Common Agenda Report English
Common Agenda Report English
Common Agenda Report English
COMMON
AGENDA
Report of
the Secretary-General
COPYRIGHT:
Our Common Agenda – Report of the Secretary-General
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Second, now is the time to renew the social contract between Governments and their people and within
societies, so as to rebuild trust and embrace a comprehensive vision of human rights. People need to see
results reflected in their daily lives. This must include the active and equal participation of women and
girls, without whom no meaningful social contract is possible. It should also include updated governance
arrangements to deliver better public goods and usher in a new era of universal social protection, health
coverage, education, skills, decent work and housing, as well as universal access to the Internet by 2030 as a
basic human right. I invite all countries to conduct inclusive and meaningful national listening consultations
so all citizens have a say in envisioning their countries’ futures.
Third, now is the time to end the “infodemic” plaguing our world by defending a common, empirically backed
consensus around facts, science and knowledge. The “war on science” must end. All policy and budget
decisions should be backed by science and expertise, and I am calling for a global code of conduct that
promotes integrity in public information.
Fourth, now is the time to correct a glaring blind spot in how we measure economic prosperity and progress.
When profits come at the expense of people and our planet, we are left with an incomplete picture of the
true cost of economic growth. As currently measured, gross domestic product (GDP) fails to capture the
human and environmental destruction of some business activities. I call for new measures to complement
GDP, so that people can gain a full understanding of the impacts of business activities and how we can and
must do better to support people and our planet.
Fifth, now is the time to think for the long term, to deliver more for young people and succeeding generations
and to be better prepared for the challenges ahead. Our Common Agenda includes recommendations for
meaningful, diverse and effective youth engagement both within and outside the United Nations, including
through better political representation and by transforming education, skills training and lifelong learning.
I am also making proposals, such as a repurposed Trusteeship Council, a Futures Lab, a Declaration on
Future Generations and a United Nations Special Envoy to ensure that policy and budget decisions take
into account their impact on future generations. We also need to be better prepared to prevent and respond
to major global risks. It will be important for the United Nations to issue a Strategic Foresight and Global
Risk Report on a regular basis, and I also propose an Emergency Platform, to be convened in response to
complex global crises.
Sixth, now is the time for a stronger, more networked and inclusive multilateral system, anchored within
the United Nations. Effective multilateralism depends on an effective United Nations, one able to adapt to
global challenges while living up to the purposes and principles of its Charter. For example, I am proposing
a new agenda for peace, multi-stakeholder dialogues on outer space and a Global Digital Compact, as well
as a Biennial Summit between the members of the Group of 20 and of the Economic and Social Council, the
Secretary-General and the heads of the international financial institutions. Throughout, we need stronger
involvement of all relevant stakeholders, and we will seek to have an Advisory Group on Local and Regional
Governments.
For 75 years, the United Nations has gathered the world around addressing global challenges: from conflicts
and hunger, to ending disease, to outer space and the digital world, to human rights and disarmament. In
this time of division, fracture and mistrust, this space is needed more than ever if we are to secure a better,
greener, more peaceful future for all people. Based on this report, I will ask a High-level Advisory Board, led by
former Heads of State and Government, to identify global public goods and other areas of common interest
where governance improvements are most needed, and to propose options for how this could be achieved.
In this spirit, I propose a Summit of the Future to forge a new global consensus on what our future should
look like, and what we can do today to secure it.
Humanity has shown time and time again that it is capable of great achievements when we work together.
This common agenda is our road map to recapture this positive spirit and begin rebuilding our world and
mending the trust in one another we need so desperately at this moment in history.
Now is the time to take the next steps in our journey together, in solidarity with and for all people.
© UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe
5. Place women
1. Leave no 3. Promote peace and and girls at
one behind prevent conflicts the centre
• Renewed social contract anchored in • New agenda for peace to: • Repeal of gender-discriminatory laws
human rights
• Reduce strategic risks (nuclear • Promote gender parity, including
• New era for universal social protection, weapons, cyberwarfare, through quotas and special measures
including health care and basic autonomous weapons)
• Facilitate women’s economic
income security, reaching the 4 billion
unprotected • Strengthen international foresight inclusion, including investment in the
• Commit to the 1.5-degree Celsius goal 4. Abide by • Improve people’s experiences with
public institutions and basic services
and net zero emissions by 2050 or international law
sooner
and ensure justice • Inclusive national listening and
• Declarations of climate emergency “envisioning the future” exercises
and right to a healthy environment
• Human rights as a problem-solving • Action to tackle corruption in line
• Package of support to developing measure, including by comprehensive
anti-discrimination laws and
with the United Nations Convention
against Corruption
countries
HIGH-LEVEL DECLARATION
ADVISORY BOARD ON FUTURE
GENERATIONS
HIGH-LEVEL TRACKS
• Global Digital Compact to: • Biennial Summit between the Group of Youth
• Fairer and more resilient multilateral • through a United Nations Futures Lab
public good architecture
Ensure long-term thinking, including
• Annual • Emergency
gender and diversity
meetings between the United Platform to be convened in
• More listening, participation and Nations and all heads of regional response to complex global crises
• Strategic
consultation (including digitally), organizations
Foresight and Global Risk Report
• Stronger
building on the seventy-fifth
anniversary declaration and Our engagement between the by the United Nations every five years
Common Agenda United Nations system, international
financial institutions and regional • On global public health:
• Gender parity within the United development banks • Global vaccination plan
Nations system by 2028
• More systematic engagement with • Empowered WHO
• Re-establish the Secretary-General’s parliaments, subnational authorities • Stronger global health security and
Scientific Advisory Board and the private sector preparedness
• “Quintet of change” for United Nations • Civil society focal points in all United • Accelerate product development
2.0, including innovation, data, Nations entities and access to health technologies in
• United
strategic foresight, results orientation low- and middle-income countries
Nations Office for Partnerships
and behavioural science
to consolidate access and inclusion, • Universal health coverage and
including accessibility online addressing determinants of health
I. A wake-up call........................................................................................................ 12
A. The choice before us.............................................................................................................................. 14
B. Renewing solidarity................................................................................................................................ 14
C. Our Common Agenda.............................................................................................................................. 18
IV. Nations large and small: a new global deal to deliver global public goods
and address major risks.......................................................................................... 48
A. Protecting the global commons and delivering global public goods....................................................... 48
B. Addressing major risks........................................................................................................................... 64
C. Next steps.............................................................................................................................................. 65
© UN Photo/Fahad Kaizer
CHAPTER I A wake-up call
I. A wake-up call
1. Seventy-five years ago, the world emerged from
a series of cataclysmic events: two successive THE COSTS OF COVID-19
world wars, genocide, a devastating influenza y Global GDP decreased by an estimated 3.5
pandemic and a worldwide economic depression. per cent in 2020.
Our founders gathered in San Francisco promising
y The pandemic has pushed a further
to save succeeding generations from the scourge of
124 million people into extreme poverty.
war; to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights,
The pandemic-induced poverty surge
in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the
will also widen the gender poverty gap,
equal rights of men and women and of nations large
meaning more women will be pushed into
and small; to establish conditions under which
extreme poverty than men.
justice and respect for international law can be
maintained; and to promote social progress and y Nearly one in three people in the world
better standards of life in larger freedom. They (2.37 billion) did not have access to
believed in the value of collective efforts to achieve adequate food in 2020 – an increase of
a better world and founded the United Nations to almost 320 million people in just one year.
that end.
y Early estimates suggest a potential
2. The Charter of the United Nations is an exceptional increase of up to 45 per cent in child
achievement. Since 1945, international norms and mortality because of health-service
institutions have delivered independence, peace, shortfalls and reductions in access to
prosperity, justice, human rights, hope and support food.
for billions of people. For many others, however,
y Total working hours fell by 8.8 per cent in
these aspirations were never fully realized and
2020, the equivalent of 255 million full-
are now receding. Too many people are also being
time jobs.
excluded from the opportunities and benefits of
technology and transitioning economies, facing a y Restricted movement, social isolation
bleak future if we do not act fast. and economic insecurity are increasing
women’s vulnerability to violence in the
3. The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic
home around the world.
has been a challenge like no other since the Second
World War, revealing our shared vulnerability
and interconnectedness. It has exposed human
rights concerns and exacerbated deep fragilities unite to produce and distribute sufficient vaccines
and inequalities in our societies. It has amplified for everyone. We have been reminded of the vital
disenchantment with institutions and political role of the State in solving problems, but also the
leadership as the virus has lingered. We have need for networks of actors stretching well beyond
also seen many examples of vaccine nationalism. States to cities, corporations, scientists, health
Moreover, with less than a decade to go, the professionals, researchers, civil society, the media,
Sustainable Development Goals have been thrown faith-based groups and individuals. When we all
even further off track. face the same threat, cooperation and solidarity
4. At the same time, the pandemic has led to a surge are the only solutions, within societies and between
of collective action, with people working together to nations.
respond to a truly global threat. The world needs to
PEACE HEALTH
Despite ongoing international tensions, conflict After a 10-year global effort led by WHO
and violence, the multilateral system with the involving over 500 million vaccinations,
United Nations at its centre has helped to avert a smallpox was officially eradicated in 1980.
third world war or a nuclear holocaust.
Today, 85% of the world’s
Conflicts between States, 1946–2020 85% children are vaccinated
6 and protected from
debilitating diseases.
4 Source: WHO, 2020.
0 POVERTY ERADICATION
1960 1980 2000 2020
Source: Peace Research Institute Oslo, 2020.
East Asia and Pacific South Asia
Rest of the World Sub-Saharan Africa
5. Let there be no illusion: COVID-19 may pale in Solidarity is a fundamental value “by
comparison to future challenges if we do not learn virtue of which global challenges must be
from failures that have cost lives and livelihoods. managed in a way that distributes costs
Our best projections show that a stark choice and burdens fairly, in accordance with basic
confronts us: to continue with business as usual principles of equity and social justice, and
and risk significant breakdown and perpetual crisis, ensures that those who suffer or benefit the
or to make concerted efforts to break through and least receive help from those who benefit the
achieve an international system that delivers for most” (General Assembly, resolution 57/213).
people and the planet. These omens must not be
ignored, nor these opportunities squandered.
person’s dignity, our diversity and our varying levels
of capacity and need. The importance of solidarity
B. Renewing solidarity has been thrown into sharp relief by COVID-19 and
the race against variants, even for countries that
6. As the United Nations marked its seventy-fifth are well advanced with vaccination campaigns.
anniversary in 2020, people around the world No one is safe until everyone is safe. The same is
expressed their belief in international cooperation true of our biodiversity, without which none of us
while also conveying their concern at the mismatch can survive, and for actions to address the climate
between its promises and the realities in their crisis. In the absence of solidarity, we have arrived
daily lives. Member States echoed this in their at a critical paradox: international cooperation is
declaration on the commemoration of the seventy- more needed than ever but also harder to achieve.
fifth anniversary of the United Nations (see General 9. Through a deeper commitment to solidarity, at
Assembly resolution 75/1), resolving to keep the the national level, between generations and in the
promises that they have already made and asking for multilateral system, we can avoid the breakdown
recommendations to advance our common agenda scenario and, instead, break through towards a
and respond to current and future challenges. more positive future. This report proposes a path
7. This report seeks to answer these calls, taking forward, centred around a renewal of our social
stock of challenges and recommending actions contract, adapted to the challenges of this century,
that build on what is working and improve what taking into account young people and future
is not. Multilateralism has evolved considerably generations and complemented by a new global
since the United Nations was founded, and we deal.
have shown that we can come together to forge 10. A strong social contract anchored in human
collective solutions. However, this does not happen rights at the national level is the necessary
often, effectively or inclusively enough. foundation for us to work together. It may not
8. Everything proposed in this report depends on a be written down in any single document, but the
deepening of solidarity. Solidarity is not charity; in social contract has profound consequences for
an interconnected world, it is common sense. It is people, underpinning their rights and obligations
the principle of working together, recognizing that and shaping their life chances. It is also vital for
we are bound to each other and that no community international cooperation, since bonds across
or country can solve its challenges alone. It is about countries do not work when bonds within them
our shared responsibilities to and for each other, are broken. The inequality, mistrust and intolerance
taking account of our common humanity and each that we are seeing in many countries and regions,
• COVID-19 is endemic, • Owing to unchanged emission levels • Continuous erosion of human rights
• Growing poverty, and massive loss
constantly mutating from human activity, global warming
of 2°C will be exceeded during the
• Richer countries hoard vaccines, no twenty-first century of jobs and income
plan for equitable distribution
• Heatwaves, floods, droughts, tropical • Public goods like education and
• Health systems are overwhelmed cyclones and other extremes are social protection systems are
WARNING SIGNS
Up to 827,000 viruses that The extinction rate Rapid increase in non-State conflicts
could infect humans exist is now 10–100 times higher since 2010
in mammals and birds than at any other time in the
3,000
Source: International Institute for past 10 million years
Source: United Nations, 2019. 2,000
Sustainable Development, 2021.
