Pakistan drops 7 places to 161st rank in Human Development Index
Pakistan has dropped seven places in the Human Development Index (HDI), ranking 161 out of 192 countries in the 2021-2022 period, according to a UNDP report
Pakistan has dropped seven places in the Human Development Index (HDI), ranking 161 out of 192 countries in the 2021-2022 period, according to a UNDP report.
According to the report, titled ‘Uncertain Times, Unsettled Lives: Shaping our Future in a Transforming World’, Pakistan’s life expectancy at birth is 66.1 years and expected years of schooling are eight. The gross per capita national income is $4,624.
The report has identified that different climate shocks are affecting world order, pushing back the growth that was achieved in the past few years.
While doing so, it has categorised the floods in Pakistan as “an example of the climate shocks seen around the world”, The News reported.
Switzerland leads the way on the latest HDI, while Norway and Iceland enjoy second and third positions.
Among the South Asian countries — Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka — only Pakistan and Afghanistan (180th position) are in the low human development category, The News reported.
Bhutan (127), Bangladesh (129), India (132) and Nepal (143) are in the medium human development category, and the crisis-hit Sri Lanka has managed to improve its position by nine points, reaching the 73rd position on the index, finding itself in the high human development category.
Meanwhile, Maldives at the 90th position.
The report has found out that around 90 per cent of countries have seen “reversals in human development” in the year of the survey, pointing to a world stuck in a never-ending cycle of crisis after crisis, causing global disruptions.
The two major factors responsible for these disruptions were the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war, The News quoted the report as saying.
The HDI is a measure of countries’ standard of living, health and education.
This is the first time in the last 30 years that human development in a majority of countries has gone in reverse for two consecutive years.
As per the data, it is evident that different climate issues are affecting the world and reducing the growth that was achieved in the past few years. Consequently, around 90 per cent of countries have seen “reversals in human development” in the period under review.
The report’s lead author, Pedro Conceicao, said the unprecedented decline in human development was driven by economic recession, and by an extraordinary decline in life expectancy. That, he said, includes the 21st-ranked United States, which has seen a dramatic drop in life expectancy due to COVID-19 from 79 years to 76.1 years.
Conceicao said other new data from the report show global levels of trust are the lowest on record. He added those who are most mistrustful hold the most extreme political views.
“Uncertainty and the feeling of insecurity hardens people’s commitments to a group that shares a similar set of beliefs and increases hostility to other groups that think differently,” he said. “And digital technology often adds fuel to this flame of divisiveness. So, as a result, the report documents that democratic practices are under stress.”
The report warns insecurity and polarization are feeding off each other. And that, it says, is preventing nations from taking the collective action needed to address the multiple threats and crises the world is facing.
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