Many countries are bouncing back from the COVID-19 pandemic, but the poorest are not and a significant number are seeing their conditions deteriorate, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) said on Wednesday.
After two decades during which rich and poor countries were coming closer in terms of development, the finding is “a very strong warning signal” that nations are now drifting apart, UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner said.
The Human Development Index that the agency has produced since 1990 is projected to reach record highs last year after steep declines during the COVID-19 pandemic years of 2020 and 2021.
However, development in half of the world’s poorest countries remains below 2019 pre-pandemic levels, the report said.
“It’s a rich person’s versus a poor person’s world in which we are seeing development unfolding in very unequal, partially incomplete ways,” Steiner told a news conference. “Why does this matter? Not only because it creates more vulnerability, it creates also more misery and protracted poverty, growing inequality.”
The growing inequalities are compounded by the concentration of economic wealth, the report said.
It said that almost 40 percent of global trade in goods was concentrated in three or fewer countries, and that the stock market value of the three largest tech companies in 2021 — Amazon, Apple and Microsoft — surpassed the GDP of more than 90 percent of the 193 UN member nations that year.
Nations should be joining forces to focus on major threats in the 21st century, especially climate change, the next pandemic and the emergence of a digital economy and artificial intelligence; instead, there is increasing division and growing frustration and polarization, he said.
A significant response has been the emergence of populism, which is anti-elite and hostile to international cooperation, Steiner said.
That “is increasingly dividing societies, radicalizing the political discourse, and essentially turning more and more people against each other,” he said.
Advancing global collective action to tackle the world’s major challenges is hindered by an emerging “democracy paradox” — 90 percent of people worldwide endorse democracy, but for the first time more than half the respondents in a global survey expressed support for leaders that risk undermining the foundations of democracy, the report said.
Territorial conflicts would continue to crop up, but the threats to human security in the 21st century would more often require being able to collaborate, Steiner said.
The report calls for more spending on global public goods that benefit all people, including to stabilize climate and the planet, to harness new technologies to improve human development, and to improve the global financial system to benefit low-income countries.
The agency’s Human Development Index measures key issues for a long and healthy life, for gaining knowledge and for achieving a decent standard of living.
Based on the latest figures from 2022, the 10 places with the highest human development scores were Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Hong Kong, Denmark, Sweden, Germany and Ireland tied for seventh, Singapore, and Australia and the Netherlands tied for 10th place.
The 10 countries with the lowest human development were Sierra Leone, Burkina Faso, Yemen, Burundi, Mali, Chad, Niger, Central African Republic, South Sudan and Somalia. All but Yemen are in Africa.
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