History & Society

Human Development Index

United Nations
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Also known as: HDI

Human Development Index (HDI), measure used by the United Nations (UN) to evaluate countries in terms of the well-being of their citizens.

Before the creation of the Human Development Index (HDI), a country’s level of development was typically measured using economic statistics, particularly gross national income (GNI). The UN believed that economic measures alone were inadequate for assessing development because they did not always reflect the quality of life of a country’s average citizens. It introduced the HDI in 1990 to take other factors into account and provide a more well-rounded evaluation of human development.

The HDI measures development in three areas: health, education, and standard of living. The health component is assessed by life expectancy at birth. Education is measured by the average number of years of school completed by adults as well as the number of years of school expected to be completed by children. Standard of living is assessed by the GNI per capita, which provides a rough measure of the annual national income per person in a country. Those three measures are combined to produce a single HDI score.

By including measures from three areas of human development, the HDI can provide insights that a single measure cannot. For example, a country with a higher GNI might have a lower life expectancy and lower educational attainment than a country with a lower GNI. When the three indicators are combined, the country with the higher GNI may have a lower HDI score than the country with the lower GNI. Such a result raises questions about how money is spent and how it might be better used to maximize well-being in the higher-income country. The UN urges governments to consider the HDI when making policy and spending choices that could either positively or negatively affect human development.

The HDI is a useful summary of a country’s achievements in human development, but it is not a comprehensive measure. The UN created additional indexes to account for other factors that influence development. The Gender Development Index, for example, uses the three measures from the HDI but factors in disparities between men and women. The Multidimensional Poverty Index measures how many of a country’s people suffer from multiple overlapping indicators of poverty in health, education, and standard of living.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica