Overview
The Malawi 2022 Voluntary National Review (VNR) Report presents Malawi’s second voluntary assessment of progress towards the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The report outlines the country’s efforts to align national development frameworks, particularly the Malawi 2063 (Mw2063) vision and the Malawi Implementation Plan (MIP-1), with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It reflects a whole-of-government and multi-stakeholder approach, involving public institutions, civil society, development partners and the private sector. The 2022 VNR highlights progress made since the 2020 review, particularly in poverty reduction, education, health and policy alignment, while acknowledging the severe impact of COVID-19, climate-related disasters and macroeconomic instability. The report demonstrates Malawi’s continued commitment to inclusive growth, resilience-building and strengthened governance systems in pursuit of sustainable development.
Recommendations
- Strengthen Domestic Resource Mobilisation: Expand revenue generation and improve public financial management to reduce reliance on external financing.
- Scale Up Climate Resilience Investment: Increase funding for climate-smart agriculture, resilient infrastructure and disaster preparedness systems.
- Promote Economic Diversification and Youth Employment: Invest in industrialisation, value addition and SME development to create sustainable employment opportunities.
- Expand Social Protection Coverage: Broaden cash transfer programmes and target ultra-poor and climate-affected households more effectively.
- Enhance Gender Equality Interventions: Strengthen enforcement of child marriage laws and expand programmes addressing adolescent pregnancy and GBV.
- Improve Data Systems and Statistical Capacity: Invest in national statistical systems to close indicator-level gaps and support evidence-based decision-making.
- Strengthen Decentralised Service Delivery: Build institutional capacity at district level to improve implementation efficiency and accountability.
Conclusion
In conclusion, the 2022 VNR underscores both the achievements and persistent challenges in Malawi’s SDG implementation journey. While measurable progress has been recorded in areas such as literacy, social protection coverage, maternal health services and policy integration, structural constraints—including high poverty levels, climate vulnerability, fiscal pressures and limited industrial diversification—continue to slow progress. The experience of responding to COVID-19 and climate shocks has reinforced the importance of resilience, coordinated partnerships and strengthened domestic resource mobilisation. Moving forward, accelerated implementation, enhanced data systems and sustainable financing will be essential to meet the 2030 targets. The review ultimately reaffirms Malawi’s determination to leave no one behind while advancing the aspirations of Mw2063 and the global SDG agenda.