Human Development Index

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World map indicating Human Development Index (2004).           high (0.800–1)        medium (0.500–0.799)        low (0.300–0.499)        n/a   (colour-blind compliant map)
World map indicating Human Development Index (2004).
     high (0.800–1)      medium (0.500–0.799)      low (0.300–0.499)      n/a
(colour-blind compliant map)

The Human Development Index (HDI) is a comparative measure of life expectancy, literacy, education, and standard of living for countries worldwide. It is a standard means of measuring well-being, especially child welfare. It is used to determine and indicate whether a country is a developed, developing, or underdeveloped country and also to measure the impact of economic policies on quality of life.[1] The index was developed in 1990 by Pakistani economist Mahbub ul Haq and has been used since 1993 by the United Nations Development Programme in its annual Human Development Report.

The HDI measures the average achievements in a country in three basic dimensions of human development:

Each year, UN member states are listed and ranked according to these measures. Those high on the list often advertise it (e.g., Jean Chrétien, Former Prime Minister of Canada [1]), as a means of attracting talented immigrants (economically, individual capital) or discouraging emigration.

An alternative measure, focusing on the amount of poverty in a country, is the Human Poverty Index.

Contents

Methodology

In general to transform a raw variable, say x, into a unit-free index between 0 and 1 (which allows different indices to be added together), the following formula is used:

  • x-index = \frac{x - \min\left(x\right)} {\max\left(x\right)-\min\left(x\right)}

where \min\left(x\right) and \max\left(x\right) are the lowest and highest values the variable x can attain, respectively.

The Human Development Index (HDI) then represents the average of the following three general indices:

  • Life Expectancy Index = \frac{LE - 25} {85-25}
  • Education Index = \frac{2} {3} \times ALI + \frac{1} {3} \times GEI
  • GDP Index = \frac{\log\left(GDPpc\right) - \log\left(100\right)} {\log\left(40000\right) - \log\left(100\right)}

LE: Life expectancy
ALR: Adult literacy rate
CGER: Combined gross enrollment ratio
GDPpc: GDP per capita at PPP in USD

UNDP has created a technical note on the definition of the HDI (see links below).

2006 report

Coloured world map indicating Human Development Index (2004)          0.950 and over      0.900–0.949      0.850–0.899      0.800–0.849      0.750–0.799      0.700–0.749       0.650–0.699      0.600–0.649      0.550–0.599      0.500–0.549      0.450–0.499      0.400–0.449       0.350–0.399      0.300–0.349      under 0.300      N/A  (colour-blind compliant map)
Coloured world map indicating Human Development Index (2004)
     0.950 and over      0.900–0.949      0.850–0.899      0.800–0.849      0.750–0.799      0.700–0.749      0.650–0.699      0.600–0.649      0.550–0.599      0.500–0.549      0.450–0.499      0.400–0.449      0.350–0.399      0.300–0.349      under 0.300      N/A
(colour-blind compliant map)

The report for 2006 was launched in Cape Town, South Africa on November 9, 2006. Its focus was on "power, poverty and the global water crisis." [2] Most of the data used for the report are derived largely from 2004 or earlier, thus indicating an HDI for 2004. Not all UN member states choose to or are able to provide the necessary statistics.

The report showed a stagnation in world HDI, as the continued improvement of developed countries was offset by a general decline of the developing world. Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia showed an important decline in HDI, in comparison with last year's report. Other developing regions showed little to no improvement.

A HDI below 0.5 is considered to represent low development and 29 of the 31 countries in that category are located in Africa, with the exceptions of Haiti and Yemen. The bottom ten countries are all in Africa. The highest-scoring Sub-Saharan countries, Equatorial Guinea and South Africa, are ranked 120th and 121st, respectively (with a shared HDI of 0.653).

A HDI of 0.8 or more is considered to represent high development. This includes all developed countries, such as those in North America, Europe, Oceania, and Eastern Asia, as well as some developing countries in Eastern Europe, Latin America, Southeast Asia, the Caribbean, and the oil-rich Arabian Peninsula.