1,000
Social contract is International institutions are trapped Preference for No consensus on facts,
eroded and geopolitical in a cycle of underinvestment and unilateralism over science or knowledge
tensions rise underperformance solidarity
• Vaccines shared widely and • Global temperature rise is limited • Strong commitment to the
equitably to 1.5°C universality and indivisibility of
• Capacity to produce vaccines for • All countries and sectors human rights
future pandemics within 100 days decarbonize by 2050 • Universal social protection floors,
and to distribute them globally
• Support provided to countries including universal health coverage
within a year
heavily affected by climate • Universal digital connectivity
• People in crisis and conflict settings emergencies
• Quality education, skills
have a bridge to better lives
• Just transitions to a new labour enhancement and lifelong learning
• Revised international debt ecosystem are ensured
• Progress on addressing gender,
architecture
• A functioning ecosystem is racial, economic and other
• Business incentives are reshaped to preserved for succeeding inequalities
support global public goods generations
• Equal partnership between
• Progress to address illicit financial • Communities are equipped to adapt institutions and the people they
flows, tax avoidance and climate and be resilient to climate change serve and among and within
finance impacts communities to strengthen social
SIGNS OF HOPE
146 million people lifted out 30% of methane emissions Transitioning to low-
of extreme poverty could be mitigated with carbon, sustainable growth
by 2030 through existing technology today. approaches could deliver
investments in governance, Source: UNEP, 2021. direct economic gains of
social protection, the green $26 trillion through to 2030
economy and digitalization compared with business-
(including 74 million women as-usual approaches
and girls) Source: United Nations, 2021.
Source: UNDP, 2020.
New era for multilateralism, The international system All actors accountable The United Nations is
as countries and other actors acts fast for everyone in an for keeping a trusted platform for
work to solve the problems emergency commitments made collaboration between
that matter most a growing number and
diversity of actors
heightened by the devastating impact of the better education and jobs for them and to give them
COVID‑19 pandemic, suggest that the time has a greater voice in designing their own futures. We
come to renew the social contract for a new era in must also find ways to systematically consider the
which individuals, States and other actors work in interests of the 10.9 billion people who are expected
partnership to build trust, increase participation to be born this century, predominantly in Africa and
and inclusion and redefine human progress. Asia: we will achieve a breakthrough only if we think
and act together on their behalf for the long term.
11. The deepening of solidarity at the national
level must be matched by a new commitment to 12. To support solidarity within societies and
young people and future generations, to whom the between generations, we also need a new deal
opening words of the Charter of the United Nations at the global level. The purpose of international
make a solemn promise. Strengthened solidarity cooperation in the twenty-first century is to achieve
is long overdue with the existing generation of a set of vital common goals on which our welfare,
young people, who feel that our political, social and indeed survival, as a human race depend.
and economic systems ignore their present and Notably, we need to improve the protection of the
sacrifice their future. We must take steps to deliver global commons and the provision of a broader
© UN Photo/Manuel Elias
set of global public goods, those issues that RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN OUR
benefit humanity as a whole and that cannot be COMMON AGENDA AND THE
managed by any one State or actor alone. Many SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS
of these objectives (the “what”) are set out in the
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the
Development and the Sustainable
declaration on the commemoration of the seventy-
Development Goals are at the core of Our
fifth anniversary of the United Nations. I believe
Common Agenda. The 2030 Agenda is a
that it is high time for Member States, together with
plan of action for people, planet, prosperity
other relevant stakeholders, to devise strategies
and peace, that seeks to realize the
for achieving them (the “how”), through enhanced
human rights of all and to achieve gender
multilateral governance of global commons and
equality. The Sustainable Development
global public goods. Furthermore, we must address
Goals are integrated and indivisible
major risks more robustly, learning lessons from
and balance the three dimensions of
our response to COVID-19.
sustainable development: the economic,
13. Finally, States have at their disposal an social and environmental. Many of the
organization whose very purpose is to solve actions proposed in this report thus seek
international problems through cooperation. The to accelerate achievement of the Goals, not
United Nations presence is global, its membership least in the light of gaps and delays caused
is universal and its activities span the breadth of by the COVID-19 pandemic. Actions already
human need. Its fundamental values are not the under way to achieve the Goals will, in
preserve of any region. Indeed, they are found in turn, be key for the implementation of Our
every culture and religion around the world: peace, Common Agenda.
justice, human dignity, equity, tolerance and, of
course, solidarity. However, while the fundamental
purposes and principles of the United Nations
15. The world has also changed, however, creating
endure, the Organization must evolve in response
new needs that call for new understandings and
to a changing world to become more networked,
arrangements to meet them. We must combine the
inclusive and effective.
best of our past achievements with the most creative
look to the future if we are to deepen solidarity and
C. Our Common Agenda achieve a breakthrough for people and the planet.
The actions suggested in this report are urgent
14. We already have the blueprints for a better and transformative and fill critical gaps. Just as
world, including the Charter of the United Nations, the founders of the United Nations came together
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and determined to save succeeding generations from
other international human rights instruments, the the scourge of war, we must now come together
2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development to save succeeding generations from war, climate
Goals, the Paris Agreement on climate change and change, pandemics, hunger, poverty, injustice and
other key instruments. These are just some of the a host of risks that we may not yet foresee entirely.
many resolutions and international instruments This is Our Common Agenda.
that have been painstakingly developed over
75 years and that constitute a crucial heritage.
We can and must build on them and redouble our
efforts to implement them.
© UN Photo
CHAPTER II We the peoples: a renewed social contract anchored in human rights
TRUST
T
WH
TY OL
OCIE E-O
-S PRIVATE
SECTOR
F-S
F
E-O
OC
OL
IE
WH
TY
INDIVIDUAL STATE/
INSTITUTIONS
THE RENEWED
SOCIAL CONTRACT
ANCHORED IN
WH
HUMAN RIGHTS Y
IE T
OL
OF
OC
F- S
E-
-S
OC
IE T L E-O
INSTITUTIONS THAT LISTEN
Y W HO
SERVICES
CIVIL
JUSTICE AND RULE OF LAW SOCIETY COMPLEMENTS TO GDP
TAXATION
CARE AND INFORMAL ECONOMY
NO CORRUPTION
INFORMATION
SOCIAL PROTECTION
DIGITAL SPACE SYSTEMS INCLUDING UNIVERSAL
HEALTH COVERAGE
DECENT WORK
INCLUSION, PROTECTION
AND PARTICIPATION
enshrining core principles, such as solidarity, respect 22. Failing to deliver what people need most,
for human rights, accountability and equality. The including basic services, drives mistrust, regardless
2030 Agenda gives practical expression to these of how open institutions are to public participation.
principles through its commitment to leave no one Societies vary in terms of which public goods are
behind. delivered publicly and which are delivered privately,
including health, education, the Internet, security
and childcare. However, regulatory frameworks that
B. Trust ensure effectiveness and accountability can be
provided and kept up to date by States. Moreover,
20. Building trust and countering mistrust, between a key lesson from COVID-19 is the importance of
people and institutions, but also between different the State as a provider of trustworthy information,
people and groups within societies, is our defining goods and services, especially in times of crisis.
challenge. Both interpersonal and institutional trust Institutions can analyse and reduce administrative
are important and mutually reinforcing, but the burdens that make it hard for people to gain access
recommendations below focus largely on the latter. to their services. Making government services
There has been an overall breakdown in trust in digital can enhance transparency and accessibility,
major institutions worldwide due to both their real if provision is made for communities that currently
and perceived failures to deliver, be fair, transparent do not have access to the digital world. At a time of
and inclusive, provide reliable information and make rapid change, I encourage societies to discuss what
a difference in people’s lives. For example, public are the most essential and valued public goods
distrust of governments and government distrust and the best means of ensuring their delivery,
of publics made it harder to maintain consensus bearing in mind the roles of both the public and
behind public health restrictions on COVID-19. private sectors and building on the Sustainable
Conversely, countries with higher levels of trust Development Goals. I would also urge investment
in public institutions (along with higher levels of in public systems and ensuring quality public
interpersonal trust) did better at managing the servants, as the main point of contact between the
pandemic. The types of challenges that we will State and people. The international system needs
face in the future will require similar, if not greater, to better support countries that lack the capacity
levels of trust in each other and in our institutions. and funding to make such investments.
21. People wish to be heard and to participate in 23. Justice is an essential dimension of the
the decisions that affect them. Institutions could social contract. In all parts of the world, distrust
establish better ways of listening to people whom is fuelled by people’s experience of inequality and
they are meant to serve and taking their views corruption, and by their perception that the State
into account, especially groups that are frequently and its institutions treat them unfairly. The 2030
overlooked, such as women, young people, minority Agenda promises to promote the rule of law and
groups or persons with disabilities. As an initial step, provide access to justice for all (target 16.3 of the
I invite Governments to conduct national listening Sustainable Development Goals), but many justice
and “envisioning the future” exercises. These can systems deliver only for the few. It is estimated
be done digitally to ensure breadth and inclusivity, that 1.5 billion people have unmet criminal, civil
albeit with commensurate measures to reach those or administrative justice needs. They are unable
3.8 billion people who are still offline. I also commit to use the law to defend themselves from violence
to ensure that the United Nations builds on recent and crime, protect their rights or resolve disputes
innovations in listening to, consulting and engaging peacefully. In a number of countries, the law still
with people around the world. actively discriminates against women, who in effect
enjoy only three quarters of the legal rights of men.
