Abstract:
The United Nations’ 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, which includes 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), serves as a comprehensive and integrated roadmap for addressing global economic, social, and environmental concerns. However, the complex interdependence of these diverse goals necessitates a comprehensive knowledge of the synergies and trade-offs that support their collective pursuit. This study extends earlier assessments by including an additional 6-7 years of data through 2022, allowing for a re-evaluation of SDG progress trajectories and the detection of emergent patterns.This study also broadens the longitudinal scope by employing advanced correlation techniques to capture non-linearity. It uses the HDI as a multidimensional lens, all of which contribute to a better understanding of the complex processes that support sustainable development. The findings show significant levels of synergy among SDGs such as 3 (Health), 5 (Gender), 6 (Water), 7 (Energy), and 9 (Industry/Innovation), with SDG 3 showing as particularly catalytic across the framework. Trade-offs focus on SDGs 2 (Hunger) and 9. When viewed via the HDI lens, there is significant variation: SDG 15 (Life on Land) has more synergy in high HDI nations, whereas SDG 3 priorities are aligned with poor HDI environments. Identifying context-specific SDG interlinkages can help guide transformative policymaking that capitalizes on synergies and controls tradeoffs through deliberate, coordinated actions. However, data gaps and methodological restrictions prevent SDG linkages from being completely characterized across the whole development spectrum. Nonetheless, this study’s multi-pronged analytical methodology provides a blueprint for attaining Agenda
2030’s holistic goal through systematic cross-sectoral collaboration.