Top thirty countries (HDI range from 0.965 down to 0.885)

  1. Flag of Norway Norway 0.965 ()
  2. Flag of Iceland Iceland 0.960 ()
  3. Flag of Australia Australia 0.957 ()
  4. Flag of Republic of Ireland Republic of Ireland 0.956 ( 4)
  5. Flag of Sweden Sweden 0.951 ( 1)
  6. Flag of Canada Canada 0.950 ( 1)
  7. Flag of Japan Japan 0.949 ( 4)
  8. Flag of United States United States 0.948 ( 2)
  9. Flag of Netherlands Netherlands 0.947 ( 2)
  10. Flag of Switzerland Switzerland 0.947 ()
  1. Flag of Finland Finland 0.947 ( 2)
  2. Flag of Luxembourg Luxembourg 0.945 ( 8)
  3. Flag of Belgium Belgium 0.945 ( 4)
  4. Flag of Austria Austria 0.944 ( 3)
  5. Flag of Denmark Denmark 0.943 ( 1)
  6. Flag of France France 0.942 ()
  7. Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom 0.940 ( 1)
  8. Flag of Italy Italy 0.940 ( 3)
  9. Flag of Spain Spain 0.938 ( 2)
  10. Flag of New Zealand New Zealand 0.936 ( 1)
  1. Flag of Germany Germany 0.932 ( 1)
  2. Flag of Hong Kong Hong Kong 0.927 ()
  3. Flag of Israel Israel 0.927 ()
  4. Flag of Greece Greece 0.921 ()
  5. Flag of Singapore Singapore 0.916 ()
  6. Flag of South Korea Republic of Korea 0.912 ( 2)
  7. Flag of Slovenia Slovenia 0.910 ( 1)
  8. Flag of Portugal Portugal 0.904 ( 1)
  9. Flag of Cyprus Cyprus 0.903 ()
  10. Flag of Czech Republic Czech Republic 0.885 ( 1)

Top/bottom three countries by region

Africa

047. Flag of Seychelles Seychelles 0.842 ( 4)
063. Flag of Mauritius Mauritius 0.800 ( 2)
064. Flag of Libya Libya 0.798 ( 6)
...
175. Flag of Mali Mali 0.338 ( 1)
176. Flag of Sierra Leone Sierra Leone 0.335 ()
177. Flag of Niger Niger 0.311 ()

Asia

007. Flag of Japan Japan 0.949 ( 4)
022. Flag of Hong Kong Hong Kong SAR 0.927 ()
023. Flag of Israel Israel 0.927 ()
...
138. Flag of Nepal Nepal 0.527 ( 2)
142. Flag of East Timor Timor-Leste 0.512 ( 2)
150. Flag of Yemen Yemen 0.492 ( 1)

Europe

001. Flag of Norway Norway 0.965 ()
002. Flag of Iceland Iceland 0.960 ()
004. Flag of Republic of Ireland Republic of Ireland 0.956 ( 4)
...
097. Flag of Georgia (country) Georgia 0.743 ( 3)
099. Flag of Azerbaijan Azerbaijan 0.736 ( 2)
114. Flag of Moldova Moldova 0.694 ( 1)

North America

006. Flag of Canada Canada 0.950 ( 1)
008. Flag of United States United States 0.948 ( 2)
031. Flag of Barbados Barbados 0.879 ( 1)
...
117. Flag of Honduras Honduras 0.683 ( 1)
118. Flag of Guatemala Guatemala 0.673 ( 1)
154. Flag of Haiti Haiti 0.482 ( 1)

Oceania

003. Flag of Australia Australia 0.957 ()
020. Flag of New Zealand New Zealand 0.936 ( 1)
055. Flag of Tonga Tonga 0.815 ( 1)
...
119. Flag of Vanuatu Vanuatu 0.670 ( 1)
128. Flag of Solomon Islands Solomon Islands 0.592 ()
139. Flag of Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea 0.523 ( 2)

South America

036. Flag of Argentina Argentina 0.863 ( 2)
038. Flag of Chile Chile 0.859 ( 1)
043. Flag of Uruguay Uruguay 0.851 ( 3)
...
091. Flag of Paraguay Paraguay 0.757 ( 3)
103. Flag of Guyana Guyana 0.725 ( 4)
115. Flag of Bolivia Bolivia 0.692 ( 2)

Countries not included

The following countries or territories are not ranked in the 2006 Human Development Index, for being unable or unwilling to provide the necessary data, or for not being recognised as states by the United Nations.

Africa

Asia

Europe

Oceania

Past top countries

The number one ranked country in each year of the index.

References

See also

External links

Energy and Sustainability Status   Edit
Ecological footprint | Ecosystem services | Kardashev scale | TPE | Human Development Index | Value of Earth | Appropriate technology | Infrastructural capital
Sustainability and Development of Energy   Edit
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