Abstract

In the current era, the development paradigm has shifted from simple economic development to sustainable development. Sustainable development has clear objectives to avoid natural resource exploitation due to increasing economic and environmental threats, such as economic unsustainability, pollution, and natural disasters. To achieve the objective of prosperity along with a protected environment, it is essential to identify the most significant determinant of sustainable development. In this context, institutional economics has gained paramount attention from world scholars. Economists are involved in an in-depth exploration of institutional issues based on politics that confront developing economies. The institutional research provides the scholars to find out enforcement and implementation challenges in the context of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The relevance of institutional variables is essential to assess the rules of law, democratic quality, and bureaucratic structure active engagement along with informal structure of institutions. It assists in devising sustainable development policies for developing nations which is one of the major concerns. Developing economies, like most Asian economies, invoke the existence of authorities that can apply heavy fines, enforce laws, and organize sustainable development activities. Taking contextual importance to achieving the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), sustainable development agenda is a serious global challenge, especially in the developing world. The developing countries have to enforce the rules and economic policy actions lined with sustainable development agendas. However, global connectivity in this context remains a huge challenge from a governance point of view. Weak institutional systems are a real fact of the developing world and a major source of human misères which disorder in the global world ranking. The current chapter explores the dynamic role of institutions in sustainable development in developing economies (Ben Ali and Krammer in Economic development in the Middle East and North Africa. Springer/Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 2016). Sustainable development is a multidimensional ideology having a major focus on social, economic, cultural, and environmental perspectives for intergenerational equity resources. Institutions can be linked with sustainable development through social, economic, environmental, and globalization channels. Efficient institutions can be implemented through a well-structured institutional framework that can effectively be used to achieve SDGs targets. Our study suggests that institutional tools such as government stability, the government’s inward investment behavior, distortion of the system through corruption, legal system strength, and democratic accountability can be used to achieve sustainable development goals. However, despite formal modes of institutions, the informal modes of institutions issues like ethnic diversity, and religious or cultural diversity are also the most pressing factors which can be used as a bridge toward sustainable development targets. To better grasp the roots of institutions of developing nations with sustainable development is the ultimate target of this study. We explore not only formal institutions’ channels but the informal institution's channels’ importance for sustainable development, especially in the poor world which can provide useful lessons to learn. The outcomes of this study contribute to the literature by providing insights regarding ideological as well as empirical importance. Our study insights would guide several national and international actors such as the World Bank, and IMF, especially scholars and policymakers in developing countries, to figure out key factors in their geographical areas for optimal implementation and execution of sustainable development goals.

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