The HPI points out that it is not trying to provide a ranking of the ‘happiest’ countries in the world. Instead, it wants to show the relative efficiency with which nations use natural resources to achieve the well-being of their citizens. The HPI tries doing so by comparing life expectancy, well-being experience and ecological footprint (per capita) using data collected from various sources including the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and Gallup data.
The NEF makes a valid point that the dominant Western model of development is not sustainable. It is also interesting to note how rich countries, such as Qatar, Luxembourg, Kuwait, the UAE, Denmark and the US have such a detrimental ecological footprint. However, the HPI assertion of providing a clear and meaningful barometer of how well a nation is doing remains problematic. Let’s return again to Pakistan’s ranking to demonstrate why.
While the life expectancy and experienced well-being of Pakistan were found to be mediocre, a ‘good’ ecological footprint was deemed responsible for propelling us to such an enviable position. Yet, the main reason why our ecological footprint is considered good has much less to do with environmental conscientiousness of our policymakers and more to do with our nation’s inability to catch up with major industrial countries.
A range of other indicators such as the UNDP’s Human Development Index (HDI) provide a much less optimistic assessment concerning Pakistan’s situation. Pakistan’s HDI ranking of 145 out of 187 countries during this past year is in stark contrast to its position on the HPI.
The NEF and its index say nothing about the economic disparity, the dismal mother and child mortality rates or the growing food insecurity in the country. The devastation caused by the three massive consecutive years of flooding does not seem to have made a dent in our situation vis-à-vis contributing to ‘planet happiness’.
Placing Pakistan, or even Bangladesh for that matter, so high on the HPI due to apparently good ecological footprints, which are, in fact, based on our inability to achieve higher growth and the pervasive level of deprivation and disparities, is therefore, hardly constructive.
The NEF would have performed a more useful function by trying to calculate the effect of bad ecological footprints due to carbon emissions of developed countries on less developed countries in the form of climate change impacts. The NEF could even have made an index of worst offending and worst impacted countries and then publicised such a ranking in the attempt to have the offending countries pay for environmental havoc being caused in countries which are worst affected by unsustainable ecological footprints.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 22nd, 2012.
COMMENTS (7)
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So its good for the planet if all countries start emulating Pakistan.. lol
Good for the planet, not so good for, well, Humans..
I believe hunters and gatherers of the stone age had the highest happy planet index....ever!! So much so that the entire London office of the New Economics Foundation dressed in (recyclable) tree bark and leaves for the rest of year.
Kudos on beating out the big bad USA. I think we are doing everything just right. We just need the right index to show that.
@Captaincookespeersahib: Ignorance is bliss.
Happy planet Index ranking at 16th place gives a false sense of pride
Calm down and stop spinning this into something negative.
Every article you click on ET theres always either something massively negative, or its riddled with indian trolls in the comments.
This is good news.
I would like my country to be the last on this particular index...
This index has nothing to do with the happiness level in the country, and is only linked with the happiness that the planet may feel on account of the relatively lower strain that this particular nation causes. Naturally, the more industrially developed the nation, the lower the HPI. Case in point made by casual perusal of those who have a score higher than Pakistan - a list that mainly includes Venezuala, Colombia, Honduras, Bangladesh, Algeria, Cuba, and Indonesia.