Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The Gender Snapshot 2023
Categories: Statebuilding, The Field of Women, Peace and Security
Sub-Categories: Human Development, International Agreements, UN Resolutions
Region: No Region
Year: 2023
Citation: Azcona, Ginette, Antra Bhatt, Guillem Fortuny Fillo, Yongyi Min, Heather Page and Sokunpanha You. Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The Gender Snapshot 2023. UN Women, 2023. https://www.unwomen.org/sites/default/files/2023-09/progress-on-the-sustainable-development-goals-the-gender-snapshot-2023-en.pdf
Sub-Categories: Human Development, International Agreements, UN Resolutions
Region: No Region
Year: 2023
Citation: Azcona, Ginette, Antra Bhatt, Guillem Fortuny Fillo, Yongyi Min, Heather Page and Sokunpanha You. Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The Gender Snapshot 2023. UN Women, 2023. https://www.unwomen.org/sites/default/files/2023-09/progress-on-the-sustainable-development-goals-the-gender-snapshot-2023-en.pdf
Executive Summary
The Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The Gender Snapshot 2023 provides a comprehensive analysis of the current state of gender equality across all 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and highlights prevailing trends, gaps, and recent setbacks on the journey towards achieving gender equality by 2030. The report paints a worrisome picture. Halfway to 2030, progress on SDG 5 – Gender Equality – is clearly way off track, with only two Goal 5 indicators being “close to target” and no SDG 5 indicator at the “target met or almost met” level.
The annual publication warns that, if current trends continue, over 340 million women and girls – an estimated 8 per cent of the world’s female population – will live in extreme poverty by 2030, and close to one in four will experience moderate or severe food insecurity. The gender gap in power and leadership positions remains entrenched and, at the current rate of progress, the next generation of women will still spend on average 2.3 more hours per day on unpaid care and domestic work than men. This year’s report includes sex-disaggregated data on the intersections of gender and climate change for the first time, and projects that by mid-century, under a worst-case climate scenario, climate change may push up to 158.3 million more women and girls into poverty (16 million more than the total number of men and boys).