U.S. ranks 27th in world social
progress; Africa in dire straits
FRANKFURT -- Denmark and Sweden lead the world in social progress,
Afghanistan is at the bottom of the list and the United States ranks 27th among
163 nations, according to the latest Index of Social Progress.
These "world social report" figures were released today by Richard Estes of
the University of Pennsylvania School of Social Work at the Fifth International
Conference of the International Society for Life Quality Studies. Addressing
social-development and quality-of-life specialists at the conference, Estes
said, "A handful of nations are doing very well, but many are struggling just to
meet basic needs. The last decade has seen a sharp deterioration in overall life
quality for vast segments of the world's population, especially for people
living in the poorest nations of Africa and Asia. Even people in previously
well-off countries are not doing as well today."
The nations comprising the top 10 are Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland,
Luxembourg, Germany, Austria, Iceland, Italy and Belgium, and the bottom 10 are
Afghanistan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Sierra Leone, Angola, Liberia, Niger, Guinea,
Chad and the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire).
In the U.S., Estes, who has researched world social development for 30 years,
found the pace of social development to be "on hold" since 1980, putting the
U.S. on the same level as Poland and Slovenia in the current "report card."
"Chronic poverty is the greatest threat to social progress in the United
States," Estes said. "More than 33 million Americans -- almost 12 million of
them children -- are poor." "Contrary to public perception," Estes said, "the
majority of poor in the United States are members of established family
households who work full-time and are white. No other economically advanced
country tolerates such a level of poverty."
Other challenges impeding American social progress include slow economic
growth, increasing unemployment, insecure access for many people to adequate
health care and deteriorating schools in many urban areas.
Estes identified 21 African and Asian countries nearing "social collapse" due
to concentrated poverty, weak political institutions, repeated economic failure,
disease and cultural isolation.
"These roadblocks to progress," he said, " are contributing to global social
unrest, including religious fundamentalism and terrorism. Rich countries ignore
the desperate plight of the world's poorest nations at our own risk."
Using data provided primarily by national governments to the United Nations
and the World Bank, Estes's study measures the ability of nations to meet the
needs of their residents for health, education, human rights, political
participation, population growth, improved women's status, cultural diversity
and freedom from "social chaos." Military spending and environmental protection
are also among the 40 factors used to tabulate his Weighted Index of Social
Progress.
Current social conditions, Estes said, are especially poor in Middle, West
and East Africa. "Not only are the conditions there the lowest in the world but
they are worse today than in 1990," he said, citing recurrent economic failure,
corrupt public administration, ethnic conflicts, protracted intra-regional wars
and the absence of viable civil institutions.
The most rapid social-development improvements are taking place in South
Central and Western Asia. Estes associated this with the emergence of democratic
institutions in the region's newly independent countries and the vast oil wealth
of Iran, Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Also contributing to the improvement in
Asia were significant reductions in military spending which allowed higher
investments in education and health and advancing the economic status of women.
But, Estes warned, "Asia's high population-growth rates, deep poverty,
tendencies toward extremism and political repression could undermine the
region's future social and economic development progress."
Estes contrasted recent development trends occurring in China and India, the
world's two population giants. "Social development in China," he said, "now
surpasses that of India, and the pace of social improvement in China is much
more rapid."
China moved from 73rd place in 1980 to 69th place, and India dropped 26 ranks
to 111th. Estes pointed to China's decade-long, double-digit rate of economic
growth, success in slowing population growth and the steady, if tentative,
emergence of certain types of "civil society" institutions as important
components of China's overall social development success, despite China's
"smothering political system."
Development trends in India reflect increased difficulty in managing social
conflict, health care, environmental degradation, weakening economic conditions
and further losses in the already low status of women.
"India's formula for development -- high military spending in combination
with pervasive poverty -- is one that predicts disaster," Estes said.
Estes characterized the pace of social progress in Latin America as
"lackluster, citing no change since 1970 in the social situation in most
Caribbean and Central American nations, where large segments of the people are
poor." In Europe, he said, "advances in social development remained at a virtual
standstill throughout much of the 1990s."
Sluggish economic growth, high unemployment, low fertility, rapid population
aging and expensive welfare arrangements are limiting the ability of many
European countries to compete in the new global economy, Estes said.
Estes will publish his full report later this year in a book, "At the
Crossroads: Development Challenges of the New Century" (Dordrecht: Kluwer
Academic Publishers).
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