Table 1. Initiatives for financing SDGs in national level
|
Theme
|
Tool
|
Enhancing market practice
|
Financial responsibility
|
Fiduciary capability, Incentives
|
|
Prudential regulation
|
Risk management, Stress tests,
Capital requirements
|
|
Disclosure and reporting
by financial institutions
|
Policy, Performance, Accounting
|
|
Disclosure and reporting
by non-financial corporations
|
Standards and requirements,
Accounting frameworks
|
|
Financial market criteria
|
Equity analysis, Credit ratings,
Green assets, Indexes
|
|
|
|
Harnessing the public balance sheet
|
Fiscal incentives
|
Targeted fiscal incentives,
Review fiscal incentives,
|
|
Public financial institutions
|
Sustainability mandates, Establishing new green institutions,
Blended finance instruments
|
|
Central Banks
|
Refinancing operations,
Asset purchase programmes
|
|
|
|
Reforming legal and market structures
|
Directed investment and lending
|
Priority sector lending, Prohibitions
|
|
Directed service provision
|
Directed provision,
Mandatory purchase requirements
|
|
Capital requirements
|
Adjust capital requirements
|
|
|
|
Encouraging cultural transformation in
financial decision-making
|
Financial capacity building
|
Consumer education, Professional education,
Regulator capacity building
|
|
Financial behaviour
|
Remuneration regulation, Codes of conduct,
Non-financial guidance
|
|
Market Structure
|
Value-based financial institutions,
Market diversity,
Right sizing financial institutions
|
Source: The Inquiry: Design of a Sustainable Financial System (2015)
Financing Sustainable development goals can be achieved through the introduction of traditional approaches and individual innovations in the development of the financial system. The results of the learning further information on measures to develop financing Sustainable Development Goals, they can be developed in two ways: by national and by international investment and aids. Influencing international and national policy-making to create systemic linkages between policies to combat illicit financial flows and sustainable development.
Picture 1. Developing process a 21st Century Financial System
Source: The Inquiry: Design of a Sustainable Financial System (2015)
The impact of investment in financing SDGs is very huge. This requires a global infrastructure financing mechanisms, including with the participation of public and private sources, as well as multilateral development banks (MDBs). It will also require changes in the preparation, quality and structuring of projects. Based on the current level of investment in public and private resources, attaining the SDGs would require about $2.5 trillion per year, over the next 15 years (from 2015 to 2030). More than 70 percent of the planned to give to developing and low income countries (Business and Sustainable Development (2017).
Picture 2. Effects of increasing investment for sustainable infrastructure to achieve the SDGs
Source Business and Sustainable Development (2017)
Picture 2 shows the additional investment requirements for a sustainable infrastructure to achieve the SDGs. It describes the possible role of various financing providers - governments, the private sector, and foreign development assistance -in bridging the gap between $ 2–3 trillion of current annual investments and the required $ 6 trillion in investments.
In conclusion, improving national financing and role of governance is difficult and takes time. But progress in both areas is essential to unlocking the investment the world needs to achieve the SDGs.
References
Sergei Guriev (2016). How to afford the SDGs. https://www.jordantimes.com/opinion/sergei-guriev/how-afford-sdgs
The Inquiry: Design of a Sustainable Financial System (2015). http://unepinquiry.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/The_Financial_System_We_Need_EN.pdf
Business and Sustainable Development (2017). http://s3.amazonaws.com/aws-bsdc/BSDC_SustainableFinanceSystem.pdf
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