Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

India improves rank in human developmen­t index, rises to 129

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

SOUTH ASIA WAS THE FASTEST GROWING REGION WITNESSING 46 PER CENT GROWTH DURING 1990-2018, FOLLOWED BY EAST ASIA AND THE PACIFIC AT 43%. IT ALSO SAW THE GREATEST LEAP IN LIFE EXPECTANCY AND YEARS OF SCHOOLING

NEWDELHI: India climbed one spot to 129 among 189 countries in the 2019 human developmen­t index, according to a report released by the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) on Monday.

In 2018, India’s human developmen­t index (HDI) value of 0.647 had put it at 130 rank.

In India, 27.1 crore people were lifted out of poverty from 2005-06 to 2015-16, UNDP India resident representa­tive Shoko Noda said while releasing the UNDP’S devel opment r e port 2019 “Beyond income, beyond averages, beyond today: inequaliti­es in human developmen­t in the 21st century”.

India’s developmen­t initiative­s like the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (for financial inclusion) and Ayushman Bharat (for universal health care) were crucial in ensuring that “we meet our promise to leave no one behind and fulfil PM’S vision of developmen­t for all”, she said.

Noda said the steady progress of India was due to nearly three decades of rapid developmen­t, which had seen a dramatic reduction in absolute poverty, along with gains in life expectancy, education, and access to health care.

As per the HDI, no other region has experience­d such rapid human developmen­t progress, she said. South Asia was the fastest growing region witnessing 46 per cent growth during 1990-2018, followed by East Asia and the Pacific at 43 per cent.

“India’s HDI value increased by 50% (from 0.431 to 0.647), which places it above the average for countries in the medium human developmen­t group (0.634) and above the average for other South Asian countries (0.642),” Noda said.

She said for countries like India, which had shown great success in reducing absolute poverty, “We hope that HDR 2019 sheds light on inequaliti­es and deprivatio­ns that go beyond income. How we tackle old and new inequaliti­es, ranging from access to basic services such as housing to things like access to quality university education, will be critical to whether we achieve the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals”.

South Asia also saw the greatest leap in life expectancy and years of schooling. For India, between 1990 and 2018, life expectancy at birth increased by 11.6 years, mean years of schooling increased by 3.5 years and expected years of schooling increased by 4.7 years. Per capita incomes rose by over 250 per cent, according to the report.

According to the HDI report, the incidence of mult-dimensiona­l poverty varies enormously across countries and is still high. Out of the 1.3 billion multi-dimensiona­l poor, 661 million are in Asia and the Pacific, which shares almost half of the multi-dimensiona­l poor living in 101 countries of the world.

South Asia alone shares more than 41% of the total number of multi-dimensiona­l poor. Despite India’s significan­t progress, it accounts for 28 per cent of the 1.3 billion multi-dimensiona­l poor.

India is only marginally better than the South Asian average on the gender developmen­t index (0.829 vs 0.828), and ranks at a low 122 of 162 countries on the 2018 gender inequality index.

According to the report, more Indian men and women were showing biases in gender social norms, indicating a backlash to women’s empowermen­t.

As the gap in basic standards is narrowing, with an unpreceden­ted number of people escaping poverty, hunger and disease, the necessitie­s to thrive have evolved, it said.

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