United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has recently published the 20th Anniversary edition of its Human Development Report (HDR) which presents the latest Human Development Index (HDI). The premise of the HDI reports is simple - national development should be measured not simply by national income nor should an individual’s well-being be evaluated by money alone, as had long been the practice, but also by life expectancy and literacy.
Income is of course crucial - without resources, any progress is difficult. Yet there is a need to gauge whether people can lead long and healthy lives, whether they have the opportunity to be educated and whether they are free to use their knowledge and talents to shape their own destinies.
A critique of the HDIs so far has been its reliance on national averages, which concealed skewed distribution, and the absence of a quantitative measure of human freedom. The current HDR presents an opportunity to review human development achievements and challenges systematically at both the global and national levels—a task not attempted since the first report — and to analyse their implications for policy and future research.
The present HDR continues with the tradition of measurement of innovation while introducing three new measures —capturing multidimensional inequality, gender disparities and extreme deprivation. The Inequality-adjusted HDI, Gender Inequality Index and Multidimensional Poverty Index, building on innovations in the field and advances in theory and data, are applied to most countries in the world and provide important new insights.
The future HDRs will have to grapple with even more difficult issues, including the increasingly critical area of sustainability, as well as inequality and broader notions of empowerment.
Download the report here: