Context:
- On September 12, 2025, the United Nations Day for South-South and Triangular Cooperation (SSTC) was observed.
- On this occasion, global leaders called for reforms and strengthening of SSTC as a key tool to achieve the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.
About South-South and Triangular Cooperation (SSTC)
Definition:
- South-South Cooperation (SSC): Collaboration among developing countries to share knowledge, skills, technology, and resources for mutual growth.
- Triangular Cooperation (TrC): Partnerships where developing countries collaborate with support from developed nations or multilateral agencies.
- Complementary Role: SSTC complements North-South cooperation; it is not a substitute.
Origin:
- Buenos Aires Plan of Action (BAPA), 1978 formalized SSC.
- September 12 was adopted as the International Day for SSTC by the UN, marking BAPA’s anniversary.
Aim:
- Foster self-reliance and collective resilience among developing nations.
- Strengthen capacity to design locally relevant solutions.
- Promote mutual benefit, solidarity, and equality in development cooperation.
Functions of SSTC
- Capacity-building, Knowledge-sharing, and Technology Transfer:
Helps nations develop skills, share best practices, and access affordable technologies for local development challenges. - Amplifying Global South’s Voice:
Strengthens collective bargaining power in international policies and multilateral institutions. - Regional and Interregional Cooperation:
Encourages countries to pool resources and collaborate on common issues like climate change, health crises, and trade barriers. - Alternative to Traditional Aid:
Provides mutual support without conditionalities, enhancing resilience and self-reliance.
Significance of SSTC
- Development Impact: Promotes low-cost, innovative, and scalable solutions aligned with SDGs.
- Global South Solidarity: Encourages collective ownership, reducing dependence on developed nations.
- Resilience: Provides practical solutions in food security, disaster preparedness, climate adaptation, and public health.
- Equity: Ensures fairness, sovereignty, and respect for domestic priorities, countering unequal conditionalities of traditional aid.
India’s Role in SSTC
- Philosophy: Guided by Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, India emphasizes solidarity and inclusiveness.
- ITEC Programme: Trains professionals from 160+ countries, enhancing skills in governance, IT, agriculture, and health.
- India-UN Development Partnership Fund (2017): Financed 75+ projects across 56 developing nations, particularly LDCs and small island states.
- Digital Diplomacy: Exported innovations like Aadhaar, UPI, and digital governance platforms for scalable solutions abroad.
- Global Advocacy: Amplified Global South concerns in G20 summits and promoted Africa’s integration in decision-making forums.
- India-WFP Partnership: Innovations like Grain ATMs, fortified rice, and ration optimization demonstrate India as a model for other developing nations.
Challenges to SSTC
- Funding Constraints: Limited humanitarian and development budgets affect project scalability.
- Capacity Gaps: Many developing nations lack infrastructure, institutions, or skilled manpower to implement innovations.
- Consensus Issues: Absence of a common global framework hampers monitoring, evaluation, and accountability.
- Geopolitical Pressures: North-South power imbalances and aid politicization can undermine SSTC’s neutrality.
- Execution Barriers: Difficulty in replicating local success stories across diverse regional contexts.
Way Ahead
- Expand Scope: Include areas like digital economy, AI regulation, and climate financing.
- Strengthen Institutions: Establish dedicated SSTC platforms and secretariats for knowledge exchange and project coordination.
- Innovative Financing: Mobilize funds through private sector, diaspora bonds, and pooled Southern resources.
- Triangular Leverage: Engage developed nations and multilateral bodies while keeping Southern nations in the lead.
- Monitoring & Accountability: Develop transparent, SDG-linked reporting mechanisms for tracking projects and outcomes.
Conclusion:
- South-South and Triangular Cooperation is now a development lifeline for billions, not merely a diplomatic slogan.
- India’s leadership offers a unique opportunity to shape equitable global partnerships.
- With strong institutions, innovation, and inclusive frameworks, SSTC can become a pillar of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.
Source : The Hindu