Validity of Development Indicators Flashcards
1
Q
What are the problems with development indicators?
A
- Development Indicators usually show an average figure for the whole country and often hide differences in the standard of living within a country.
- Average indicators can hide extremes within a country such as a rich minority and a poor majority.
- Using a single development indicator, such as Gross National Product (GNP) per capita, may fail to reflect accurately the true quality of life within a country.
- It is not possible to tell where a rise in GNP is being spent within a country- ie. defence spending rather than healthcare.
- Per capita indicators are expressed as dollars to allow comparison, but exchange rates continually fluctuate making it hard to generate consistent/reliable data.
- Most economic indicators do not take into account the informal economy which accounts for a large proportion of wealth generated in some countries.
- Development is not only about money, other aspects of development like literacy and healthcare are also important.
2
Q
What is the HDI
A
- To address the problem of using a single indicator or multiple indicators for comparing the development of countries, the United Nations uses the Human Development Index.
- Countries are ranked based on their score and split into categories that suggest how well developed they are.
3
Q
What factors are used to calculate the HDI?
A
- Life expectancy index
- Education index
- Mean years of schooling index
- Expected years of schooling index
- Income index