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News ID: 106710
Publish Date : 09 September 2022 - 21:54

UN: Human Progress Retreats to 2016 Levels by COVID, Other Crises

NEW YORK (Al- Jazeera) - Back-to-back global crises have set back human development by five years, a new report by a United Nations agency has warned.
The UN Development Programme (UNDP) said on Thursday that, for the first time since its creation in 1990, the Human Development Index (HDI) has declined for two consecutive years straight in 2020 and 2021 amid crises such as COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine – HDI being a measure of countries’ life expectancies, education levels and standards of living.
“What we see is an unprecedented decline,” the UNDP’s Ulrika Modeer said.
“The world has definitely seen such challenges before. We have seen pandemics, wars, affecting more than one country actually the entire world. But what has happened now and what is represented in the report is an uncertainty complex,” she said. “So many of these challenges happening at the same time”.
HDI has steadily risen for decades, but began sliding in 2020 and continued its fall last year, erasing the gains of the preceding five years, the paper said.
The UNDP said nine out of 10 countries recorded a decline in their HDI score in either 2020 or 2021 and more than 40 percent declined in both years, with the lives of people in South Sudan, Chad and Niger declining the most.
“If you look at the countries at the bottom of this list, there’s one common factor – and that is conflicts,” said Hiba Morgan, who has extensively covered events in some of these countries.
“There is another factor that is common amongst those three countries that are on the bottom of the list and that is the impact of climate change. We’ve seen South Sudan facing floods for three consecutive years that has led to the displacement of tens of thousands of people that has submerged dozens of villages in various states around the country.”
“The world is scrambling to respond to back-to-back crises. We have seen with the cost of living and energy crises that, while it is tempting to focus on quick fixes like subsidizing fossil fuels, immediate relief tactics are delaying the long-term systemic changes we must make,” Achim Steiner, UNDP administrator, said.
“We are collectively paralyzed in making these changes. In a world defined by uncertainty, we need a renewed sense of global solidarity to tackle our interconnected, common challenges.”
The coronavirus pandemic was a major driver of the decline, but the report noted a compounding number of crises – political, financial and climate-related – have not allowed time for populations to recover.
While some countries had begun to recover from the pandemic, many others in Latin America, Africa, South Asia and the Caribbean had not yet turned the corner before a new crisis hit: the war in Ukraine.
While the fallout from Russia-Ukraine war on food and energy security has not yet been calculated into this year’s index, “without any doubt, the outlook for 2022 is grim”, Steiner said.
A large contributor to the HDI’s decline is a global drop in life expectancy – down from 73 years in 2019 to 71.4 years in 2021.