UNDP
brackets
India with Equatorial Guinea in human development index
NEW DELHI, March 15, 2013 SPECIAL
CORRESPONDENT
However, the country’s value increased 61 per cent from
1980 to 2012
India has been ranked 136 among
187 countries evaluated for human development index (HDI) — a measure for
assessing progress in life expectancy, access to knowledge and a decent
standard of living or gross national income per capita.
The Human
Development Report of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
for 2013, released on Thursday, puts India’s HDI value for the last year at
0.554, placing it in the medium human development category, which it shares
with Equatorial Guinea.
On the positive side, India’s HDI
value went up from 0.345 to 0.554 between 1980 and 2012, an increase of 61 per
cent or an average annual increase of 1.5 per cent.
Life expectancy at birth
increased by 10.5 years, mean years of schooling by 2.5 years and expected
years of schooling by 4.4 years.
Importantly, the gross national
income (GNI) per capita went up 273 per cent, the report says.
Interestingly, the report notes
that social movements and the specific issues media highlight do not always
result in political transformations benefiting the broader society.
Citing the example of Anna
Hazare’s “movement” against corruption, which pressured the government for
change, the report says critics, however, point out that such a campaign can
favour policies that may not be supported by a wider electorate. “Thus, it is
important to institutionalise a participatory process that can adjust the
political balance by providing a platform for excluded citizens to demand
accountability and redress of inequities, ranging from systemic discrimination
to unfair and unjust exclusion.”
PAT FOR INDIA
There is a word of appreciation
for India for its policies on internal conflicts. “India has shown that while
policing may be more effective in curbing violence in the short term,
redistribution and overall development are better strategies to prevent and
contain civil unrest in the medium term,” the report says, referring to
Operation Green Hunt launched against Maoists, which has come under sharp
criticism from human rights activists within the country. The other initiatives
that have been lauded are the right to education and the rural employment
guarantee scheme that provides up to 100 days of unskilled manual labour to
eligible poor at a statutory minimum wage. “This initiative [the job guarantee
scheme] is promising because it provides access to income and some insurance
for the poor against the vagaries of seasonal work and affords individual the
self-respect and empowerment associated with work.”
Despite India’s progress, its HDI
of 0.554 is below the average of 0.64 for countries in the medium human
development group, and of 0.558 for countries in South Asia. From South Asia,
countries which are close to India’s HDI rank and population size are
Bangladesh and Pakistan with HDIs ranked 146 each. But the report points out
that the ranking masks inequality in the distribution of human development
across the population.
Even on the Gender Inequality
Index — inequalities in reproductive health, empowerment and economic activity
— India has been ranked 132nd among the 148 countries for which data is
available. In India, only 10.9 per cent of the parliamentary seats are held by
women, and 26.6 per cent of adult women have reached a secondary or higher
level of education, compared with 50.4 per cent of their male counterparts. For
every 100,000 live births, 200 women die of causes related to pregnancy, and
female participation in the labour market is 29 per cent, compared with 80.7
per cent for men.
As for the Multidimensional
Poverty Index (MPI), which identifies multiple deprivations in the same
household in education, health and living standard, India’s value averages out
at 0.283, a little above Bangladesh’s and Pakistan’s. The figures for
evaluating MPI have been drawn from the 2005-06 survey, according to which 53.7
per cent of the population lived in multidimensional poverty, while an
additional 16.4 per cent were vulnerable to multiple deprivations.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/undp-brackets-india-with-equatorial-guinea-in-human-development-index/article4510390.ece
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