Aligning development co-operation to the SDGs in lower middle-income countries
A case study of Bangladesh
This case study explores whether the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) can be used
as a shared framework by all actors to manage development co-operation for results
in lower middle-income countries, taking Bangladesh as a case study. The study offers
an introduction to Bangladesh’s progress in mainstreaming the Goals in national policy
making, as well as in monitoring the SDG targets and indicators. The report then focuses
on the experiences of development co-operation partners in aligning their country-level
programmes and frameworks with the SDGs, and identifies enabling factors, drivers
and obstacles that contribute to SDG alignment and monitoring in Bangladesh. The study
concludes with recommendations for both the government and its development partners
to increase the collective use of the SDG framework and improve the policy coherence,
effectiveness and sustainable impact of all development efforts.
Published on April 29, 2022
In series:OECD Development Co-operation Working Papersview more titles