warning comes Financing for Sustainable Development Report 2026 (FSDR), a new UN report launched on Monday finds Only four years are left for the 2030 deadline to end For the sustainable development agenda, progress has stalled – and in some cases been reversed – following the setback. Covid-19 pandemic, rising geopolitical tensions and rising climate impacts.
According to the report, development finance is being squeezed at a critical moment: a quarter of developing countries still have lower per capita income than before the pandemic, and about 3.4 billion people are living in countries that spend more on interest payments than on health or education.
Officer There has been a huge decline in development aidForeign investment continues to decline and many countries are struggling to raise enough tax revenues to finance basic services.
At the same time, Global trade tensions and rising tariffs are adding to economic pressureEspecially for less developed countries.
Characteristics of Flexibility
Despite the bleak outlook, the report points to areas of resilience. Global economic growth in 2025 exceeds expectationsTrade between developing countries (South-South trade) has grown rapidly over the past two decades, and investment in renewable energy is set to reach a record high of $2.2 trillion in 2024 – twice the level of investment in fossil fuels.
However, the authors stress that progress will not be sustained without urgent action, identifying a financing gap of up to $4 trillion annually for developing countries and calling for accelerated implementation of the Seville Commitment (a 2025 global agreement to scale up financing for development) as the best – and only – realistic path to getting back on track.
Key priorities include increasing investment, strengthening multilateral cooperation, modernizing the international financial system to give developing countries a stronger voice, and building resilience to better withstand future shocks.
Without renewed global cooperation and political will, the report warns, the promise of the SDGs – and a more equitable future – will remain out of reach.
Middle East war triggers recession
Speaking at UN headquarters on Monday, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said conflict in the Middle East was posing increasing risks to development.
“We are watching the impact of the war on the price of fuel, fertilizer and food in real time,” he said, “as well as trade, transportation and tourism.”
He said that the debt burden on developing countries is increasing further due to rising energy costs, slow growth and currency devaluation.
The UN chief identified three broad areas of focus to close the $4 trillion financing gap.
First, “revitalizing the machinery of finance” (leveraging multilateral development banks, creating new public-private finance initiatives); second, by reforming credit (including mechanisms for debt relief and “reimagining” the credit rating system); And third, through reforming the international financial architecture so that it reflects today’s global economy.
