For UN Agenda: data gaps detected in 193 countries
To make informed decisions, governments and international organisations need data. The United Nations has been analysing the global availability of such data together with ETH Zurich. This has brought to light some surprising insights.
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In brief
- The SDG Monitor, developed by ETH Zurich and the United Nations, shows where global data gaps exist and which countries reliably provide data on which topics.
- According to an accompanying report, 18 of the 30 countries with the best data availability are developing countries, which is attributable among other things to different national priorities.
- The report underlines that the availability of data depends greatly on the availability of resources as well as the methodology and outlay associated with data collection. Data availability improves wherever SDG data are firmly integrated into national decision-making processes.
Without data, it is not possible to make effective political decisions such as promoting a particular energy source, combating poverty in rural regions, or limiting the spread of a particular disease. Or to put it in the words of Christoph G?ssmann: “Without data we are flying blind. Unfortunately, this is currently too often the case.”
G?ssmann is a doctoral student in the Law, Economics and Data Science Group under ETH Professor Elliott Ash. Together with staff from the Office of the Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN), he has been investigating how the availability of data from all 193 Member States can best be evaluated and presented – data that can be used to measure how the UN’s 2030 Agenda is progressing.
The 2030 Agenda leads the way to a sustainable world in harmony with nature and in prosperity, peace and partnership. The centrepiece of the Agenda comprises the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which make progress – or regress – measurable. But data are needed for this.
G?ssmann has developed the SDG Monitor together with UN staff. “With our analysis app, we provide decision-makers in governments and international organisations with the foundation they require for evidence-based decision-making,” says G?ssmann.
“The SDG Monitor conveys a comprehensive overview of where there are data gaps and provides input on how to close them.”Christoph G?ssmann
Little data on peace and other topics
The SDG Monitor is freely available and innovatively combines various official data sets of the United Nations, thereby generating new insights in an easily accessible manner. The Monitor helps uncover data gaps in specific countries and topic areas, and analyses which countries supply data particularly consistently. The Monitor automatically compiles diagrams and links data availability, for example, with data on which international organisation is responsible for collecting the data (Custodian Agency).
This enables users of the tool to display the desired data availability for one or more countries and to break down the analysis even further. The following diagram illustrates data availability per SDG. Topics such as energy, health and industry are documented considerably better than those such as peace, climate and gender.
Surprising insights published in the accompanying report
One year after the SDG Monitor went online in 2022, G?ssmann published a half-time report on the 2030 Agenda together with colleagues from the United Nations and the Global Partnership for Sustainable Development Data. Besides insights about which data are available where, the report provides a lot of background on why data availability varies so much across countries and topics.
The authors present some core insights: more data are needed concerning urgent priorities such as gender equality (SDG 5) and climate action (SDG 13). The 30 countries with the best data availability include 18 developing countries. “This was initially a surprising finding for us,” says G?ssmann. “On closer inspection we can attribute this observation, in part, to differences in national priorities. Developing countries often align more closely with the SDGs than developed countries.” Notably, Switzerland is also one of the top 30.
The external page Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were adopted in 2015 and are to be achieved by all 193 Member States of the United Nations (UN) by 2030. The 17 Sustainable Development Goals are subdivided into 169 targets. Further down in the hierarchy, the SDGs also include 248 indicators comprising around 700 data series. Examples of goals are no poverty, no hunger, quality education, reduced inequalities, sustainable cities and communities.
The report also notes that the availability of data varies depending on the organisation responsible for collecting the data (Custodian Agency). Among other things, data availability depends on how costly the data collection methods are and how developed the statistical standards for data collection were when the 2030 Agenda was launched. For example, some data can be derived relatively cost-efficiently from satellite data, while other data require the implementation of expensive and time-consuming surveys.
Science and politics hand in hand
“It is important to stress that the SDG Monitor only examines which data are available for which country and on which topic,” says G?ssmann. “The app does not measure the progress made on the 2030 Agenda – for instance, whether women and men are represented equally in parliaments throughout the world – but rather whether we actually have the requisite data to make a statement about this.” Amid widespread data gaps, the SDG Monitor plays a crucial role in promoting accountability and transparency, helping to maintain pressure on the implementation of the SDGs.
So, are governments really flying blind as far as the evidence for their decisions is concerned? G?ssmann doesn’t consider the situation to be quite so drastic. In recent years, data have been reported to the United Nations somewhat faster than in the past. Moreover, countries rely on various data sources in their decision-making, not just those collected through SDG reporting. Nevertheless, it is crucial to improve the availability of SDG data, which requires strong political will. Beyond public pressure, progress can be driven by developing national applications for SDG data – integrating it not only for SDG reporting but also into national decision-making processes. G?ssmann adds: “It then pays off for countries to invest in the collection of SDG data. And for countries unable to make the investment on their own, the international community needs to contribute financially and help build local capacities.” The SDG Monitor supports decision-makers in international organisations, governments and civil society in all these efforts.
Partnership between ETH and UN
The SDG Monitor and accompanying report are an important cornerstone of the partnership between ETH and the UN. In October 2023, ETH and the United Nations signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) and announced their intention of working together more closely. The partnership is intended to drive forward the development of technology-based social innovations to address global challenges. The UN-ETH website provides an overview and further information.
On the weekend of 20 and 21 September, almost one year after the signing of the MoU, the two partners will convene at the external page Summit of the Future in New York to review the progress of the partnership. The ETH meets New York 2024 event will also take place on this occasion.
Reference
Goessmann C, Idele P, Jauer K, Loinig M, Melamed C, Zak T: Pulse of Progress: The State of Global SDG Data in 2023. United Nations, 15 September 2023, doi: external page 10.3929/ethz-b-000630718