© UNDP
When security and justice actors are abusive and Meeting of the General Assembly on the Rule of
act with impunity, they exacerbate grievances and Law at the National and International Levels (see
weaken the social contract. Distrust is also fuelled resolution 67/1). We will examine how our rule of
by people’s experience of corruption, which has a law assistance can support States, communities
disproportionate impact on women, exacerbates and people in rebuilding their social contract as
inequality and costs the world trillions of dollars a foundation for sustaining peace. In this vein,
annually. During our consultations, I heard from it will also be important to accelerate action to
Member States about the potential for transforming tackle corruption, in line with the United Nations
justice systems in ways that strengthen the Convention against Corruption.
bonds that hold our societies together. In support
24. Taxation is one of the most powerful tools of
of efforts to put people at the centre of justice
government, critical to investing in public goods
systems, I will promote a new vision for the rule
and incentivizing sustainability. Governments
of law, building on Sustainable Development
should consider using taxation to reduce extreme
Goal 16 and the 2012 Declaration of the High-level
inequalities in wealth. This would be an important different income categories also face challenges
signal in the wake of a pandemic in which millions in terms of domestic resource mobilization.
of people lost their jobs and governments around Addressing this is an integral part of financing for
the world faced declining fiscal space while the development and crucial in supporting the efforts
wealth of billionaires saw a massive jump. Taxation towards achieving the Sustainable Development
can also drive a sustainable and just transition, as Goals. Any new approach to taxation will need to
governments shift subsidies from activities that embed the principles of sustainability while also
damage the environment to those that sustain and considering the views and capacities of developing
enrich it; tax carbon emissions and other polluting countries.
activities rather than people or income; introduce
25. More broadly, a reformed international tax
fair royalty regimes in extractive activities; and
system is needed to respond to the realities of
channel resources to sustainable investments.
growing cross-border trade and investment and
These reforms can have different impacts on
an increasingly digitalized economy while also
different countries, sectors and people, however,
addressing existing shortcomings in fair and
and it is especially important to ensure that they do
effective taxation of businesses and reducing
not create new inequalities and to compensate and
harmful tax competition. The G20 has agreed on
support any perceived to lose out. Countries across
© UN Photo/Evan Schneider
a new international tax architecture that addresses scientifically established facts is an existential risk
the tax challenges arising from globalization and to humanity. While vigorously defending the right
digitalization and introduces a global minimum to freedom of expression everywhere, we must
tax for corporations, with a blueprint in place for equally encourage societies to develop a common,
broader implementation under the auspices of empirically backed consensus on the public good of
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and facts, science and knowledge. We must make lying
Development (OECD). As discussions continue, wrong again. Institutions can be a “reality check”
the perspectives of all countries must be heeded, for societies, curbing disinformation and countering
including the potential for asymmetrical impacts hate speech and online harassment, including of
on countries at different stages of development. women and girls. I urge acceleration of our efforts
Consideration could also be given to measures to produce and disseminate reliable and verified
to tax the value of the digital economy, taxation information. The United Nations plays a key role
of financial technology innovations, including in this regard, which it can continue to strengthen,
cryptocurrencies, and a digital development tax, building on models such as the Intergovernmental
whereby the companies that have benefited for Panel on Climate Change, the World Meteorological
decades from a free and open Internet contribute to Organization Scientific Advisory Panel or the
the connectivity of the 3.8 billion people who are still Verified initiative for COVID-19. Other steps include
offline and to a safer digital world. I also propose support for public interest and independent media,
stronger international cooperation to tackle tax regulation of social media, strengthening freedom
evasion and aggressive tax avoidance, money- of information or right to information laws and
laundering and illicit financial flows, including ensuring a prominent voice for science and
through a new joint structure on financial integrity expertise, for example through representation of
and tackling illicit financial flows, with membership science commissions in decision-making. A global
centred around the United Nations, international code of conduct that promotes integrity in public
financial institutions, OECD, major financial information could be explored together with States,
centres and expert civil society organizations. Its media outlets and regulatory bodies, facilitated by
role could include promotion of transparency and the United Nations. With recent concerns about
accountability through the provision of data and trust and mistrust linked to technology and the
other information, as well as fostering agreements digital space, it is also time to understand, better
to address illicit financial flows. regulate and manage our digital commons as a
global public good (chap. IV).
26. The Internet has altered our societies as
profoundly as the printing press did, requiring a
deep reimagining of the ethics and mindsets with
C. Inclusion, protection and
which we approach knowledge, communication
and cohesion. Along with the potential for more
participation
accessible information and rapid communication
27. A vibrant social contract guarantees the
and consultation, the digital age, particularly social
conditions for people to live a decent life, leaving
media, has also heightened fragmentation and
no one behind and enabling all to participate in
“echo chambers”. Objectivity, or even the idea that
society, as promised in the 2030 Agenda. This
people can aspire to ascertain the best available
means measures to address discrimination and
truth, has come increasingly into question. The
to ensure that human rights are protected and
goal of giving equal balance to competing points
people can meet their basic needs. Food, health
of view can come at the expense of impartiality and
care, water and sanitation, education and decent
evidence, distorting the public debate. The ability
work are basic human rights. We must ensure a
to cause large-scale disinformation and undermine
broad sharing of opportunity and human security
2. ZERO
HUNGER
1. NO 3. GOOD HEALTH
POVERTY AND WELL-BEING
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SYSTEMS
13. CLIMATE 5. GENDER
ACTION EQUALITY
10. REDUCED
INEQUALITIES
in sectors with the greatest potential for creating Sustainable Development Goals, proved its value
more and better jobs, such as the green, care in the public health measures taken in response to
and digital economies, is key and can be brought the pandemic. Impressive actions taken to house
about through major public investment, along people have demonstrated what is possible with
with incentive structures for long-term business sufficient political will.
investments consistent with human development
30. To take stock of these commitments and
and well-being. In particular, we need road maps to
progress made as the world seeks to recover from
integrate informal workers into formal economies
COVID-19, consideration should be given to holding
and to benefit from women’s full participation in the
a World Social Summit in 2025. This would be
workforce. The advancement of the human right
an opportunity to hold a different form of global
to adequate housing, in line with target 11.1 of the
deliberation and to live up to the values, including
© UN-Women/Johis Alarcón
trust and listening, that underpin the social for everyone, men and women alike. The Beijing
contract. The Summit outcome could be an update Declaration and Platform for Action and the Global
of the 1995 Copenhagen Declaration on Social Acceleration Plan for Gender Equality point the way.
Development, covering issues such as universal I urge Member States and other stakeholders to
social protection floors, including universal health consider five related and transformative measures:
coverage, adequate housing, education for all (a) the full realization of equal rights, including
and decent work, and give momentum towards through repeal of all gender-discriminatory laws
achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. (target 5.1 of the Sustainable Development Goals);
31. Perhaps humanity’s greatest resource is our own (b) measures to promote gender parity in all spheres
collective capacity, half of which has historically been and at all levels of decision-making, including quotas
constrained as a result of gender discrimination. No and special measures; (c) facilitating women’s
meaningful social contract is possible without the economic inclusion, including through large-scale
active and equal participation of women and girls. investment in the care economy and equal pay,
Women’s equal leadership, economic inclusion and and more support for women entrepreneurs; (d)
gender-balanced decision-making are simply better greater inclusion of the voices of younger women;
and (e) an emergency response plan to accelerate
GENDER INEQUALITY
GENDER INEQUALITY
DISCRIMINATION VIOLENCE
In 88 countries, laws restrict the jobs >1.4 billion women lack legal protection
and hours that women can work, affecting from domestic sexual or economic violence.
1.6 billion women.
Source: World Bank, 2021. Source: World Bank, 2018.
ECONOMIC LOSS
Gender inequality causes major losses in global GDP.
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
GLOBAL
GDP
A
IC
LIT
the Generation Equality Forum. The United Nations
PO
itself will ensure gender parity at all levels within
the Organization by 2028. We will also undertake
a review of United Nations system capacity –
staffing, resources and architecture – to deliver on
gender equality as a core priority across all entities.
33. Underpinning the social contract is an
CI V
AL
my Call to Action for Human Rights, I set out
CI
SO
seven domains in need of particular attention,
which are reflected across Our Common Agenda. CULT
URAL
Implementation of the full spectrum of human
92%
rights is at the heart of our capacity to recover
from the pandemic, renew the social contract and of all the
more. Civil, political, economic, social and cultural Sustainable Development Goals
rights are mutually reinforcing, indivisible and are linked to human rights
universal, not ordinary services with a market-set and labour standards.
price tag but essential factors in building more
inclusive societies. Promoting and protecting Human rights serve the whole of society
civic space makes societies stronger and more – not only the individual – and are central to the
resilient, building on the right to participate and social contract.
freedom of expression, association and assembly.
While upholding human rights is an obligation
for all States, beyond that it is also time to treat
rights as problem-solving measures and ways to
address grievances, not just for individuals but
for communities at large. We have a growing body
of evidence that shows how institutions can be
designed to prevent human rights abuses. We also services to address the spread of disinformation
know that rights-respecting institutions strengthen and harmful life-threatening content, in line with
the social contract, protecting societies as well as international human rights law.
individuals.
36. Finally, to ensure that everyone is seen and
34. Racism, intolerance and discrimination recognized, measures to prove legal identity
continue to exist in all societies, as seen during the (target 16.9 of the Sustainable Development
pandemic with scapegoating of groups blamed for Goals) and end statelessness, including by closing
the virus. As a start, the adoption of comprehensive legal loopholes, and disaggregating data by age,
laws against discrimination, including based on gender and diversity are urged. People on the move
race or ethnicity, age, gender, religion, disability, require special attention, support and protection.
and sexual orientation or gender identity, is long While COVID-19 pandemic restrictions had severe
overdue. New approaches to proactively support consequences for human mobility and left many
the participation in public affairs of those who have refugees and migrants stranded, displacement
traditionally been marginalized, including minority continued to grow. Measures to protect, assist
and indigenous groups, are also necessary. Fuller and find solutions for the internally displaced,
use could be made of human rights mechanisms, benefiting from the High-level Panel on Internal
including the universal periodic review, in this Displacement, are essential to leaving no one
regard, and I support the update of the modalities of behind. I urge Governments and other stakeholders
the universal periodic review by the Human Rights to make progress in putting the Global Compact on
Council as part of the new guidelines. Refugees and the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly
and Regular Migration into practice, including
35. In 2023, we will commemorate the seventy-
through respect for the fundamental principle of
fifth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of
non-refoulement and measures to provide access
Human Rights and 30 years since the adoption of
to asylum for refugees, by protecting and upholding
the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action
the rights of all persons on the move, regardless of
on human rights. As this milestone nears, the time
status, by supporting host countries and through
has come to take stock, rejuvenate our shared
the inclusion of refugees and migrants in essential
values and update our thinking on human rights.
public services.
Consideration should, for instance, be given to
updating or clarifying our application of human
rights frameworks and standards to address
D. Measuring and valuing what
frontier issues and prevent harms in the digital or
technology spaces, including in relation to freedom
matters to people and the
of speech, hate speech and harassment, privacy, planet
the “right to be forgotten” and neuro-technology.
