many in the U.N.’s traditional stakeholder groupings. Indeed, business is seen
as the cause of many of the world’s problems, not the agents of socio-economic
justice and environmental sustainability the Sustainable Development Goals want
so passionately to promote.
An uneasy alliance
Nevertheless, the situation is steadily changing. Whereas
the Millennium Development Goals were very government-orientated, these 17 new
goals — which have employment, economic development and consumption
issues at their core — need the private sector to be a full-on active
partner. The U.N., like most international development agencies, is having to
understand and work with the for-profit sector.
After all, the
multinational companies in the Fortune Global 500 have annual cash value-added
figures well in excess of the GDP of most developing countries while at the
same time touching the lives of millions of people throughout their value
chains. They are the agencies integrating our global economy and have immense
technical and people resources to be deployed in the social, economic and
environmental fields.
Until the fall of the Berlin wall and the end of the Cold
War, the senior levels of the U.N. did not talk to companies about global
issues. There was some engagement on issues such as agricultural development
and through agencies such as the ILO. But basically companies remained the
capitalist exploiters, multi-nationals in particular, and dialogue was taboo.
However, today’s rising multinationals are all from former communist countries
such as China and Russia and socialistic countries such as India and Brazil.
Consequently, the U.S. and Western domination of the Fortune 500 list is
waning.
Former U.N. General Secretary Kofi Annan realized that you
could not have development without the private sector, and reached out to the
business community by setting up the U.N. Global Compact. In addition, U.N.
agencies as diverse as UNDP and UNICEF have made real strides in working with
companies on a wide range of issues and in different forms of partnership: from
sponsorships to policy development and international standard-setting.
Another limit on the engagement of companies is that the
primary focus of the 17 Goals is the poorest of the poor, and for profit
companies don’t relate well to the desperately poor. Through their value chains
some companies such as Unilever can provide a family with all its weekly needs
for personal and family washing in Bangladesh for the price of one Coca-Cola;
while Mondelez buys about a quarter of Ghana’s cocoa crop, supporting the
incomes of over 200,000 small farmers. However,
the poorest find it hard to become employees or customers of big companies such
as Mercedes Benz, Glaxo and Microsoft.
However, the investment and training commitments that all
companies of substance make genuinely help develop the working, middle and even
elements of an upper class in developing countries. All developing countries
need the social, economic and organizational skills of these groupings, as they
seek to develop an economy and an accountable political system.
A focus on the poorest of the poor often overlooks these
nation-building investments, but they are as vital as the investment in
universities and schools. Indeed, Unilever was once described as the best
business school in India due to all the senior executives who had served there
and were now running other, often local, companies.
The massive garment industry of Bangladesh today began with
the investment of the Daewoo corporation of South Korea in one local plant.
Many managers left and started their own businesses; no single development
agency was involved in the growth of this industry, which now contributes over
half of Bangladesh’s foreign earnings and provides well over a million jobs.
Delivering on aspirations
Big international companies are some of the world’s greatest
problem-solvers. They can get oil from deep seas and take a baby sweet corn
from the field in Kenya and have it on a supermarket shelf in London within 30
hours, complete with all hygiene checks and a correct bar code. The slums of
Brazil have cable TV but don’t have running water and sanitation.
International companies are high focussed,
performance-driven and disciplined global organizations. They take aspirations
and turn them into facts on the ground, constantly monitoring and measuring
performance in order to gain efficiency and ensure success. The 17 SDGs are all
high-level aspirations and someone has to turn them into practical realities
based on feedback gained from constantly measuring success.
A few companies will check their total business profile and
value chain impact against the list of 17 SDG goals but most will focus on a
few issues that are close to the business and get involved in doing something
about them. Sometimes this will be through business activities, particularly in
the value chain where large companies are most likely to interface with poor
people.
At other times it will be through community outreach
projects, often in partnership with non-profits and charities. In many respects
the 17 SDGs are high-minded aspirations and companies will be most engaged in
turning them into practical action on the ground.
In a previous generation, companies faced many problems
identified in the SDGs when they did business in developing countries. What
they did was to integrate them into the business and solve them for their
employees and their families. They created corporate services that ensured
well-housed, healthy, educated workers, with access to clean water and other
services needed for a productive life for themselves and their families.
Companies such as Tata in India can be very proud of what
they achieved in this respect. But these corporate welfare states are dying out
rapidly. In part, due to the way business is conducted today, the costs
involved, and also because paternalism is not a good thing. It is better to
meet these social challenges through constructive partnerships with company
stakeholders and the wider society. This shares costs and builds capacity in
society.
At first sight, the 17 SDGs were a bit of a laundry list of
good works to be done, but they do set global priorities and give companies a
reference point when deciding how to develop their business and make a wider
social contribution.
Companies also have a way of assessing their wider impact on
human and environmental issues of importance and a benchmark by which to judge
their net contribution to global development. In turn, they can show how to
develop certain aspirations into real progress on the ground.
Although they are capable of doing much themselves, they
will need partners, too. That is a real opportunity to take the partnership
agenda beyond high aspirations to practical reality. There is still much to be
done to develop the craft of practical partnership and all potential partners
have much to learn, business included.
Looking ahead, it’s so important that we all understand how
multi-stakeholder partnerships can serve as vehicles for mobilizing and sharing
knowledge, expertise, technologies and financial resources to support the
achievement of the SDGs. It is already an imperative and will become
increasingly inherent that everyone, not just those within the philanthropic
space, realize their role in addressing the SDGs and making the world a better
place for everyone.
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