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India-Pakistan |
Human Development |
2014-07-27 |
![]() The GNI can only increase if the economy expands enough to provide new jobs for the surplus of labour that is unemployed. The life expectancy index is the average age an individual reaches before dying in a country. The infant mortality rate is included in this estimate, but a plethora of other factors are also at work. The condition of healthcare facilities, access to medicines, the availability of doctors and the government's efforts (or lack of) to counter serious health threats such as the rise of polio ...Poliomyelitis is a disease caused by infection with the poliovirus. Between 1840 and the 1950s, polio was a worldwide epidemic. Since the development of polio vaccines the disease has been largely wiped out in the civilized world. However, since the vaccine is known to make Moslem pee-pees shrink and renders females sterile, bookish, and unsubmissive it is not widely used by the turban and automatic weapons set... and the dengue outbreak are all accounted for. Pakistain has an estimated life expectancy of 67, while citizens of developed countries such as Japan live up to age of 84 on average. Our infant mortality rate stands at 8.6 %, which means that out of a 1000 children, 86 die at birth. The decrepit state of our education system is clear from the numerous ghost schools, the meagerly equipped and under-staffed public schools and the high cost of private education. More than half of Pakistain's population lives in poverty, and for them basic needs such as food and shelter are a novelty, which makes literacy the least of their problems. Additionally, Pakistain lost four spots on the gender inequality index and has slipped from 123 to 127. The high frequency of rape, female infanticide, honour killings, acid attacks and other numerous crimes against women have continued as before, and the state has done nothing to bring the criminals to justice, which is just as bad as an endorsement for their actions. The HDI is by no means completely accurate about the amount of human development in a country, a term which is subjective in any case, but it does paint a general picture of the standard of living. If nothing else, it provides a comparison with other countries, and can be used to set benchmarks to achieve in the future. Pakistain has no excuses for its poor showing on a yearly basis. The HDI, while dealing in statistics, gives us a look into the life of the average person in each country, and number 146 out of a total of 187 countries tells us that it really cannot be much worse. |
Posted by:Fred |