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World Bank economist: solve global inequalities with local skills

From Ebola to building dams, a World Bank economist tells Jack Grove how a UN goal on universities is vital in facing grand challenges

Published on
September 13, 2016
Last updated
September 14, 2016
Doctor examining young child patient, Dakar, Senegal
Source: Getty
Experts on call: universities鈥 interdisciplinary know-how will be key in achieving UN Sustainable Development Goals

How do you fix the global problems of poverty, hunger and gender inequality?

It鈥檚 an impossible task, some argue. However, last year, world leaders came together to agree a 17-point plan that may improve the lives of billions of the world鈥檚 poorest people.

Plans of action to ensure universal access to clean water, sustainable energy, healthcare and education are now being drawn up by governments across the world with the aim of eradicating inequalities by 2030.

But what role will higher education play in meeting the United Nations鈥 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and 167 related targets over the next 15 years? Does the lofty UN agenda allow enough space for academics to get involved with these global challenges?

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Those issues will be tackled at the European Association for International Education鈥檚 annual conference, with representatives from the World Bank, the European Commission and Boston College due to debate the subject at a session on 14 September.

鈥淚t is fantastic that the SDGs recognise higher education as a goal for the first time,鈥 said Andreas Blom, lead education economist at the World Bank.

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鈥淭his was missed last time the goals were set in 2000 and it had a substantial impact on [the] global development agenda,鈥 Dr Blom added.

With higher education excluded from the Millennium Development Goals, several countries and international agencies pulled their financial support for universities and colleges in the developing world, he explained.

鈥淭he World Bank gave some money, but lots of bilateral funders pulled out and focused their funding almost exclusively on basic primary-level education in the run-up to 2015,鈥 he said.

鈥淭he latest plan recognises that you cannot just focus on primary education.鈥

Under the goal to provide 鈥渋nclusive and equitable education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all鈥, the that all women and men must have 鈥渆qual access鈥o affordable technical, vocational and tertiary education, including university鈥, while it also urges countries to increase the number of scholarships to enable the poorest to access higher education.

鈥淲e need to have higher education institutions and governments responding to these questions,鈥 said Dr Blom, who believes that financial support for students is often too focused on middle-income families, rather than the poorest.

鈥淭here is an understanding that primary education is financed by the government, but countries leave students to fund the full cost of their university studies, which is not possible for the poorest people,鈥 he added.

While many have welcomed the arrival of policies relating to tertiary education in the SDGs, others believe that the sector is mentioned too fleetingly. If society is to fix some of its biggest problems, academics will need to be at the heart of finding the solutions, critics argue.

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鈥淚f you are building dams to improve water security, universities will provide the local science and technology expertise,鈥 Dr Blom said.

鈥淭he goals set around health cannot be met unless you have substantial investment in training local people,鈥 he added, saying that universities and related hospitals were good places for this to happen.

The outbreak of the Ebola virus in West Africa in 2013 showed the importance of having skilled local staff in place, he said.

鈥淭he Ebola crisis showed if you do not have someone that tests for a virus in a country, you will not have the capacity to respond quickly to an emerging problem,鈥 Dr Blom added.

Engaging academics with local societal challenges would help to 鈥渞eframe鈥 the idea of higher education in many countries, where it is often seen primarily as a place to educate civil servants or engineers, he added.

鈥淚f you don鈥檛 do this, you will not have top talent learning in African universities, so you need to reframe higher education to give academics more autonomy to engage outside their institution,鈥 he added.

Given how many of the UN鈥檚 goals overlap, it will be universities that are best placed to provide the interdisciplinary know-how required to achieve many of the interlinking targets, argued Balasubramanyam Chandramohan, a senior research fellow at the University of London鈥檚 Institute of Commonwealth Studies, who co-chaired a symposium on SDGs in April.

鈥淯niversities have expertise in operating at multi-faculty, multi-departmental and multi-unit levels,鈥 said Dr Chandramohan, who added that they also knew how to 鈥渙perate across discrete but structurally linked branches of knowledge and categories of problems鈥.

鈥淎n overall strategy on the SDGs is needed to avoid ending up with 17 SDG silos [followed by] the self-congratulatory evaluation of 鈥榓chievement鈥 of individual goals,鈥 he added.

jack.grove@tesglobal.com

鈥淯N Sustainable Development Goals and the role of higher education鈥 will take place on 14 September at 4pm (Room 3B, Level 1, ACC).

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