Thursday, December 15, 2011

ARTICLE - HAITI - HDI - BAD RANKING

STILL A BAD RANKING FOR HAITI, ACCORDING TO THE HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX (HDI)
(Haiti Libre) -

Acording to the Human Development Index (HDI) (1), Haiti this year, is ranked 158th out of 187 countries compared to 2010 where Haiti was ranked 145th out of 169 countries.

New data from the report indicates that life expectancy is now 62.1 years, compared with 50.6 in 1980, 59.1 in 2000 and 61 in 2008.

Education: Regarding the literacy rate among those over 15 years it is 48.7%, compared to 53.7% in 2000 and 34.7% in 1980. The average duration of schooling is 4.9 years with a gross enrollment rate of 27%.

Health: Concerning expenditures in health, they are of the order of 1.2% of GDP. The mortality rate among children under five is 87 per 1,000 live births. The adolescent fertility rate, is 46.4 births per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19. The maternal mortality ratio is 300 in 100,000.

Economy: GDP per capita is $1,045, the gross national income (GNI) per capita is $1,123.

Poverty: According to the 2011 report, the multi-dimensional poverty (Percentage of the population with a weighted deprivation score of at least 33 percent) affects 56.4% of the population.

"In Haiti, the proportion of people who suffer from both multi-dimensional poverty and inadequate access to clean water in the Metropolitan Area/West is 19% while in the Centre it reaches 70%" the report said.

Environment: The report indicates that 19% of species are threatened, the rate of emissions of greenhouse gases per inhabitant is 0.3 for carbon dioxide. It is shown that the change in forest area is at -11.6%, and forest area occupies 3.7% of the surface soil.

Demography: The population has 10,123,800 inhabitants, 53.6% urban, 5,101,950 are women and 5,021,840 men.

(1) What is the HDI?

The Human Development Index (HDI) is a summary composite index that measures a country's average achievements in three basic aspects of human development: health, knowledge, and income. It was first developed by the late Pakistani economist Mahbub ul Haq with the collaboration of the Nobel laureate Amartya Sen and other leading development thinkers for the first Human Development Report in 1990. It was introduced as an alternative to conventional measures of national development, such as level of income and the rate of economic growth.

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