Abstract

The World Bank and International Monetary Fund reported that the achievement of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) requires an escalation of development finance. The report Scaling Finance for the Sustainable Development Goals highlighted the urgency of the efforts to realize SDGs in encouraging financial innovation to move quickly. Even if the role of finance in achieving SDGs is unquestionable, few scientific studies have addressed these issues. We tried to fill the existing research gap. In this study, we examined the link between sustainable finance and SDGs based on European Union countries belonging to the OECD. We present a new and the original research approach. We assumed that the sustainable finance model plays a fundamental role in implementing SDGs (all SDGs were analysed except for SDG 6 and SDG14, due to lack of statistics were not analysed) and ensuring that social and environmental sustainability are reflected in SDGs. The results of this study show that the more sustainable the finance model, the better the achievement of SDGs in the group of analysed countries. We found a strong link between sustainable finance model and social sustainability (SDG1, 3, 4, 5, 10, 16); environmental sustainability (SDG11, 12, 13, 15) and economic sustainability (SDG8, 9, 17).

Highlights

  • The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (Agenda 2030) contains 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that are integrated and linked together (United Nations, 2015)

  • This paper is one of the first based on an original research approach analysing the relationship between sustainable finance model and SDGs using correspondence analysis

  • Such analyses have not been conducted before to analyse the link between SDGs and sustainable finance model, which indicates the novelty of our research approach

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Summary

Introduction

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (Agenda 2030) contains 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that are integrated and linked together (United Nations, 2015). This means that SDGs and the effectiveness of policies implemented to achieve each of the goals are interrelated (Collste et al, 2017). The International Monetary Fund [IMF] published an analysis that showed that developing countries face an average annual funding gap of some USD $2.6 trillion for investment in health, education, roads, electricity, water, and sanitation.

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