English, asked by Harshawardhaku7883, 1 year ago

Only the per capita income cannot reflect the true state of economic development. Why?

Answers

Answered by Jasleenkmehta14
9

Per capita income, which is defined as the income per head of a country's population, is not the foolproof measure to observe economic development.

Economic development is more about the welfare of public than just income.

Per capita income doesn't reflect the actual standard of living of the common people. It doesn't count the level of healthcare, education and such essential infrastructure facilities enjoyed by the people, which are essential benchmarks for development.

It also doesn't account the income distribution. A country with a few rich and many poor could still have a high per capita income.

Age Factor is also avoided in per capita income, for instance, in a country with a very young or very old population, per cap income may not be exactly accurate, because neither the children nor the elderly people contribute to national income.

Development is a wide concept, and apart from income, it must evaluate the socioeconomic conditions of the ordinary citizens of the country. Therefore, per capita income alone fails to be a truly reliable measure of development.

Answered by narutosasukeluffy765
1

Answer:

Explanation:

because some people of country may have very high income which may show increase in per capita income but actually the poor may have remain same.

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