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Human De­ve­lop­ment Index

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Human Development Index

2006 re­port

The re­port for 2006 was laun­ched in Cape Town, South Af­ri­ca on No­vem­ber 9, 2006. Its focus was on "power, po­ver­ty and the glo­bal water cri­sis." Most of the data used for the re­port are de­ri­ved lar­ge­ly from 2004 or ear­lier, thus in­di­ca­ting an HDI for 2004. Not all UN mem­ber sta­tes choo­se to or are able to pro­vi­de the ne­cessa­ry sta­tis­tics.

The re­port show­ed a sta­gna­ti­on in world HDI, as the con­ti­nued im­pro­ve­ment of de­ve­l­o­ped coun­tries was off­set by a ge­ne­ral de­cli­ne of the de­ve­lo­ping world. Coun­tries in Sub-Sa­ha­ran Af­ri­ca and South Asia show­ed an im­portant de­cli­ne in HDI, in com­pa­ri­son with last year's re­port. Other de­ve­lo­ping re­gi­ons show­ed litt­le to no im­pro­ve­ment.

An HDI below 0.5 is con­side­red to re­pre­sent low de­ve­lop­ment and 29 of the 31 coun­tries in that ca­te­go­ry are lo­ca­ted in Af­ri­ca, with the ex­cep­ti­ons of Haiti and Yemen. The bot­tom ten coun­tries are all in Af­ri­ca. The hig­hest-scoring Sub-Sa­ha­ran coun­tries, Equa­to­ri­al Gui­nea and South Af­ri­ca, are ran­ked 120th and 121st, re­spec­tive­ly (with a sha­red HDI of 0.653).

An HDI of 0.8 or more is con­side­red to re­pre­sent high de­ve­lop­ment. This in­clu­des all de­ve­l­o­ped coun­tries and some de­ve­lo­ping coun­tries in main­ly Eas­tern Eu­ro­pe, Latin Ame­ri­ca, Sou­theast Asia and oil-rich Ara­bi­an Pen­in­su­la.

Human Development Index

Do­ku­ment her­un­ter­la­den [.doc][192 KB]


Quel­le: "Human De­ve­lop­ment Index." Wi­ki­pe­dia, The Free En­cy­clo­pe­dia.