The right to a healthy environment also warrants 37. Even with our planet undergoing rapid and
deeper discussion. It may be time to reinforce dangerous change, economic models continue
universal access to the Internet as a human right, to assume endless expansion and growth and
with accelerated steps to connect the remaining overlook the broader systems that sustain life
3.8 billion people offline to the Internet by 2030, and well-being. We need a pathway that protects
notably those most often left behind, including people and the planet, allowing for sustainable
women, along with indigenous and older people. development. This means broad shifts in what
The United Nations stands ready to work with prosperity and progress mean, how to incentivize
Governments, businesses and civil society to and measure them, and how to evaluate policies.
find alternatives to disruptive blanket Internet 38. We must urgently find measures of progress
shutdowns and generic blocking and filtering of that complement GDP, as we were tasked to do by
2030 in target 17.19 of the Sustainable Development and others to already begin implementation of
Goals. We know that GDP fails to account for human the recent System of Environmental-Economic
well-being, planetary sustainability and non-market Accounting (SEEA) Ecosystem Accounting and the
services and care, or to consider the distributional system for population and social conditions, and
dimensions of 1economic activity. Absurdly, GDP to consider existing complements or alternatives
rises when there is overfishing, cutting of forests to GDP, such as the human development index,
or burning of fossil fuels. We are destroying nature, the inclusive wealth index, the Genuine Progress
but we count it as an increase in wealth. Such Indicator, the multidimensional poverty index and
discussions have been ongoing for decades. It the inequality-adjusted human development index.
is time to collectively commit to complementary
39. In rethinking GDP, we must also find ways to
measurements. Without that fundamental shift, the
validate the care and informal economy. Specifically,
targets that we have fixed in relation to biodiversity,
most of the care work around the world is unpaid and
pollution and climate change will not be achievable.
done by women and girls, perpetuating economic
I will consult the Presidents of the General Assembly
inequality between genders. COVID-19 also had
and the Economic and Social Council to determine
deeply gendered economic and job impacts that
how to advance this issue. Any process would
highlighted and exacerbated the trillions of dollars
need to bring together Member States, international
that are lost owing to billions of hours of unpaid
financial institutions and statistical, science
care work performed every year. Rethinking the
and policy experts to identify a complement or
care economy means valuing unpaid care work in
complements to GDP that will measure inclusive
economic models but also investing in quality paid
and sustainable growth and prosperity, building
care as part of essential public services and social
on the work of the Statistical Commission. In
protection arrangements, including by improved
addition to identifying complementary measures,
pay and working conditions (target 5.4 of the
the process would also need to agree on pathways
Sustainable Development Goals). More broadly,
for national and global accounting systems to
we also need to find new ways to account for and
include additional measurements, and to establish
value the vast informal economy.
systems for regular reporting as part of official
statistics. In the interim, I urge Member States
© UN Photo/Cia Pak
CHAPTER III Succeeding generations: shaping the future
to be expanded to protect the interests of all the the priorities identified by young people during the
people of the twenty-first century and to bequeath consultations for Our Common Agenda and the
a liveable world to those who will follow. seventy-fifth anniversary of the United Nations.
42. Young people today, along with future Having a voice
generations, will have to live with the consequences
45. Some countries have created opportunities for
of our action and inaction. Today’s generation of
younger generations to have a voice in decisions that
young people is distinct from future generations.
affect them, through youth councils, parliaments
However, it is time to find ways to give more weight
and ministries. However, these solutions have
to their collective interests and to make our systems
not always avoided tokenism, often remaining
work to safeguard their futures. This renewal of
peripheral to core political processes. Youth-led
solidarity between generations is an integral part of
protest movements are frequently driven by deep
the other actions identified in this report, otherwise
distrust of today’s political classes and desire for
the social contract that shapes the future will be
proper engagement in decision-making. Yet some
designed exclusively by those who will not live to
authorities have clamped down on peaceful protest,
see it realized.
dismissed young people as too inexperienced and
treated them as beneficiaries or, worse, as threats
A. Solidarity with younger rather than equal partners. At the global level,
generations young people have been formally recognized as
critical actors within intergovernmental frameworks
43. The world today is home to the largest generation on peace and security, sustainable development,
of young people in history at 1.8 billion people, climate change, human rights and humanitarian
close to 90 per cent of whom live in developing action. Yet here, too, engagement is not always
countries. Young people have never been more meaningful, nor does it guarantee geographical,
educated or more connected, yet they continue to gender, income and other forms of diversity.
face significant obstacles to achieving their full 46. In line with the commitments made by Member
potential. Some 267 million young people (15–24 States in the declaration on the commemoration of
years old) are not in education, employment or the seventy-fifth anniversary of the United Nations
training, two thirds of whom are young women as to listen to and work with youth, governments are
a result of gendered expectations of unpaid family urged to promote political representation for youth,
work and informal employment. The pandemic including young women and girls. This could entail
has only made this worse. The pandemic also lowering the voting age and the eligibility age for
exposed large disparities between developed and standing as a candidate for elected office, as
least developed countries in the numbers of young well as strengthening youth participatory bodies.
people online, notably affecting their capacity Supporting the political participation of a diverse
to continue education remotely during school range of young people may mean challenging social
closures. Young people tell us that our systems norms and stereotypes, especially in relation to
do not listen to them meaningfully and that our gender, as well as in relation to other forms of
systems are short-sighted and do not take their marginalization. Young people are also urged to
concerns seriously. seize the opportunities available to them, including
44. Delivering on the priorities of young people and by exercising their right to vote. Together with
meaningfully including them in decision-making leading researchers and academic institutions,
are investments that will deliver immediate returns, I will explore a “youth in politics” index to track
as well as build human capital and social cohesion the opening of political space in countries around
for the longer term. The actions below respond to the world that younger generations are so clearly
demanding, as well as the participation of young systems in history. For many students, especially
people in these processes. girls and young women, this break may become
permanent, with potential consequences for
47. Within the United Nations system, the bond
their rights, equality and development for future
with young people can be further strengthened, for
generations. Even prior to COVID-19, traditional
instance through regular check-ins, recognizing
education systems were still not reaching some
their diversity and reaching those who are
258 million children and young people in the world
marginalized. Efforts will be stepped up to increase
and were failing to provide many students with
youth participation in our support to electoral
even basic foundational skills such as reading and
processes and in peacebuilding efforts, including
mathematics. Students in developing and developed
by building the capacity of local youth networks
countries alike tell us that they leave the education
and youth-led organizations. While our envoys on
system without the tools that they need to adapt
youth have increased the profile of youth issues in
and thrive in a rapidly changing world, including
the Organization, if the United Nations is to live up
digital literacy, global citizenship and sustainable
to its commitments this work must be put on a more
development. This situation is exacerbated by the
sustainable footing. I propose the establishment
fact that both early childhood education and lifelong
of a dedicated United Nations Youth Office in the
learning, so crucial for individuals and society at
Secretariat, which will integrate the current activities
large, remain an aspiration in most countries.
of the Office of the Envoy on Youth, continue to
lead high-level advocacy and serve as the anchor 49. Our priority should be to help children and
for United Nations system coordination and young people to catch up on learning lost during the
accountability on youth matters across our work pandemic while transforming education systems
on peace, sustainable development, humanitarian so that students reach their full potential. I will
issues and human rights. In the meantime, my champion lifelong learning for all and convene
Envoy on Youth will prepare recommendations a Summit on Transforming Education in 2022 to
for more meaningful, diverse and effective youth accelerate progress towards the achievement of
engagement in United Nations deliberative and Sustainable Development Goal 4. The Summit
decision-making processes, for the consideration will forge a common vision for education, building
of the General Assembly, the Security Council on the forthcoming work of the International
and the Economic and Social Council and their Commission on the Futures of Education and
respective subsidiary bodies. This will be done in other recent progress including the replenishment
consultation with the world’s young people and in of the Global Partnership for Education fund
coordination with United Nations system agencies and the establishment of the Global Education
and other stakeholders. Cooperation Mechanism. We need a road map for
teaching all children to read, write and perform
Learning basic mathematics and for giving them other core
48. Quality education (including early childhood skills. Education systems need to be modernized
education) is a fundamental human right – one and connected, making learning more student-
of society’s great equalizers, a prerequisite for centred, dynamic, inclusive and collaborative. We
young people to be equipped to exercise their can succeed only if we value the world’s teachers
voice and contribute to the social contract, and and work with them as partners in transforming
a foundation for tolerance, peace, human rights schools, colleges and universities. The Summit will
and sustainability. Yet the provision of education tackle crucial issues, including equity, the education
today is in turmoil. Over 90 per cent of children obstacles faced by girls and young women, the
in the world have had their education interrupted transition from education to employment, and the
by COVID-19, the largest disruption of education promotion of lifelong learning and reskilling. It will
$10,000,000,000,000
56%
87%
TOTAL ANNUAL EDUCATION FINANCING NEEDS: $504 BILLION
HIGH INCOME
6%
LOW INCOME
33%
GLOBAL
© UN Photo/Rick Bajornas
overqualified and underpaid, neither meeting their result in 24 million new “jobs of the future” by 2030.
aspirations nor allowing them to unleash their full One way to proceed could be the formation of a
potential, and perpetuating underdevelopment and high-ambition coalition to promote green and digital
lack of tax revenue in low- and lower-middle-income economy job creation, involving relevant ministers
countries. A focus is needed on (re)skilling and (finance, planning, labour and education), youth and
upskilling youth and connecting them from learning other key stakeholders from the 20 countries whose
to employment and entrepreneurial opportunities. labour markets and workforce will expand most
The availability of decent jobs for youth is also rapidly over the next decade, emphasizing equal
tied to the sustainability of their futures, including access for women and girls to these jobs and the
efforts to transition to low-emission and climate- transition from the informal to the formal sectors.
resilient labour markets.
that will irreversibly affect every person on the planet. present decisions on people in the future. Other
This knowledge needs to become a source of action. States could establish similar mechanisms,
It is time to place long-term analysis, planning and building on these good practices. At the multilateral
thinking at the heart of national governance and the level, a growing number of Member States and
multilateral system. We must expand our thinking advocates have proposed options to represent
and institutions across time. succeeding generations in the United Nations
system, including through a Commissioner
56. The United Nations will review its work
or Ombudsperson for Future Generations, a
to strengthen this capacity. This will include
Commission of Global Guardians for the Future,
conducting future impact assessments of major
or a repurposed Trusteeship Council. To help
policies and programmes, convening foresight and
explore the viability of these and other options,
planning experts across the United Nations system
I propose the appointment of a Special Envoy for
and its multilateral partners, regularly reporting on
Future Generations, building on a proposal by my
megatrends and catastrophic risks (chap. IV) and
predecessor in 2013. The Special Envoy could be
working with a wider community of governmental,
tasked with representing the interests of those who
academic, civil society, private sector, philanthropic
are expected to be born over the coming century.
and other actors to strengthen strategic foresight,
The Special Envoy could also support the work
preparedness for catastrophic risks, and anticipatory
of the multilateral system on long-term thinking
decision-making that values instead of discounts
and foresight, including through the Futures Lab
the future. Collectively, this body of work would come
mentioned above. One of the first tasks of the
together in a Futures Laboratory (“Futures Lab")
Special Envoy could be to explore, together with
and could support States, subnational authorities
Member States, the use of the Trusteeship Council
and others to build capacity and exchange good
to give a voice to succeeding generations (chap. V).
practices to enhance long-termism, forward action
and adaptability. 59. Member States might also consider reflecting
duties to future generations in their Constitutions
Representing future generations and national legislative frameworks, a step already
57. Future generations are, by definition, taken by many countries. The interests of younger
unrepresented in today’s decision-making and and future generations are increasingly being
unable to articulate their needs. To translate the considered by national courts, particularly in the
principle of intergenerational equity into practice, context of climate change and the environment.
consideration could be given to forums to act on Internationally, these efforts could be consolidated
their behalf, as their trustees, as well as instruments in a Declaration on Future Generations. This could
to further protect their interests. build on the above-mentioned UNESCO Declaration
to specify duties to succeeding generations and
58. At the national level, some countries have
develop a mechanism to share good practices and
established committees for the future or
monitor how governance systems address long-
future generations commissioners who advise
term challenges.
governments and public bodies on the effects of
UN Photo/Violaine Martin
CHAPTER IV Nations large and small: a new global deal to deliver global public goods and address major risks
ATMOSPHERE
GtCO2e
250 30
200 20 2°C Range
1.8°C Range
150 10
1.5°C Range
100 0
-600,000 -400,000 -200,000 0 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050
Source: United States Environmental Protection Agency, 2020. Source: UNEP, 2020.
OUTER SPACE
As the density of objects in orbit increases, Outer space debris Source: European Space Agency, 2021.
so does the likelihood of collisions, where each
collision will create further debris in a chain 1,200
Extrapolation
reaction potentially rendering space unusable No further launches
1,000
catastrophic collisions
Cumulative number of
for generations.
