The UN puts Canada and the U.S. as tied at 10th place, but Canada is ranked 17th in the world using our system, says the report.
Every
year, the United
Nations releases the Human Development Index.
The
HDI is like a country’s report card. In a single number, it tells
policymakers and citizens how well a country is doing. This year,
Norway
was at the top of the class, while Niger finished last.
The
index first appeared in 1990. Before then, a country’s level of
development was measured solely by its economic growth. By taking
non-economic dimensions of human well-being into account, the HDI
revolutionized the idea of what was meant by countries becoming “more
developed.”
The
HDI has been wildly successful in changing the way people think about
the development process. However, it still suffers from real flaws.
There have been numerous attempts to do its job better, including one
that we published on Nov. 6.
Eliminating
the flaws in the HDI make a substantial difference. For example,
Denmark was ranked fifth in the world according to this year’s UN
rankings, but our new index knocks it down to only 27th, switching
places with Spain.
Problems
with the HDI
Human
development can be devilishly hard to measure. The HDI considers
changes in three domains: economics, education and health. (One
alternative to the HDI, the Social Progress Index, combines data on
54 domains.)
In
our view, the HDI has three main problems. First, it implicitly
assumes trade-offs between its components. For example, the HDI
measures health using life expectancy at birth and measures economic
conditions using GDP per capita. So the same HDI score can be
achieved with different combinations of the two.
As
a result, the HDI implies a value of an additional year of life in
terms of economic output. This value differs according to a country’s
level of GDP per capita. Dig into the HDI and you will find whether
it assumes an additional year of life is worth more in the U. S. or
Canada, more in Germany or France, and more in Norway or Niger.
The
HDI also struggles with the accuracy and meaningfulness of the
underlying data. Average income could be high in a country, but what
if most of it goes to a small elite? The HDI does not distinguish
between countries with the same GDP per capita, but different levels
of income inequality or between countries based on the quality of
education. By focusing on averages, the HDI can obscure important
differences in human development.
Incorporating
inaccurate or incomplete data in an index reduces its usefulness.
Finally,
data on different domains may be highly correlated. For example, the
GDP per capita and the average level of education in countries are
strongly related. Including two highly correlated indicators may
provide little additional information compared to just using one....
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