UNDP HDR
United Nations Development Program (UNDP): Human Development Report
United Nations Development Program publishes a widely circulated annual report, namely the Human Development Report, which contains indicator tables for 191 UN member countries along with Hong Kong, SAR (China) and Occupied Palestinian Territories. These countries and areas are classified in four ways: by human development level, by income, in major world aggregates and by region. All countries included in the HDI are classified into three clusters by achievement in human development: high human development (with an HDI of 0.800 or above), medium human development (0.500–0.799) and low human development (less than 0.500). It is an annual publication that is normally launched in June or July and also available online at www.undp.org.
The HDI (human development index) is a composite index that measures a country's average achievements in three basic areas of human development: longevity, knowledge, and a decent standard of living. Longevity is measured by life expectancy at birth; knowledge is measured by a combination of the adult literacy rate and the combined primary, secondary, and tertiary gross enrolment ratio; and standard of living by GDP per capita (PPP US$).
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Instructions for importing data from the HDR
This document explains the process undertaken to update four series in the Human Development series.The UNHDR reports are done annually but 2012 data is found in 2013 reports. The HDI series data came from one report (2015 report) and the rest were put together from various reports as explained below.
Series investigated for updates
Gender empowerment measures of the UNDP-SeriesGEM: A composite index measuring loss in achievements in three dimensions of human development—reproductive health, empowerment, and labour market, due to inequality between genders. For details on how the index is calculated, see UN HDR Technical note 4.
Gender Inequality Index -SeriesGenIneqInd- Calculated from male and female gender indices which themselves are estimated across health, education, labor force participation and political power
Gini index of income inequality (lower = more equal)-SeriesGiniExtended: WDI World Bank, Klaus Deininger 202-473-0430 and Lyu Squire 202-473-6099; plus WDI CD 2002 for 1997-2000; plus WD 2002; plus UNDP HDR 2005; WDI 2008; WDI 2011
Human Development Index, UNDP, Revised 2012-SeriesHDI
HDI, Inequality Adjusted, UNDP-SeriesHDIIneqAdj
Human poverty index (1) of the UNDP; higher is worse SeriesHPI1
Poverty multi-dimensional poverty index-SeriesPovMulDim: the Composite measure of the percentage of deprivations that the average person would experience if the deprivations of poor households were shared equally across the population, see UN HDR 2010 Technical note 3.
Life expectancy, UNDP HDRO, 2010: SeriesLifeExpectancyUNHDRO
Average year of education, 25 and above, Barro-Lee and UNDP HDRO estimation: SeriesEdYearsAge25UNHDRO
This document explains the process undertaken to update four series in the Human Development series.
Data obtained from http://hdr.undp.org/en
The UNHDR reports are done annually but 2012 data is found in 2013 reports. The HDI series data came from one report (2015 report) and the rest were put together from various reports as explained below.
Operations carried out:
The Gender empowerment measure of the UNDP: the GEM does not have current data since the Gender Inequality Index (GII) has taken over as the main empowerment index.
GII was updated up to 2014(HDR 2014 Statistical Tables: Table 4 and 2013 report)
Multidimensional Poverty Index:
Table 6 2015 statistical tables and 2015 table 7
6 A 2014 Statistical tables and 2014 Table 6
Data was gathered from four tables then sorted (sorting sheet). A merged table was then created (Importing file).
Human Development Index
Due to the changes in calculations that occurred in 2010, the new series contains data from 2015 HDR report (2015 Statistical Tables Annex 2).
Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index
Data came from 2015 Statistical Tables: Table 3, 2014(Table 3 for 2013 data). Data also came from HDR report of 2013 in the annex tables for 2012 data.
This section explains the process undertaken to update the UNDP education Series and the addition of two new series.
The Sources of data for the UNDP Education update.
Data obtained from http://hdr.undp.org/en/data-theme/education
http://hdr.undp.org/en/content/mean-years-schooling-males-aged-25-years-and-above-years
http://hdr.undp.org/en/content/mean-years-schooling-females-aged-25-years-and-above-years
http://hdr.undp.org/en/content/mean-years-schooling-adults-years
The original source: Barro and Lee (2013), UNESCO Institute for Statistics (2013b) and HDRO estimates based on data on educational attainment from UNESCO Institute for Statistics (2013b) and on methodology from Barro and Lee (2013). The education year’s data that we collect from Barro and Lee are quinquennial. For their HDR, UNDP calculates annual values (starting from 2010).
Current IFs table goes up to 2011. UNDP has data going to 2013 now. Updated the series: EDYearsAge25UNHDRO, and added two new series: EDYearsFemaleAge25UNDRO and EDYearsMaleAge25UNHDRO