800
600
400
200
0
Lower orbit (2,000 km) 2025 2050 2075 2100 2125 2150 2175 2200 2225
Antarctic ice Source: Intergovernmental Panel Projected pollution of the sea Source: Lebreton and others, 2019.
on Climate Change, 2019.
sheet mass loss Even with an extremely ambitious scenario (no further emissions in the ocean
as sea level equivalent, change relative to 1986–2005 by 2020), the level of microplastics in the ocean could double by mid-century
as already accumulated plastic waste slowly degrades into smaller pieces.
+1.5°C scenario +4.3°C scenario
4.0 Mt Buoyant Emissions growth to 2050
0.3 3.5 Mt microplastics Emissions level to 2050
3.0 Mt Emissions stop to 2050
2.5 Mt Degraded Emissions growth to 2050
0.2
metres
GLOBAL PUBLIC
GOODS I
IFY
DE
NT
NT
IFY
IDE
GOVERNANCE ARRANGEMENTS
GLOBAL
COMMONS Protect the global commons
P R OT E CT
DELIVER
as global public goods where action is needed. a global public good effectively and proactively are
I also consider how these global concerns could be essential for the very sustainability and safety of
better served or protected. In some areas, robust human life. To achieve many of the proposals set
agreements and momentum exist but they are out in this report, we must first work to end and
failing to keep pace with the gravity of the challenge recover from the pandemic. We must also address
or are suffering from lack of implementation, while the gaps and inequities that made us so vulnerable
in other areas agreements or road maps are dated, in the first place, building on what has worked and
fragmented or nascent. drawing lessons from what has not.
(WHO) and its chronic underfunding, with 80 per able to deal with the relevant pharmaceutical
cent of its $2 billion annual budget dependent companies and manufacturers, as well as other
on earmarked contributions, which undermines key stakeholders. Greater sharing of technology
its independence and capacity to deliver on its and know-how will need to underpin such an
mandate. However, even in the face of necessary effort, including strengthening and building local
but hard questions, it is important not to lose production capacities around the world. It is critical
sight of what has gone right, thanks in part to that efforts are sustainable, so that we are better
a robust ecosystem of partnerships, as well as prepared to respond to the next health emergency.
recent steps to strengthen WHO, the International
Health Regulations (2005) and regional capacities,
such as the Africa Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention. Had the virus broken out a decade or
more earlier, the consequences would have been
more dire. Improved health surveillance, scientific
advances and public-private partnerships have
been vital to the unprecedented development of
effective COVID-19 rapid tests, treatments and
vaccines.
66. The recommendations of the Independent Panel
for Pandemic Preparedness and Response provide
an important starting point. I lend my support
to many of its findings and offer the following
additional proposals.
67. The greatest near-term test of multilateralism
is the effort to end the COVID-19 pandemic, notably © World Bank/Vincent Tremeau
by winning the race between vaccines and variants.
As of mid-July 2021, over 3.4 billion vaccine doses
had been administered globally, but in an uneven
68. Longer-term governance of global health must
manner leaving us all vulnerable. We need over
focus more on prevention, preparedness and equity.
11 billion doses for the global population to cross
There are several areas where collective action is
the 70 per cent vaccination threshold that might end
urgently needed. First, the independence, authority
the acute phase of this pandemic. This will involve
and financing of WHO must be strengthened. This
the largest public health effort in history. In short,
includes greater financial stability and autonomy,
the world needs a global vaccination plan to: (a) at
based on fully unearmarked resources, increased
least double the production of vaccines and ensure
funding and an organized replenishment process
equitable distribution, using the COVID-19 Vaccine
for the remainder of the budget. As recommended
Global Access (COVAX) Facility as the platform;
by the Independent Panel, it also requires
(b) coordinate implementation and financing; and
empowerment of WHO with respect to normative,
(c) support countries’ readiness and capacity to
policy and technical guidance and evaluation, as
roll out immunization programmes while tackling
well as full access to information and information-
the serious problem of vaccine hesitancy. To
sharing. WHO needs to play a leading and
realize this plan, I have called for an emergency
coordinating role in the emergency response to a
task force which brings together all the countries
pandemic, and WHO country offices must have the
with vaccine production capacities, WHO, the Gavi
resources and be equipped to respond to technical
Alliance and international financial institutions
Projections for the first year: In the first year of Projections for the first year:
The global loss in GDP the pandemic: The global loss in GDP
could have been The global loss in GDP was around could have been
$6.6–7.9 TRILLION $5 TRILLION $2.7–4.2 TRILLION
The total death toll The estimated total death toll The total death toll
could have been was around could have been
10–19 MILLION 5 MILLIONa 1.0–2.6 MILLION
requests from Governments to support pandemic the regional level, along with incentives that link
preparedness and response. research and development investments with health
results rather than profits, such as reward systems
69. Secondly, global health security and
or health-impact funds to foster future innovations.
preparedness (particularly investment in pandemic
Further consideration could be given to technology
preparedness, but also for a broader set of potential
transfers and commitments to voluntary licensing
health challenges) need to be strengthened through
in agreements where public funding has been
sustained political commitment and leadership at
invested in research and development.
the highest level. I encourage States to consider
the recommendations made by the Independent 71. Finally, COVID-19 has shown the deep social
Panel, including the updating of national impacts of global health crises. Some Governments
preparedness plans for future health crises and have taken steps to put in place universal health
a universal periodic peer review process to foster coverage, including for mental health, and all
accountability and learning between countries. The countries are urged to do so without delay.
international system for pandemic preparedness Measures to address the social determinants of
and response, including systems to ensure early health are also vital. This means recognizing the
detection, an independent verification capacity for interconnection between people, animals and plants
WHO and the containment of emerging pathogens, and their shared environment through concepts
must be adequately and predictably financed, such as One Health, reducing pollution, de-risking
possibly through a facility that builds on existing our food systems, reducing poverty and gender
global health financing mechanisms to reduce inequality, and promoting global biosecurity.
fragmentation. I encourage States collectively
to commit to increasing international financing
A global economy that works for all
for pandemic prevention and preparedness, as 72. The COVID-19 pandemic is only the latest
recommended by the G20 High Level Independent reminder of our vulnerability to economic shocks.
Panel on Financing the Global Commons for Rapid improvements were made to global systems
Pandemic Preparedness and Response. We also to avoid a worldwide recession in response to the
need a more robust toolbox for compliance with 2008 crisis, but blind spots in national economic
the International Health Regulations (2005). Efforts policies continue to be mirrored at the global level,
by WHO member States to achieve a pandemic including the tendency to judge success by narrow,
preparedness and response instrument are short-term measures of profit and growth and the
welcome in this regard. The platform for complex perverse incentives of business practices that put
emergencies, proposed below, would also be shareholders’ interests above those of all other
available in the event of a future pandemic as a stakeholders. The pandemic also exposed other
complement to any measures taken by WHO to problems, not least the limits of GDP as a threshold
strengthen its global surveillance system and for determining international support despite other
declare public health emergencies of international risks and vulnerabilities, the lack of resilience in
concern. international trade and supply chains and the short-
sightedness of a system that cannot agree to invest
70. Thirdly, building on the ACT-Accelerator
adequately in a global vaccine drive that could save
model, product development and access to health
half a million lives in 2021 and add $9 trillion to
technologies should be accelerated in low- and
the global economy through 2025, a return that far
middle-income countries, especially for neglected
exceeds the estimated costs of $50 billion.
or emerging infectious diseases, but also for a
wider range of health threats such as antimicrobial 73. A global economy that is sustainable and
resistance. This will require more resilient equitable has characteristics of a global public
manufacturing and supply chains, including at good, requiring robust international cooperation
together with a rethinking of the interdependence with the green and circular economies, including
between the economy, people and the planet. by broadening negotiations on environmental
Economic governance is driven disproportionately goods and services. We must move away from
by a small number of States and financial actors, protectionist approaches, maximizing trade at all
and is siloed from other areas of international costs, with massive spillover effects, towards a
agenda-setting and decision-making, despite system that incentivizes the adoption of welfare-
welcome efforts being made by the International improving practices and effective multilateral
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, trade agreements. This also means promoting
among others, to better account for sustainable and valuing technological capacity, innovation
development, human rights and preparedness and resilience in developing countries, including
and resilience. Building on the spirit of previous through more flexibility in intellectual property
proposals for an Economic Security Council, as well rights, technology transfer, trade facilitation
as the collaboration observed during the pandemic, support and limits on the use of trade restrictions,
I propose a Biennial Summit at the level of heads of especially in a global pandemic. Reinstating an
State and Government between the members of the effective dispute settlement mechanism to be able
G20 and the members of the Economic and Social to address trade tensions is key.
Council, the Secretary-General and the heads of the
75. A resilient global economy would also see more
international financial institutions to work towards
countries able to support their own inhabitants,
a more sustainable, inclusive and resilient global
through financing for sustainable development
economy. This would allow us to combine more
linked to the Sustainable Development Goals.
systematically the respective strengths of relevant
This, in turn, requires adequately resourced
bodies and to make fuller use of the follow-up to
public sectors and private actors who understand
the intergovernmental process on financing for
themselves to be contributing to and benefiting
sustainable development. Immediate matters this
from the delivery of global public goods. Stronger
biennial gathering could promote include ultra-
global cooperation to promote financial integrity by
long-term and innovative financing for sustainable
addressing endemic tax evasion and aggressive tax
development and a Sustainable Development Goals
avoidance, as well as illicit financial flows, is long
“investment boost” for a green and just transition
for all countries in need, more flexible research and
development incentives to foster innovation and a
process to resolve longstanding weaknesses in the
international debt architecture. Agreement could
also be pursued on a “last mile alliance” to catalyse
and elevate policy action to reach those furthest
behind as part of efforts to achieve the Goals.
74. A fairer and more resilient multilateral trading
system would be open, rules-based, transparent and
non-discriminatory. The World Trade Organization
(WTO) is being reinvigorated and updated to take
account of twenty-first century realities, such as
electronic commerce and the digital economy,
which offer opportunities for the inclusion of
micro-, small and medium-sized enterprises and
women in international trade. Efforts are also
needed, however, to align international trade © UN Photo/Manuel Elias
+4.4°C by 2100
+2.7°C by 2100
+1.5°C by 2100
Breakdown Our current trajectory Breakthrough
A scenario without climate The trajectory with the latest A scenario where the world
action and no effective commitments to reduce acts immediately to deliver a
multilateralism to tackle emissions 45% reduction in emissions
climate change between 2010 and 2030
83. The Conference of the Parties has the potential economies that are dependent on fossil fuels to
to act as a platform that captures the growing ones that are low emission and climate resilient.
insistence of people all over the world on climate I urge all countries to implement carbon pricing
action, magnifying the voices of those most mechanisms and ultimately to set a carbon price,
affected and who will hold us all to account. and I encourage Group of 20 nations to consider the
Fulfilling the objectives of the Paris Agreement is a proposal from IMF to create an international carbon
responsibility of all stakeholders. Some companies price floor. Financial actors within the G20 are taking
have larger emissions profiles than entire countries decisive steps by pledging net zero commitments,
and cities are responsible for over 70 per cent of but now comes the credibility test: all financial
emissions worldwide. I urge Governments formally actors must set verifiable targets that cover their
to recognize the engagement and contributions entire portfolios to shift them away from high-
of all stakeholders who significantly contribute emission sectors to the climate resilient and net
to the delivery of countries’ commitments at the zero economy, along with timelines to implement
Conference. I also intend to invite leaders from their pledges. The United Nations-convened Net-
civil society, the private sector and young people Zero Asset Owner Alliance provides an important
to the leaders meeting ahead of the first global model with transparent and accountable targets. As
stocktaking in 2023 and to ensure that they can initiatives around carbon markets multiply, the use
meaningfully participate in that process. of offsets must be the last resort. I urge all private
actors to prioritize reducing absolute emissions and
84. Addressing risks to our planet needs to be part
negative biodiversity impacts across their entire
of every decision, every policy, every investment
value chain and to hold to the highest standards
and every budget. The countries that are members
of environmental integrity.
of the G20 provided over $3.3 trillion in direct
support for coal, oil, gas and fossil fuel power 86. Even as we work tirelessly to prevent climate
between 2015 and 2019. In 2019, 60 per cent of change, we need to be prepared for a drastically
fossil-fuel subsidies went to producers and utilities different climate and environment in the future.
despite Governments’ climate commitments. Fossil- Most countries need to adapt their economies, their
fuel subsidies distort prices and risk increasing infrastructure and their services to account for the
investment in emission-intensive assets that place impact of climate change, with increased adaptation
the goals of the Paris Agreement out of reach. With support for developing countries as stated above.
too much of the international financial architecture Only one in three people globally are covered by
still incentivizing economic growth with little or no early warning systems and it is essential to fully
consideration for sustainability and climate impacts, capitalize the World Meteorological Organization
I urge States, international financial institutions and Systematic Observations Financing Facility to
multilateral and national development banks to ensure that every person is covered. As the impacts
work with us to find complementary measures to of climate change worsen and displacement grows,
GDP that account for the environment and to use the General Assembly could consider measures
this new measure to change fundamentally their to address territorial threats of climate change,
mandates and investments. especially for small-island developing States and
other States facing a severe risk. Building on the
85. More broadly, all finance flows must be
work of the Platform on Disaster Displacement,
consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse
along with the Global Compact on Refugees, the
gas emissions and climate resilient development.
Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular
Public finance is critical, particularly for those
Migration and the Task Force on Displacement of
investments that yield no financial returns, such as
the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and
some adaptation action. We also need large-scale
Damage Associated with Climate Change Impacts,
private finance to support countries in shifting from
further consideration could be given to finding a healthy planet for the prosperity of all. I would urge
ways to prevent, protect and resolve situations of recognition of the right to a healthy environment.
environmental displacement.
A new agenda for peace
88. Peace is the central promise of the Charter of
TRANSFORMING FOOD SYSTEMS the United Nations and one of the principal global
y Sustainable food systems and strong forest public goods the United Nations was established
protection could generate over $2 trillion to deliver. In crucial respects, our multilateral
per year of economic benefits, create architecture has succeeded: there have been no
millions of jobs and improve food security, world wars and nuclear weapons have not been
while supporting solutions to climate used in war for the past 75 years, while some of the
change. greatest risks of escalation have been prevented.
Nevertheless, our collective peace and security is
increasingly under threat as a result of emerging
risks and dangerous trends for which traditional
87. Climate action is a central part of a fundamental forms of prevention, management and resolution
reset in our relationship with nature. More broadly, are ill suited. This includes protracted conflicts
a strong post-2020 biodiversity framework is involving transnational networks and new actors,
needed to provide sufficient financing to reverse frequently associated with terrorism, rapidly
the catastrophic biodiversity loss the planet is evolving weapons technologies and a growing
currently experiencing. Food systems must also willingness of regional actors to participate directly
be transformed, aligning with health, climate, equity in wars. Climate change is contributing to instability
and the Sustainable Development Goals. Building and is affecting livelihoods, access to resources and
on the outcomes of the Food Systems Summit, human mobility trends. With significant numbers
which will be held in New York in September 2021, of people displaced and overall levels of violence
we must anticipate and respond to risks of large- outside armed conflict reaching new highs, it
scale food insecurity and famine driven by our would be hard to argue that we are delivering on
changing environment. Revisiting our patterns the promise of the Charter. Risks to peace and
of unsustainable consumption and production security are growing: new technologies are placing
should enable more efficient and greater equity the capacity to disrupt global stability in the hands
in resource use, less food loss and waste, and of far more actors; longstanding agreements on
sound management of chemicals and waste to nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass
minimize adverse impacts on human health and the destruction are increasingly fragile as trust among
environment. Food systems need to ensure that all major powers continues to erode; and emerging
people have access to healthy diets that contribute domains of potential conflict or lawlessness,
to the restoration of nature, address climate such as cyberspace, have highlighted gaps in our
change and are adapted to local circumstances. governance architecture. The world is moving
This transition can help to deliver across all the closer to the brink of instability, where the risks
Goals and is best supported through inclusive we face are no longer managed effectively through
participation of various stakeholders, in particular the systems we have.
producers, women, indigenous people and youth.
The international meeting “Stockholm+50: a healthy a) 89. To protect and manage the global public
planet for the prosperity of all – our responsibility, good of peace, we need a peace continuum
our opportunity” offers an opportunity to redefine based on a better understanding of the
humankind’s relationship with nature and to achieve underlying drivers and systems of influence
that are sustaining conflict, a renewed effort
to agree on more effective collective security in the home. At the same time, increases in
responses and a meaningful set of steps to some forms of violence, particularly against
manage emerging risks. To achieve this, we women, tend to be an early warning sign of
need a new agenda for peace, potentially diminishing law and order and rising insecurity
focusing on six core areas: that may catalyse into broader conflict.
The new agenda for peace could consider
b) Reducing strategic risks. I have already
how to more effectively address violence
proposed to work with Member States to
holistically. For instance, this could be through
update our vision for disarmament so as to
a multi-stakeholder effort to reduce violence
guarantee human, national and collective
significantly worldwide and in all its forms,
security, including through broader support
including against women and girls, in line with
for non-proliferation, a world free of nuclear
target 16.1 of the Sustainable Development
weapons and other weapons of mass
Goals, and building on the movement to halve
destruction, effective control of conventional
global violence by 2030;
weapons and regulation of new weapons of
technology. The new agenda for peace could be e) Investing in prevention and peacebuilding.
an opportunity to take this forward, in particular Investments in prevention and preparedness
through establishing stronger commitments pay for themselves many times over in the
for the non-use of nuclear weapons and a time human and financial costs that are spared,
frame for their elimination, ensuring continued yet we continue to make the case in vain. The
cooperation to prevent and counter-terrorism, new agenda for peace could involve a set
strengthening digital transformation and of commitments to provide the necessary
promoting innovation by United Nations peace resources for prevention, including at the
and security entities, banning cyberattacks national level; reduce excessive military budgets
on civilian infrastructure, putting in place and ensure adequate social spending; tailor
measures to de-escalate cyber-related risks development assistance to address root causes
and tensions, and establishing internationally of conflict and uphold human rights; and link
agreed limits on lethal autonomous weapons disarmament to development opportunities.
systems. The entry into force of the Treaty on There has also been too little progress on
the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in January adequate, predictable and sustained financing
2021 was an extraordinary achievement and for peacebuilding, with demand for support
a step towards the eventual elimination of from the Peacebuilding Fund significantly
nuclear weapons; outpacing available resources. The new agenda
for peace could renew calls for Member States
c) Strengthening international foresight and
urgently to consider allocating a dedicated
capacities to identify and adapt to new peace
amount to the Peacebuilding Fund from
and security risks. The proposals laid out
assessed contributions, initially through
in chapter III above to ensure the future of
the peacekeeping budget and later through
succeeding generations and chapter IV.B below
the regular budget, as a complementary
on addressing major risks could allow us to
investment that would increase the
identify and adapt to new risks to peace and
sustainability of peacekeeping outcomes and
security;
support the development agenda. Relatedly,
d) Reshaping our responses to all forms of the Peacebuilding Commission has reshaped
violence. Large-scale conflict kills fewer people the responses by the United Nations to
than other forms of violence, including violence multidimensional threats to development,
from criminal groups and interpersonal violence peace and security through an inclusive
© UN-Women/Ryan Brown
space could imperil access and use by succeeding on the peaceful, secure and sustainable use of outer
generations. Our governance and regulatory space, move towards a global regime to coordinate
regimes require updating in line with this new era space traffic and agree on principles for the future
to preserve outer space as a global common. governance of outer space activities.
91. Recently agreed Guidelines for the Long-term Reclaiming the digital commons
Sustainability of Outer Space Activities have
92. The fourth industrial revolution has changed
shown that progress in governance is possible,
the world. The Internet has provided access
but many gaps remain. A combination of binding
to information for billions, thereby fostering
and non-binding norms is needed, building
collaboration, connection and sustainable
on existing frameworks and drawing in the full
development. It is a global public good that
range of actors now involved in space exploration
should benefit everyone, everywhere. But currently
and use. Immediate actions could include the
the potential harms of the digital domain risk
development of a global regime to coordinate space
overshadowing its benefits. Governance at the
traffic and the elaboration of new instruments to
national and global levels has not kept pace with
prevent weaponization of outer space. To that end,
the inherently informal and decentralized nature
consideration could be given to a multi-stakeholder
of the Internet, which is dominated by commercial
dialogue on outer space as part of a Summit of
interests. Serious and urgent ethical, social and
the Future (see para. 103 below) bringing together
regulatory questions confront us, including with
Governments and other leading space actors. The
respect to the lack of accountability in cyberspace;
dialogue could seek high-level political agreement
the emergence of large technology companies
93. It is time to protect the online space and 95. States play the primary role in the development
strengthen its governance. I would urge the of international law, whether within the framework
Internet Governance Forum to adapt, innovate of international organizations such as the United
and reform to support effective governance of the Nations or outside it. The United Nations has also
digital commons and keep pace with rapid, real- played and continues to play a unique role in the
world developments. Furthermore, building on identification and development of customary
the recommendations of the road map for digital international law. The ongoing discussions within
cooperation (see A/74/821), the United Nations, the United Nations on the development of norms
Governments, the private sector and civil society and standards for a number of matters of global
could come together as a multi-stakeholder concern, such as information and communications
digital technology track in preparation for a technology (see A/75/816) and the conservation
Summit of the Future to agree on a Global Digital and sustainable use of marine biological diversity
Compact. This would outline shared principles of areas beyond national jurisdiction, underscore
for an open, free and secure digital future for all. the importance of the United Nations as a vital
Complex digital issues that could be addressed forum for the development of international law.
may include: reaffirming the fundamental For those many instruments already in place, I
commitment to connecting the unconnected; urge States to implement their obligations and
avoiding fragmentation of the Internet; providing stand ready to provide support through the various
people with options as to how their data is used; United Nations activities for capacity-building and
application of human rights online; and promoting technical assistance.
a trustworthy Internet by introducing accountability 96. In the seventy-fifth anniversary declaration,
criteria for discrimination and misleading content. States agreed to abide by the international
More broadly, the Compact could also promote agreements they have entered into and the
regulation of artificial intelligence to ensure that commitments they have made, to promote
this is aligned with shared global values. respect for democracy and human rights, and to
enhance democratic governance and the rule of
law by strengthening transparent and accountable
and legal arrangements, gaps and emerging past 75 years. When the Charter of the United
priorities or levels of urgency, and the need for Nations was developed, multilateralism meant
equity and fairness in global decision-making. The cooperation among a small number of States.
