Breaking the gridlock: Reimagining cooperation in a polarized world
April 3, 2024
Thimphu, 3 April 2024 – The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) launched the global Human Development Report 2023/2024, titled “Breaking the Gridlock: Reimagining cooperation in a polarized world" today at the Royal University of Bhutan (RUB). The Minister for Foreign Affairs and External Trade, D.N Dhungyel graced the event attended by senior government officials, Heads of UN Agencies, Ambassadors, and students among others.
With a Human Development Index (HDI) score of 0.681, Bhutan ranked 125 out 193 countries in 2022, which is two places up from 2021 and puts the country in the medium development category.
Overall, the 2023/24 Human Development Report (HDR) reveals a troubling global trend: the rebound in the global HDI – a summary measure reflecting a country’s Gross National Income (GNI) per capita, education, and life expectancy – has been partial, incomplete, and unequal.
The HDI is projected to reach record highs in 2023 after steep declines during 2020 and 2021. But this progress is deeply uneven. Rich countries are experiencing record-high levels of human development while half of the world’s poorest countries remain below their pre-crisis level of progress.
Global inequalities are compounded by substantial economic concentration. As referenced in the report, almost 40 percent of global trade in goods is concentrated in three or fewer countries; and in 2021 the market capitalization of each of the three largest tech companies in the world surpassed the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of more than 90 percent of countries that year.
In his Keynote Address, Lyonpo D.N Dhungyel said the HDR 2023/24 is timely as the world navigates through unprecedented global crisis, ranging from socio-economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, declining economic growth, triple planetary crisis and widening inequalities, among others. “The increasing fragmentation, polarization, and growing inequality we witness in the world today, only serves as an urgent call for strengthening multilateralism for greater political resolve, solidarity and compassion. Bhutan recognizes that our journey towards sustainable development cannot be traversed alone. Multilateralism is indispensable to address today’s complex global challenges that impacts all nations, small and big.”
UNDP Resident Representative Mohammad Younus said the widening human development gap revealed by the report shows that the two-decade trend of steadily reducing inequalities between wealthy and poor nations is now in reverse.
"Despite our deeply connected world, we are falling short. We must leverage our interdependence as well as our capacities to address our shared and existential challenges and ensure people’s aspirations are met. This gridlock carries a significant human toll. The failure of collective action to advance action on climate change, digitalization or poverty and inequality not only hinders human development but also worsens polarization and further erodes trust in people and institutions worldwide.”
The report argues that advancing international collective action is hindered by an emerging ‘democracy paradox’: while 9 in 10 people worldwide endorse democracy, over half of global survey respondents express support for leaders that may undermine it by bypassing fundamental rules of the democratic process, as per data analyzed in the report. Half of people surveyed worldwide report having no or limited control over their lives, and over two-thirds believe they have little influence on their government’s decisions.
Political polarization is a growing concern with global repercussions. Along with a sense of powerlessness, report authors say, it is fueling inward-turning policy approaches – starkly at odds with the global cooperation needed to address urgent issues like the decarbonization of our economies, misuse of digital technologies, and conflict. This is particularly alarming in light of 2023's record-breaking temperatures, which emphasize the immediate need for united action to tackle the climate crisis, or in the advent of artificial intelligence as a new and fast-evolving technological frontier with little or no regulatory guard rails.
The report highlights that deglobalization is neither feasible nor realistic in today’s world and that economic interdependence remains high. It points out that no region is close to self-sufficiency, as all rely on imports from other regions of 25 percent or more of at least one major type of goods and services.
The report also emphasizes how global interdependence is being reconfigured and calls for a new generation of global public goods. It proposes four areas for immediate action:
- Planetary public goods, for climate stability, as we confront the unprecedented challenges of the Anthropocene;
- Digital global public goods, for greater equity in harnessing new technologies for equitable human development;
- New and expanded financial mechanisms, including a novel track in international cooperation that complements humanitarian assistance and traditional development aid to low-income countries; and
- Dialling down political polarization through new governance approaches focused on enhancing people's voices in deliberation and tackling misinformation.
In this context, multilateralism plays a fundamental role, the report argues, because bilateral engagements are not able to address the irreducibly planetary nature of the provision of global public goods.
To view the full report, visit https://hdr.undp.org/human-development-report-2023-24