Human Development Index: Pakistan remains stagnant at 146

52 per cent of Pakistan’s population lives in poverty. Pakistan slips 4 spots on the gender inequality index.


Ismail Sheikh July 24, 2014
Human Development Index: Pakistan remains stagnant at 146

Pakistan continued its dismal performance in the field of human development as it failed to improve its position on the Human Development Index (HDI) over the past five years.

According to the 2014 Human Development Report “Sustaining Human Progress: Reducing Vulnerabilities and Building Resilience,” published on Thursday by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) Pakistan remained among the group countries with low human development as it remained on same position as of last year, showing little sign of improvement.

Pakistan, which was ranked at 146 out of a total 187 countries on the index, scored 0.537 points on HDI, showed improvement of mere 0.002 points from last year’s score of 0.535.

The country showed some improvement in life expectancy at birth as it improved by 0.9 in 2013 to 66.6 from 65.7 in 2012.

On the gender inequality index, Pakistan slipped four spots to 127 from last year’s ranking of 123 as it scored 0.563 on the index as opposed to 0.567.

But Pakistan was part of a dismal overall human development situation in South Asia. While Bangladesh and India both showed some signs of improvement, the likes of Afghanistan worse off.
Bangladesh, which was last year at par with Pakistan on 146, has moved to 142 this year. India, which was on 136 last year, has moved one rank up to 135. Nepal is ranked at 145 while Afghanistan at 169.

The report added that 52 per cent of Pakistanis live in poverty. The HDI’s Multidimensional Poverty Index — an alternative to income-based poverty estimates — shows that the proportion of population living under the multidimensional poverty in Pakistan has increased by almost three per cent in one year.

Meanwhile, people living under multidimensional poverty rate in neighbouring Bangladesh and India has reduced to 47.8 and 51.1 per cent from last year’s count of 57.8 and 53.7 respectively.

COMMENTS (45)

HashK | 10 years ago | Reply

@R.Subramanian: @HashK: I told in India with 180 rupees per day we can live very comfortably ............ per month in India itself… So I strong feel as far as India is concerned this poverty data is really wrong.

Poverty relates to poor population who are either unemployed or low earners and not to people employed on well earned jobs with regular stream of income. (qualified or non-qualified).

Looking at your comments earlier I can see that you are assuming that people earn minimum 180 INR a day, apart from that you are only considering people who are earning something above that and you conclude that poverty data is wrong. What you are missing from your analysis is poor with either no source of income or very little income (irregular low income as well).

R.Subramanian | 10 years ago | Reply

@HashK: I told in India with 180 rupees per day we can live very comfortably based on standard market rate I did not include the Government subsidies. If the family uses Government subsidies means then they can live with 90 rupees per day...but this 90 rupees per day data is really wrong one, here normal unskilled low level labour is asking minimum 350 per day and the other side in high salary jobs, in software field, the salary is equivalent to what people are earning in US and Europe.. that means we can earn 2000 dollars to 4000 dollars per month in India itself... So I strong feel as far as India is concerned this poverty data is really wrong.

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