Sociology, asked by amansapkota7, 1 month ago

Calculate the HDI of a country that has 1,700 US $ PCI, 67 years life expectancy, and 4.7 and 15.7 MSY and ESY respectively. Derive the highest and lowest data from theve text for your convenience. Nepal's HDI is quite low. How can it be upgraded? Suggest any four measures. Explore and state any four reasons why HDI of countries such as Norway, Ireland and Switzerland is so high. used Activity e HDI score and ranking of the following nations with reference to any of the reliable so mention the name of the source at the end.

Answers

Answered by suhailahmed2650
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Introduction

The main premise of the human development approach is that expanding peoples’ freedoms is both the

main aim of, and the principal means for sustainable development. If inequalities in human development

persist and grow, the aspirations of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development will remain unfulfilled.

But there are no pre-ordained paths. Gaps are narrowing in key dimensions of human development, while

others are only now emerging. Policy choices determine inequality outcomes – as they do the evolution

and impact of climate change or the direction of technology, both of which will shape inequalities over the

next few decades. The future of inequalities in human development in the 21st century is, thus, in our hands.

But we cannot be complacent. The climate crisis shows that the price of inaction compounds over time as

it feeds further inequality, which, in turn, makes action more difficult. We are approaching a precipice

beyond which it will be difficult to recover. While we do have a choice, we must exercise it now.

Inequalities in human development hurt societies and weaken social cohesion and people’s trust in

government, institutions and each other. They hurt economies, wastefully preventing people from reaching

their full potential at work and in life. They make it harder for political decisions to reflect the aspirations of

the whole society and to protect our planet, as the few pulling ahead flex their power to shape decisions

primarily in their interests. Inequalities in human development are a defining bottleneck in achieving the

2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Inequalities in human development are not just about disparities in income and wealth. The 2019 Human

Development Report (HDR) explores inequalities in human development by going beyond income, beyond

averages, and beyond today. The proposed approach sets policies to redress these inequalities within a

framework that links the formation of capabilities with the broader context in which markets and

governments function.

Policies matter for inequalities. And inequalities matter for policies. The human development lens is central

to approaching inequality and asking why it matters, how it manifests itself and how best to tackle it.

Imbalances in economic power are eventually translated into political dominance. And that, in turn, can lead

to greater inequality and environmental disasters. Action at the start of this chain is far easier than relying

on interventions farther down the track. The 2019 HDR contributes to that debate by presenting the facts

on inequalities in human development and proposing ideas to act on them over the course of the 21st

century.

This briefing note is organized into seven sections. The first section presents information on the country

coverage and methodology for the 2019 Human Development Report. The next five sections provide

information about key composite indices of human development: the Human Development Index (HDI), the

Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index (IHDI), the Gender Development Index (GDI), the Gender

Inequality Index (GII), and the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI). The final section covers five

dashboards: quality of human development, life-course gender gap, women’s empowerment,

environmental sustainability, and socioeconomic sustainability.

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