Advisory Board could also take into account the Today, a broader range of State and non-State
proposals made throughout this report, including actors are participating in global affairs as part of
the repurposing of the Trusteeship Council and the open, participatory, peer-driven and transparent
creation of an Emergency Platform. systems, geared at solving problems by drawing on
the capacities and hearing the voices of all relevant
103. Once the Advisory Board has reported
actors rather than being driven by mandates or
its findings, it will be important to hold a high-
institutions alone. This is a form of multilateralism
level, multi-stakeholder “Summit of the Future”
that is more networked, more inclusive and more
to advance ideas for governance arrangements
effective in addressing twenty-first century
in the areas of international concern mentioned
challenges. Any effort to improve our governance
in this report, and potentially others, where
of the global commons and public goods and to
governance arrangements are nascent or require
manage risks must navigate this complexity and
updating. It would be preceded by preparatory
seek explicitly to incorporate these new approaches
events and consultations. The Summit would most
where they are likely to deliver better outcomes.
appropriately be held in conjunction with the high-
level week of the seventy-eighth session of the 105. Multilateralism that is more networked
General Assembly and could include high-level draws together existing institutional capacities,
tracks on: overcoming fragmentation to ensure all are working
together towards a common goal. It goes beyond
a) Advancing governance for global public goods
traditional silos, such as peace and security,
and other areas, as appropriate, in the light of
development, human rights and humanitarian action,
the findings of the Advisory Board;
and enhances coordination between regional and
b) Anticipating sustainable development and global actors and action. Networks can be flexible,
climate action beyond 2030; allowing for variable participation by a wide range
c) Peace and security, for the new agenda for of actors and the possibility for open coalitions or
peace; small “mini-lateral” or even “micro-lateral” groups,
growing over time to include more actors. To keep a
d) Digital technology, for the Global Digital
diverse set of actors aligned, the most successful
Compact;
networks involve clear goals, such as the climate
e) Outer space, to seek agreement on the target of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
sustainable and peaceful use of outer space, Expert bodies like the Intergovernmental Panel on
move towards a global regime to coordinate Climate Change can ensure networks are evidence
space traffic and agree on principles for the driven. Networks do not, however, replace our core
future governance of outer space activities; international institutions, which have a unique role
in galvanizing diverse actors and making space
f) Major risks and agreement on an Emergency
for marginalized voices. With clear goals and
Platform;
targets, and international organizations to provide
g) Succeeding generations, for possible agreement legitimacy, we can make better use of the power of
on a Declaration on Future Generations. networks to deliver global public goods. For my part,
104. As we work to update our systems of I will seek to enhance cooperation with regional
governance for the future, I offer the following organizations, development actors, international
overall observations and parameters. The financial institutions and other relevant multilateral
context for collective action has evolved over the institutions (see chap. V).
PARAMETERS
NETWORKED – FOR NETWORKED
INCLUSIVE – INCLUSIVE
– EFFECTIVE – EFFECTIVE MULTILATERALISM
MULTILATERALISM
NETWORKED EFFECTIVE
MULTILATERALISM MULTILATERALISM
INCLUSIVE
Draws on MULTILATERALISM
Delivers
existing institutional
results
capacities
Coordination
Diverse set Resource
between regional
of States priorities
and global levels
Accountability for
Flexible Parliaments
commitments
International
Variable institutions,
including
international
financial
Clear goals institutions
Civil society
Evidence driven
Cities
Private
sector
106. More inclusive multilateralism is marked by a as investment funds that take into account
genuine possibility for States from all regions and environmental, social and governance factors.
of all sizes to engage in collective action, notably
107. Ultimately what matters is results. We need
including a stronger voice for developing countries
multilateralism that is more effective in delivering
in global decision-making. It also means inclusion
on its promises and consequently is more trusted.
of a diverse range of voices beyond States. In
This means the multilateral system is prepared
addition to intergovernmental organizations, this
and ready to act or adapt in the face of present
can include parliaments, subnational authorities
and new risks; prioritizes and resources the
(cities and local and regional governments), civil
tasks that matter; delivers results; and can hold
society, faith-based organizations, universities,
all actors, State and non-State, accountable for
researchers and experts, trade unions, the private
commitments made. Any conversation about
sector and industry, and local and grass roots
improving governance of the global commons and
movements, including those led by women and
global public goods should assess how well our
young people. This vision recognizes that States
current arrangements meet these criteria. Where
remain central to our collective ability to meet
they do not, options for better preparedness,
global challenges and have unique responsibilities
prioritization, decision-making arrangements,
in the multilateral system, while also acknowledging
resourcing, accountability and compliance would
that solutions increasingly depend on the private
need to be considered. In particular, a balance is
sector and non-State actors, who should therefore
needed between voluntary and binding actions
be part of the deliberations and accountable for
that is commensurate with the challenges we face.
their commitments. The role of parliaments, cities
While international law is essential in delivering
and other subnational authorities is particularly
global public goods and I have called for a renewed
being recognized in inclusive approaches, with,
commitment to its development, we also have ways
for example, voluntary local reviews of Sustainable
to encourage mutual accountability through other
Development Goal implementation providing a
frameworks, including peer-review models (such
model on which to build. Civil society needs to
as the universal periodic review) and mechanisms
remain part and parcel of our work across sectors
for sharing good practices and transparent data
and in multilateral forums. In the light of its power
gathering. Finally, key to ensuring effectiveness
to shift the needle significantly on many of our most
is that funding and financing are brought to bear
critical challenges, inclusion and accountability
in support of our collective commitments. The
of the private sector are essential. Arrangements
Economic and Social Council forum on financing for
where the private sector commits to responsible
development follow-up, which seeks to review the
innovation and to harnessing technology fairly
means to implement the Sustainable Development
provide a good basis on which to build, as do
Goals, provides a promising example.
business models that support inclusion, human
rights and sustainable development, such
this, Member States could consider steps to bring generations. Notably, I propose to ensure that the
the governance bodies and funding of development voices of youth are more systematically integrated
agencies closer in alignment to maximize impact, across the United Nations system by exploring
while leaving each agency its separate brand and with Member States the upgrading of the current
operations. I will also encourage United Nations position of Envoy of the Secretary-General on Youth
country teams to actively support States in to an office in the Secretariat. I will also continue
renewing the social contract, particularly focusing to listen to and support networks of young United
on trust, addressing discrimination and exclusion, Nations staff members, including on the need to
and measuring what matters. We will look to make improve our recruitment and retention of young
every United Nations presence a centre of context- people from diverse backgrounds, as well as to put
specific prevention expertise, including by better in place a more modern and flexible environment
linking peace and security, human rights, climate that supports junior staff members, including
and development work, and focusing on factors young women, in advancing their careers.
that can give rise to or exacerbate grievances. The
115. Separately, I propose the appointment of a
consultations for the seventy-fifth anniversary
Special Envoy for Future Generations who would, for
(reaching 1.5 million people) and for Our Common
the first time, represent the interests of succeeding
Agenda (with some 500 submissions) have initiated
generations across the United Nations system and
a new era in listening, consultation and engagement
with Member States. The envoy would also steer
with people, along with our guidance on civic space
initial steps by the United Nations to bolster our
under my Call to Action for Human Rights. I will
capacity to understand, plan and act for the long
encourage all parts of the United Nations system
term, exemplified by the proposed Futures Lab. I
to make such consultations with people, including
hope this will allow the United Nations to become
women and young people, regular and systematic
a reliable guardian for our future, acting on behalf
going forward.
of both current and succeeding generations as
113. Other elements that the United Nations system anticipated in the Charter. The Futures Lab would
will take forward as part of its own support to and also significantly strengthen the capacity of the
reflection on the renewed social contract include United Nations in futures analysis and foresight.
reviewing our rule of law assistance, implementation
of my Call to Action for Human Rights, including
In support of delivering global public
through a United Nations system-wide agenda for
goods through more networked, inclusive
protection, and making human rights commitments
and effective multilateralism
a reference point in the design and delivery of United 116. In chapter IV, I outlined a vision for improved
Nations programmes, development assistance and multilateral governance focused on protecting
crisis prevention initiatives. I recommit to ensuring our global commons and delivering critical global
gender parity at all levels within the United Nations public goods, as well as being prepared to respond
system by 2028. I will also support a review of to major risks. To support this, the United Nations
the United Nations system’s capacity – staffing, system must adapt to play a leading role in a more
resources and architecture – to deliver on gender networked and inclusive world, improving our
equality as a core priority across all entities. collaboration and strategic engagement with other
actors and forums at the global and regional levels,
In support of solidarity between while also maximizing our comparative advantage
generations in service of the people who need us most.
114. In chapter III, I proposed some institutional
117. The value added of the United Nations in a
modifications at the United Nations to strengthen
networked world includes a number of elements
our solidarity with both younger and succeeding
which could be strengthened. First, one of the
© UN Photo/Manuel Elias
primary roles of the United Nations is as a source 118. Another important role for the United Nations
of reliable data and evidence, providing public and in a networked world is as a convener: serving
verified information to help the world understand as a place to build consensus around priorities
risks and opportunities. To strengthen this role, and strategies, where actors from all sectors can
I will seek to re-establish the Secretary-General’s make commitments and be accountable, and as
Scientific Advisory Board and explore better linking a platform for collective action and delivery. Our
of knowledge centres across the United Nations universal nature means that in some instances
system, including in its specialized agencies, to we are not the most nimble, and that formalities
reinforce impact. I will also encourage the United and protocol must be observed. However, we also
Nations to become more strategic in knowledge offer a space to bring together decision-makers
production, delivering fewer, but more coherent with the accountability and authoritativeness
and action-oriented reports each year. This will in associated with intergovernmental processes
part be achieved through the United Nations digital to support networked approaches. We must do
transformation strategy, which is directly aimed at this better, and more often. The United Nations
effective knowledge production and dissemination will improve its work at different levels (country,
across the system. regional and global) and across different thematic
pillars (including peace and security, development,
climate, human rights and humanitarian response).
We will also strengthen cooperation within the 121. Civil society organizations were present in San
United Nations system and between the system Francisco at the founding of the United Nations
and regional organizations, international financial and have been an integral part of the United
institutions and others. To enhance cooperation Nations ecosystem from the outset. As part of our
between the United Nations and regional bodies, consultations, civil society has called for better
I will convene an annual meeting with all heads engagement with the United Nations system. I
of regional organizations. I will also promote believe that it is essential for the United Nations
continuous active dialogue between the United to listen to, coordinate with and engage with civil
Nations system, international financial institutions society. I have heard the calls for a single, high-level
and regional development banks, as a complement entry point for civil society and will further explore
to the Biennial Summit proposed in chapter IV. options in that regard. However, I also believe that
what is most needed at this time is to go beyond a
119. The United Nations system, including the
consultation and advocacy role, and rather for all
Secretariat, will also take further steps to become
parts of the United Nations system directly to include
more inclusive. For certain constituencies, such
civil society in their work across all the pillars of our
as parliamentarians, the private sector, and cities
activities. This is about a shift in mentality as well
and subnational authorities, which are crucial and
as in practice. As such, all United Nations entities
innovative drivers of global change today, we have
will be asked to establish a dedicated focal point
been asked to consider standing mechanisms for
for civil society, if they have not already done so.
engagement and consultation, consistent with the
These focal points will be expected proactively to
sovereignty of Member States and provisions of
create the space necessary for civil society actors to
the Charter on membership of the United Nations.
contribute at the country and global levels, and within
Within the Secretariat, I will strengthen our
United Nations meetings, networks, processes and
collaboration with subnational authorities through
arrangements. We will regularly map and monitor
the creation of an Advisory Group on Local and
our relationships with civil society across the system
Regional Governments. I will also explore options
to ensure that the better engagement we all seek is
to enhance parliamentary inputs at the United
being achieved and sustained.
Nations, working with our existing partners.
