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The political economy of development
This academic site promotes excellence in teaching and researching economics and development, and the advancing of describing, understanding, explaining and theorizing.
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World indicators on the environmentWorld Energy Statistics - Time SeriesEconomic inequality


 Introduction

 Income Poverty

Social Indicators:

Health: life expectancy, infant and maternal mortality, malnutrition

Health status and health care services for the poor

Health: the problem of AIDS

Education

Water and sanitation

  What the Poor Say


Social Indicators

Social indicators have generally been improving over the last three decades, and improve as incomes increase. Nevertheless, there are worrisome exceptions. Life expectancy has actually declined in the first few years of the transition in the FSU countries, albeit the decline appears to have been reversed in most countries; and it is declining in the African countries hardest hit by the AIDS epidemics (for example Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe). Sub-Saharan Africa also experienced declines in enrollment rates between 1980 and 1996.

On current trends neither the infant mortality target (of a two-thirds decline by 2015) nor the primary education target (of full enrollment by 2015) set for the International Development Goals will be achieved.

It is important to note that, while the International Development Goals on health and education refer to country-wide averages, health and educational outcomes vary considerably by economic status. The mortality rates of the poor are systematically higher than the average and enrollment rates systematically lower. So efforts to improve literacy or reduce mortality may have to concentrate where they are most needed, namely among the poor.

Next: Health: life expectancy, infant and maternal mortality, malnutrition