Why Hong Kong, Japan and Iceland, and not Norway, Switzerland and Australia, Are the Best Countries for Human Development
POLITICAL SCIENCES |

Why Hong Kong, Japan and Iceland, and not Norway, Switzerland and Australia, Are the Best Countries for Human Development

A PAPER BY SIMONE GHISLANDI AND COLLEAGUES PROPOSES A SIMPLE HUMAN LIFE INDICATOR, THAT OVERCOMES SOME OF THE UN'S HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX LIMITATIONS

Since its introduction in 1990, UN’s Human Development Index (HDI) has contributed to shifting our understanding of development away from a purely economic view, toward a more diverse one, combining data on health, schooling and economics. HDI, though, has its flaws, according to a new study co-authored by Simone Ghislandi, an Associate Professor at Bocconi University’s Department of Social and Political Sciences, and it could be conveniently replaced with a new and simpler Human Life Indicator (HLI).
 
The new index takes into account only the inequality-adjusted life expectancy at birth: at life expectancy parity, i.e., a country with many disadvantaged people dying young and many rich people dying old is considered worse-off than a country with all the population living about the same age. Even if the two indexes are highly correlated (0.93), HLI also measures the progress toward reducing inequality in human development.
 
«Replacing a set of indicators with a single one makes sense because the components of the HDI are correlated and picking one doesn’t imply a major loss of information», prof. Ghislandi says. Furthermore, life expectancy is the right choice because it’s the most reliable among HDI’s components. Finally, HDI implicitly assumes that life has a different value in different countries. «As the same HDI score can be reached with different combinations of life expectancy and GDP per capita, tinkering with data you can observe different economic values for one year of life in different countries», Prof. Ghislandi continues.
 
The new indicator produces an earthquake in the development ranking, with significant loss of positions, compared to HDI 2018 revision, for rich but unequal countries (the US drops from 13th to 32nd, Australia from 3rd to 10th, and Germany from 5th to 25th) and gains from more equal ones (Japan jumps from 19th to 2nd, Spain from 26th to 5th, and Italy from 28th to 6th).
 
Simone Ghislandi, Warren Sanderson, Sergei Scherbov, A Simple Measure of Human Development: The Human Life Indicator, in Population and Development Review, 6 November 2018, DOI:10.1111/padr.12205.
 
Changing Rankings
 
UN's HDI   HLI   UN's HDI   HLI
Norway 1 Hong Kong   New Zealand 16 Finland
Switzerland 2 Japan   Belgium 17 Canada
Australia 3 Iceland   Liechtenstein 18 Austria
Ireland 4 Singapore   Japan 19 Ireland
Germany 5 Spain   Austria 20 Slovenia
Iceland 6 Italy   Luxembourg 21 New Zealand
Hong Kong 7 Switzerland   Israel 22 United Kingdom
Sweden 8 Sweden   Korea 23 Portugal
Singapore 9 Norway   France 24 Greece
Netherlands 10 Australia   Slovenia 25 Germany
Denmark 11 Israel   Spain 26 Belgium
Canada 12 France   Czechia 27 Denmark
United States 13 Netherlands   Italy 28 Malta
United Kingdom 14 Korea   Malta 29 Cyprus
Finland 15 Luxembourg   Estonia 30 Czechia

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by Fabio Todesco
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