122. Within the Secretariat, the United Nations Office
120. The increasing role and influence of the private
for Partnerships will support these relationships,
sector, and its centrality to achieving so many of
ensuring that we have in place the necessary
the actions outlined in this report, will also be taken
administrative, legal and digital instruments to
into account within the United Nations system. The
allow our partners to access information and to
business and human rights agenda is important
participate in the work of the United Nations. We
in this regard. I also call for a broader range of
will in particular build on the possibilities for greater
businesses, from multinational corporations
inclusion that we have seen during COVID-19, with
to small and medium-sized corporations, to
digital solutions and hybrid meetings allowing more
participate in the Sustainable Development Goals
diverse actors to participate without limitations
and climate action, including through business
because of visas, funding and travel. Ensuring
models that align with efforts to rethink measures
inclusive virtual meetings means taking into
of progress and prosperity. The new strategy issued
consideration and proactively seeking to address
by the Global Compact Office, promoting its 10
issues such as access to the Internet, language
principles and the expansion of its network and
barriers, time zones and safety.
private sector investments, is a unique vehicle to
raise ambition and achieve stronger private sector 123. To make the United Nations more effective, we
engagement, accountability and partnerships. will develop new capabilities that promote agility,
integration and cohesion across the system. This
will be part of a wider transformation towards a unpredictability and timing of our cash inflows. If
United Nations “2.0”, a new version that is able the vision that Member States articulated in the
to offer relevant and system-wide solutions to seventy-fifth anniversary declaration, and on which
the challenges of the twenty-first century. I will I have elaborated in this report on Our Common
accelerate this transformation through a “quintet Agenda, is to become a reality we must solve
of change”, a set of cross-cutting agendas that the financial crisis and secure more sustainable
underpin many of the initiatives proposed in funding for the Organization. The United Nations
this report. The quintet capabilities include system can make better use of available resources,
data, analytics and communications; innovation including by repurposing existing funds and
and digital transformation; strategic foresight; adopting less rigid budgetary procedures. The
behavioural science; and performance and results United Nations system will also explore ways to
orientation. Driven by the Secretary-General’s Data better harmonize budgeting and funding requests,
Strategy, better data, analysis and communications ensuring that the different executive boards of
capabilities will enable us to turn information more agencies, funds and programmes work together
easily into insight, transform our decision-making, and communicate. We will focus on improving
optimize our services and make the Organization how we formulate and execute budgets to keep
a better communicator. Further investing in the Organization nimble and dynamic and able to
innovation and digital transformation will reshape respond to volatile situations and new emergencies.
our way of working, helping us to reach more people Ongoing efforts to ensure transparency for Member
in need and better serve them. Strengthening States in the budget process must not come at
strategic foresight, through initiatives like the the expense of the ability of the United Nations
Futures Lab, will enable anticipatory action and to use resources efficiently and effectively; the
the design of more forward-looking policies focus should be on programme delivery and results
and programmes. The systematic application of rather than financing. We must allow managers
behavioural science will increase our effectiveness to manage, and hold them accountable for the
in policy, programme and mandate delivery. It will results. In addition to these steps, I invite Member
also allow us to simplify bureaucratic processes. States to consider examining the mechanisms
Performance and results orientation will ensure for reviewing the budget, with support from the
that the Organization is focused on impact, learning Secretariat as necessary. Together, we can identify
and continuous improvement. ways to improve the budget process, especially in
how we formulate and communicate the results that
124. Finally, for the Organization to be effective, it is
we hope to and do accomplish, looking holistically
crucial that Member States’ financial obligations be
at what makes sense, what works well and what
met in full and on time. The underlying reasons for
needs to be improved.
the recent financial crisis of the United Nations are
not fully resolved. I have made several proposals
to Member States in this regard, ranging from
B. For Member States’
increasing our existing liquidity reserves to creating
a new reserve for our peacekeeping operations
consideration
and addressing the structural impediments in the
125. Any decisions regarding the principal
management of our budgets. As part of recent
intergovernmental organs and other bodies of the
reforms, the United Nations has also made
United Nations are for Member States. However,
significant investments in improving transparency
there are various needs that have been identified
in its financial reporting and budgeting. However,
throughout this report, notably in conjunction with
efforts to focus more on results and improve
the interests of succeeding generations, and the
mandate delivery have been undermined by the
governance of the global commons and the delivery
of global public goods through networked, inclusive organizations; considering public commitments
and effective multilateralism. The activities of the to exercise restraint in the use of the veto; and
Trusteeship Council have been suspended since expanding the use of informal mechanisms, such
1994. Previous commissions and secretaries- as Arria-formula meetings, to advance sensitive
general, along with some Member States, have issues. Reinforced action on prevention to ensure
proposed a repurposing of the Council to enhance that the threats we face today do not fester and
the governance of the global commons. Building deteriorate would mean that the Council, charged
on these ideas, and as part of the follow-up to Our with managing and resolving potential and actual
Common Agenda, I invite States to consider making threats to international peace and security, avoids
the Council available as a multi-stakeholder body seeing its agenda expand exponentially. The United
to tackle emerging challenges and, especially, to Nations system needs to be able to address the
serve as a deliberative forum to act on behalf of cross-cutting issues of security, climate change,
succeeding generations. Among other tasks, it health, development, gender equality and human
could issue advice and guidance with respect to rights from a prevention perspective with greater
long-term governance of the global commons, effectiveness and accountability, for example
delivery of global public goods and managing through expanding the role of the Peacebuilding
global public risks. Commission to more settings. The proposed
emergency platform for convening the key actors
126. Beyond the Trusteeship Council, I took note
to respond to a complex global crisis could be
of calls from Member States for reforms of the
another element of this.
three principal organs of the United Nations in
the seventy-fifth anniversary declaration, in 128. Member States’ efforts to revitalize the work of
particular their commitments to instil new life the General Assembly and streamline its resolutions,
into the discussions on the reform of the Security reporting requirements and committees have
Council and to continue the work to revitalize the been welcomed. It has also been suggested that
General Assembly and to strengthen the Economic States could strengthen the high-level week of
and Social Council. With regard to any decisions the Assembly, using it as an opportunity to take
by Member States to adapt the intergovernmental decisions and make commitments at the level
organs to the needs and realities of today, I stand of Heads of State and Government. Similarly, the
ready to provide the necessary support. Below Economic and Social Council was established in
are some of the ideas that have emerged from the Charter as the principal United Nations body
our consultations on the seventy-fifth anniversary coordinating the economic and social work of the
and Our Common Agenda, grouped here for the Organization. While we are now in a different era,
consideration of Member States. various proposals have been made to reinforce
the role and profile of the Council, including
127. After decades of debate, the majority of
by bringing the G20 and its processes into a
Member States now acknowledge that the Security
closer relationship with the Council. In my view,
Council could be made more representative
the Biennial Summit put forward in chapter IV
of the twenty-first century, such as through
would be an important step forward in better
enlargement, including better representation for
coordination of global economic governance. In
Africa, as well as more systematic arrangements
addition, the high-level political forum has emerged
for more voices at the table. In addition to the
as the primary global gathering for sustainable
intergovernmental negotiations continuing with
development. It provides an inclusive platform for
renewed urgency, suggestions have been made
monitoring implementation of the 2030 Agenda,
to strengthen the inclusiveness and legitimacy
while promoting peer learning and expanding the
of the Council by systematically consulting with
global movement for the Sustainable Development
a broader range of actors, including regional
Goals. I invite all Governments, sectors, partners with States to find ways to put the human rights
and alliances to engage at the high-level political mechanisms on a more sustainable financial
forum each year to increase ambition, accelerate footing, including through more flexibility for the
implementation efforts and build connections United Nations to allocate funding, and to better
across issues that are essential for effective link them with other processes to maximize their
multilateralism. impact and assist States parties with compliance.
More transparency has also been called for in
129. The consultations as part of Our Common
terms of human rights commitments undertaken
Agenda have called for fuller use of the human
by prospective candidates for membership of the
rights treaty monitoring system, including the
Human Rights Council, in line with the criteria
universal periodic review, treaty bodies and special
adopted by Member States in General Assembly
procedures, to solve pressing social, economic
resolution 60/251 by which the Council was created.
and political challenges. As indicated in my Call
to Action for Human Rights, I am ready to work
© UN Photo
130. Finally, echoing calls made to the United General Assembly and the Security Council relate
Nations system, we have received suggestions to civil society, local and regional governments
on how to increase opportunities for engagement and business actors, and for the President of the
by civil society and other stakeholders across all Economic and Social Council to convene a general
the intergovernmental organs. These have included review of arrangements for observer status or
an annual civil society caucus in conjunction with consultation in this regard. I encourage Member
the General Assembly’s high-level week, as well States to give serious consideration to these ideas,
as calls for an updated resolution defining how in keeping with our quest for a multilateralism that
organs like the Economic and Social Council, the is more networked, inclusive and effective.
© UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe
CHAPTER VI Moving forward
1. In the declaration on the commemoration of the or more of the 12 themes from the declaration.
seventy-fifth anniversary of the United Nations I issued a similar invitation to several high-level
(General Assembly resolution 75/1), Member groups of experts, practitioners and former leaders.
States tasked me to report before the end of the In response, we received many insightful papers,
seventy-fifth session of the General Assembly with videos and presentations and heard directly from
recommendations to advance Our Common Agenda some thought leaders in the breakfast dialogues
and to respond to current and future challenges. and elsewhere.
In response, in addition to involving the United
4. In line with my determination that young people
Nations system as a whole, I embarked upon a
should be the designers of their own futures,
process of reflection, consisting of four tracks
I provided young thinkers and leaders with
engaging a broad array of stakeholders, including
dedicated opportunities to contribute. A group
Member States, prominent thought leaders, young
of next generation fellows hosted by the United
people and civil society. The process built on the
Nations Foundation built on the consultations on
year-long anniversary global listening exercise,
the seventy-fifth anniversary with young people,
when over 1.5 million people from all 193 Member
with guidance from my Envoy on Youth, convening
States took part in an online survey. Polling firms
a series of action groups on thematic priorities
also conducted surveys in 70 countries. These
through a “big brainstorm” and holding national
consultations showed significant public support
conversations with young people who had not
for international cooperation and a desire for more
previously engaged with the United Nations. The
networked, inclusive and effective multilateralism
fellows worked intensively with youth-led networks
in the future.
and organizations from across the world and held
2. Engagement with Member States began with intergenerational dialogues with policymakers.
a letter to all permanent representatives and Their work informed my recommendations on
observers on 8 October 2020 laying out the young people and future generations. They have
process and inviting them to share their views. also set out their own vision, ideas and proposals
On 15 December 2020, the President of the General in a report entitled “Our future agenda”.
Assembly convened an informal encounter at which
5. In keeping with the vision of more networked
I shared some initial reflections and listened to
and inclusive multilateralism, and in keeping with
views from the floor. In 2021, the United Nations
the Charter of the United Nations, I also consulted
Foundation, a key partner in this exercise, convened
widely with “we the peoples” of our world, including
a series of breakfast dialogues with Member States
civil society, parliamentarians, think tanks, the
organized around the 12 themes of the seventy-
private sector, subnational leaders and city
fifth anniversary declaration. On 8 July 2021,
networks, underrepresented groups and other
I again participated in an informal dialogue with
non-government partners. This was supported
the Assembly to share and hear more ideas.
by the United Nations Foundation and the Igarapé
3. To enrich the reflection process, I invited a Institute, along with a network of global partners
geographically diverse, gender-balanced group from all regions, including the African Centre for
of thought leaders to contribute their ideas on one the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (South
Africa), Southern Voice (a network of 50 think tanks generated more than 520 proposals from over
from Africa, Asia and Latin America) and the Lee 1,750 participants, including from organizations
Kuan Yew School of Public Policy of the National with several million members, in 147 countries
University of Singapore. Every effort was made and in six languages.
to ensure that the reflection process included a
6. The rich array of perspectives and inputs
wide range of voices from all regions, including
received greatly enhanced the ideas laid out
through an experimental digital consultation
in the report of Our Common Agenda and I am
exercise overseen by the Igarapé Institute, which
enormously grateful to all those who contributed.