#Delhi /#Mumbai : #India’s ranking on Human Development Index (HDI) rose by a notch in 2014 — to 130 th from 131st a year earlier — according to the 2015 edition of the Global Human Development report, released by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) on Monday. From 2009 to 2014, the country moved six positions up in the HDI ranking.
With a score of 0.609 on HDI, India stands well below the average score of 0.630 for countries in the medium human development group. But it is marginally above the South Asian countries’ average score of 0.607. According to the latest ranking, India stands higher than neighbours Bangladesh and Pakistan but lower than countries like Namibia, Guatemala and Tajikistan, even Iraq. Norway tops the HDI ranking, followed by Australia, Switzerland and Denmark. The latest ranking is based on data from 188 countries.The Human Development Index is based on assessing progress on three dimensions of human development. First, a long and healthy life measured through life expectancy of the population. Second, access to knowledge measured by mean years of education among the adult population, and access to learning and knowledge measured by expected years of schooling for children of school-entry age. And last, standard of living measured by the country’s per-capita gross national income (GNI).
In its latest report, UNDP has revised and updated the underlying data which make comparisons with previous published rankings misleading (though it has presented a consistent set of rankings in the appendix). In particular, two major data revisions were made. First, the new rankings make use of the new purchasing-power parity(PPP) conversion rates based on 2011 International Comparison Program surveys published by the World Bank, while the previous rankings were based on the 2005 PPP rates.
The second revision pertains to changes in the population indicators. The 2015 human development report has made use of new data released by the United Nations Population Division in ‘The 2015 World Population Prospect’, which has led to changes in life expectancy estimates. These revisions have impacted countries HDI values, and thus their rankings. As a result of the changes in data, changes have also occurred in three indicators for India — life expectancy, mean years of education among the adult population and GNI per capita leading to a change in HDI values.
After adjusting for inequality, India’s HDI for 2014 falls from 0.609 to 0.435, indicating a loss of almost 29 per cent due to inequality in the distribution of the HDI dimension indices. This seems to be line with that observed in neighbouring countries like Bangladesh and Pakistan. The average loss due to inequality for medium HDI countries is estimated to be 25.8 per cent.
Data show that life expectancy at birth in India has over the past decade risen from 64.5 years (in 2005) to 68 years in 2014. Similarly, mean years of schooling have increased from 4.8 to 5.4 over the same period. During these 10 years, per-capita incomes in India have risen significantly, from $3239 to $5497 (at 2011 purchasing-power parity). On the gender development index (GDI), with a value of 0.795, India ranks behind Bangladesh (0.917), Namibia, Guatemala, even Tajikistan. GDI measures gender inequalities on three dimensions — health (measured by female and male life expectancy at birth), education (measured by expected years of schooling for female and male children, and mean years for adults aged 25 years and older); and command over economic resources (measured by estimated female and male GNI per capita).
On the gender inequality index (GII), India fares poorly in 2014, standing 130th among 155 countries, well behind Bangladesh and Pakistan, which are ranked 111 th and 121 st , respectively. GII is based on reproductive health (measured by maternal mortality and adolescent birth rates), empowerment (measured by the share of parliamentary seats held by women and attainment in secondary and higher education by each gender), and economic activity (measured by the labour market participation rate for women and men).
Data presented in the report show that 12.2 per cent of Parliament seats are held by females. The comparable proportion is 20 per cent for Bangladesh, and 19.7 per cent for Pakistan. Besides, only 27 per cent of adult women have achieved education up to at least the secondary level. Though it is higher than Pakistan (19.3 per cent), it is lower than Bangladesh (34 per cent). India also fares poorly on maternal mortality rate (MMR), or the number of deaths per 100,000 live births. Compared with India’s 190, MMR for both Pakistan and Bangladesh is lower at 170.
The Global Human Development report also estimates multidimensional poverty index (MPI), which “identifies multiple deprivations in the same households in education, health and living standards”. According to this index, 55.3 per cent of India’s population were multidimensionally poor in 2005-06, while another 18.2 per cent lived near multidimensional poverty.
However, since these estimates are based on data that are almost a decade old, the country’s standing as on date is likely to be better than that estimated in the report.
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