World Economic and Social Survey
LATEST ISSUE

The World Economic and Social Survey (WESS) provides objective analysis of pressing long-term social and economic development issues, and discusses the positive and negative impact of corresponding policies. The analyses are supported by analytical research and data included in the annex.

 

World Economic and Social Survey 2009: Promoting Development, Saving the Planet

The separation in practice of the climate change and development agendas has distorted the global debate on the two biggest policy challenges facing the international community. According to the World Economic and Social Survey 2009, an integrated approach based on the concept of sustainable development is urgently needed. The key to such an approach is a low-carbon, high-growth transformation of the global economy—a transformation that can keep temperature increases consistent with environmental stability as identified by the scientific community, while at the same time fostering the strong growth and economic diversification in developing countries that would allow convergence of incomes worldwide. The greening of catch-up growth will have to be further tailored so as to meet the adaptation challenges facing vulnerable countries and communities whose economic security will be threatened even if climate change is kept within globally manageable limits.

To date, the concept of development has too often remained in the background during the evolving climate debate. As a result, the discussions concerning both normative issues (invoking “common but differentiated responsibilities”) and financial ones (entailing how to fund mitigation and adaptation) have become polarized. Moreover, the discussion on creating policies and programmes to support the greening of catch-up growth has hardly started.

The Survey seeks to bridge this gap within the public policy debate. It argues that mitigation and adaptation efforts can move forward effectively only if they are part of a consistent development strategy built around a massive investment-led transformation along low-carbon, high-growth paths. While acknowledging that a variety of market and non-market institutional mechanisms will be needed if advances are to be made along those paths, the Survey contends at the same time that a critical role must be played by developmental States able to mobilize public finance and build appropriate technological capacity. This potentially win-win strategy will require the readiness of the international community to step up to the plate with multilateral financing on a much larger scale than has been forthcoming to date and new approaches to transferring technology from rich to poor countries.

 

ORDER THIS PUBLICATION

 

The Team:

Imran Habib Ahmad

Tariq Banuri
Chantal Line Carpentier
Piergiuseppe Fortunato
Nazrul Islam
Alex Izurieta
Alex Julca
Richard Kozul-Wright
Jan McAlpine
Manuel Montes
David O’Connor
Oliver Paddison
Mariangela Parra
Rob Vos

 

Background Papers

 

Contact us: at World Economic and Social Survey

WESS 2009
 

Press releases:
Arabic / Chinese / English / French / Russian / Spanish

 

Press Conference Presentation:

 

Press Conference webcast:

PC

Overview:

Arabic / Chinese / English / French / Russian / Spanish

 

Full Report (242 pages; 1.78mb)


Preface
Table of Contents
Chapter I (34 pages; 552kb)
Chapter II (27 pages; 653 kb)
Chapter III (35 pages; 680kb)
Chapter IV (24 pages; 544kb)
Chapter V (28 pages; 433kb)
Chapter VI (33 pages; 432kb)
Bibliography (23 pages; 220kb)

 

Policy Briefs related to WESS 2009

   PAST ISSUES
 

 

To obtain a free DVD containing all past issues of WESS and WESP, send a request to

  OTHER PUBLICATIONS
 

World Economic Situation and Prospects

Publications and documents by year

Working paper series


     
Note: Most of the downloadable documents are in PDF format.  In order to view and print them, you must have Acrobat Reader installed and configured to work with your browser. Get a free copy of Acrobat Reader

 

 


 
Copyright © United Nations
Department of Economic and Social Affairs
Last updated: 10 December, 2009