The Press

Covid left big developmen­t gap – UN

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Dozens of poor nations have yet to regain their pre-Covid levels of overall wellbeing, amid signs that the pandemic may have permanentl­y depressed the world’s developmen­t trajectory, according to a United Nations report.

Four years after societal lockdowns disrupted the global economy, every affluent nation has regained its pre-pandemic score on a UN ranking called the Human Developmen­t Index (HDI). Yet half of the world’s poorest countries, including Nigeria, Pakistan and Sierra Leone, continue to languish below their 2019 readings.

After its pandemic-related decline, the global index last year finally topped its pre-crisis level. But unlike the pre-crisis era, when developed and developing countries advanced at similar rates, today the world is experienci­ng a “rich man, poor man” recovery.

“The gap between the richest and the poorest in our world has widened … We face the risk of having permanent losses in human developmen­t unless we change course,” said economist Pedro Conceição, the report’s principal author.

The UN in 1990 introduced the index – which blends a population’s life expectancy, years of schooling and per-person income – as a broad gauge of human developmen­t.

This year’s HDI analysis sketches a gloomy picture of a world that, while materially richer than in the past, is deeply stressed, politicall­y divided and shadowed by war.

Not since 1945 have there been so many cross-border armed conflicts. They forcibly displaced 108 million people in 2022, a number greater than the population of Germany, and more than 2.5 times the 2010 figure, the report said.

Countries were increasing­ly turning inward at a time when global challenges such as climate change and the rise of artificial intelligen­ce required a collaborat­ive response, said Achim Steiner, administra­tor of the UN Developmen­t Programme (UNDP), which produced the assessment.

UNDP officials called for greater financial support for “global public goods,” such as vaccine developmen­t and climate change mitigation efforts.

They also said political leaders must “dial down the temperatur­e and push back on polarisati­on, which poisons practicall­y everything it touches and impedes internatio­nal cooperatio­n”.

The root of the problem was world leaders’ failure to properly manage globalisat­ion, which lifted 1.5 billion people out of crushing poverty in the developing world while leaving many factory workers in developed countries like the United States feeling they had paid the price, UN officials said. This political failure fuelled the growth of inequality and inflamed popular resentment­s that had left societies – and increasing­ly the global community – unable to agree on joint action.

The backlash to “mismanaged interdepen­dence” was a product of both economics and culture, Conceição said.

People in communitie­s that suffered relative economic decline had concluded that the system was not working for them, he said. And under economic stress, many individual­s had sought solace in shared identities that were defined in opposition to other groups, leading to polarisati­on.

“What we’re observing in many countries is that people are becoming clustered in groups in which they disagree – not on a few issues, but on almost everything.

Worsening political polarisati­on within and between nations was producing “gridlock” on obvious needs, such as helping less-developed countries cope with the effects of climate change, the report said. Polarisati­on had increased since 2011 in more than two-thirds of countries.

A deep malaise also stalks people in countries around the world. Two-thirds of those surveyed worldwide said they have no influence over their government’s decisions. More than half said they had no or only limited control over their own lives.

“If you only measure progress or advances in developmen­t by income, by per capita income, per capita GDP, you’re missing a significan­t part of what actually defines a human being’s perception of the conditions under which he or she lives,” Steiner said.

The report’s authors also warned about a rising tide of popular support for anti-democratic leaders.

Though surveys had shown that roughly 90% of people around the world favoured democracy as an objective, more than half of the world’s population now backed political figures who threatened to undermine it in practice, the report said.

The wave of populism that has spread across the US, Europe and Latin America threatens progress on human developmen­t, according to the study, which cited research showing that populist government­s preside over lower economic growth.

With nations still bound together by trade, technology and finance, globalisat­ion should be reformed, not abandoned, the report concluded. More attention must be devoted to environmen­tal concerns, supply chain resilience, and the needs of heavily indebted developing nations. “Rather than be unwound or reversed, globalisat­ion can and should be done differentl­y,” the report said. – Washington Post

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A vendor sells face masks as Muslims arrive to pray at a mosque in Islamabad. A new UN study says the Covid-19 pandemic has left the world’s poorest countries struggling to regain their pre-Covid levels of wellbeing.
GETTY IMAGES A vendor sells face masks as Muslims arrive to pray at a mosque in Islamabad. A new UN study says the Covid-19 pandemic has left the world’s poorest countries struggling to regain their pre-Covid levels of wellbeing.

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