UN's "Top Places to Live"
UN's "Top Places to Live"
So this year's rankings were released....
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u ... ries_col_1
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Norway, Sweden, Australia, Canada and the Netherlands ranked as the best five countries to live in but Africa's quality of life plummeted because of AIDS (news - web sites), said a U.N. report released on Thursday.
The United States was ranked in eighth place, a drop of one position from 2003 in the report that rates not only per-capita income but also educational levels, health care and life expectancy in measuring a nation's well-being.
The Human Development Index, prepared by the U.N. Development Program, is issued annually and includes every country for which statistics are available.
Iraq (news - web sites), Afghanistan (news - web sites), North Korea (news - web sites), and Liberia (news - web sites) were among nations not included because of lack of data.
Norway has led the list for the past four years.
Aside from the overall index, the report produces indicators on women's equality, income inequality and consumption, poverty and other categories that countries use to measure development. In Canada, for example, the index has been used in advertisements to attract business.
The industrialized nations as usual were in the top 20, their ratings close to one another. Belgium was in sixth place, followed by Iceland, the United States, Japan, Ireland, Switzerland, Britain, Finland, Austria, Luxembourg, France, Denmark, New Zealand, Germany and Spain.
At the bottom of the list for the seventh year was Sierra Leone, emerging from a decade of civil war. Right above it were Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali and Burundi.
The world's newest nation, East Timor (news - web sites), was included for the first time and ranked 158th out of 177 countries.
In Africa, the AIDS crisis reduced the average life expectancy in many countries to 40 years or less, making it the biggest factor in the decline of overall human development indicators, the report said. In comparison, the average life expectancy in Norway was 79 years.
At least 20 nations suffered development reversals since 1990, 13 of them in Africa: Angola, Central African Republic, Lesotho, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe, the report said.
"The AIDS crisis cripples states at all levels because the disease attacks people in their most productive years," said Mark Malloch Brown, head of U.N. Development Program.
In Latin American and Caribbean nations, Barbados again headed the list, in 29th place. Argentina ranked 34th, Chile, 43; Costa Rica, 45; Uruguay, 46; Bahamas, 51; Cuba, 52; Mexico, 53; Venezuela, 68. Surprisingly, Brazil dropped to 72nd place, one above Colombia, compared to last year when it ranked 65th.
In Asia, Hong Kong was in 23rd place and Singapore in 25th, South Korea (news - web sites) in 28th, Thailand, 76; Philippines, 83; China, 94; India 127; Bangladesh 138 and Pakistan 142.
In the Middle East, Israel led the list in 22nd place, followed by Cyprus in 30th place, Bahrain, 40; Kuwait, 44; Qatar, 47; United Arab Emirates, 49; Libya, 58; Oman 74; Saudi Arabia, 77; Lebanon, 80; Jordan, 90; Tunisia, 92; Palestinian territories 102; Syria, 106; Algeria, 108; Egypt, 120; Morocco, 125 and Yemen, 149.
The 285-page report can be found on the Web at http://hdr.undp.org.
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u ... ries_col_1
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Norway, Sweden, Australia, Canada and the Netherlands ranked as the best five countries to live in but Africa's quality of life plummeted because of AIDS (news - web sites), said a U.N. report released on Thursday.
The United States was ranked in eighth place, a drop of one position from 2003 in the report that rates not only per-capita income but also educational levels, health care and life expectancy in measuring a nation's well-being.
The Human Development Index, prepared by the U.N. Development Program, is issued annually and includes every country for which statistics are available.
Iraq (news - web sites), Afghanistan (news - web sites), North Korea (news - web sites), and Liberia (news - web sites) were among nations not included because of lack of data.
Norway has led the list for the past four years.
Aside from the overall index, the report produces indicators on women's equality, income inequality and consumption, poverty and other categories that countries use to measure development. In Canada, for example, the index has been used in advertisements to attract business.
The industrialized nations as usual were in the top 20, their ratings close to one another. Belgium was in sixth place, followed by Iceland, the United States, Japan, Ireland, Switzerland, Britain, Finland, Austria, Luxembourg, France, Denmark, New Zealand, Germany and Spain.
At the bottom of the list for the seventh year was Sierra Leone, emerging from a decade of civil war. Right above it were Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali and Burundi.
The world's newest nation, East Timor (news - web sites), was included for the first time and ranked 158th out of 177 countries.
In Africa, the AIDS crisis reduced the average life expectancy in many countries to 40 years or less, making it the biggest factor in the decline of overall human development indicators, the report said. In comparison, the average life expectancy in Norway was 79 years.
At least 20 nations suffered development reversals since 1990, 13 of them in Africa: Angola, Central African Republic, Lesotho, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe, the report said.
"The AIDS crisis cripples states at all levels because the disease attacks people in their most productive years," said Mark Malloch Brown, head of U.N. Development Program.
In Latin American and Caribbean nations, Barbados again headed the list, in 29th place. Argentina ranked 34th, Chile, 43; Costa Rica, 45; Uruguay, 46; Bahamas, 51; Cuba, 52; Mexico, 53; Venezuela, 68. Surprisingly, Brazil dropped to 72nd place, one above Colombia, compared to last year when it ranked 65th.
In Asia, Hong Kong was in 23rd place and Singapore in 25th, South Korea (news - web sites) in 28th, Thailand, 76; Philippines, 83; China, 94; India 127; Bangladesh 138 and Pakistan 142.
In the Middle East, Israel led the list in 22nd place, followed by Cyprus in 30th place, Bahrain, 40; Kuwait, 44; Qatar, 47; United Arab Emirates, 49; Libya, 58; Oman 74; Saudi Arabia, 77; Lebanon, 80; Jordan, 90; Tunisia, 92; Palestinian territories 102; Syria, 106; Algeria, 108; Egypt, 120; Morocco, 125 and Yemen, 149.
The 285-page report can be found on the Web at http://hdr.undp.org.
I can't wait until the day schools are over-funded and the military is forced to hold bake sales to buy planes.
"It's a great thing when you realize you still have the ability to surprise yourself. Makes you wonder what else you can do that you've forgotten about"
"It's a great thing when you realize you still have the ability to surprise yourself. Makes you wonder what else you can do that you've forgotten about"
Here's a nice list from the site linked at the end of the article: http://hdr.undp.org/statistics/data/ind ... 2_1_1.html
Canada's #4! Woo!
Canada's #4! Woo!
I think they have the highest taxes in general.
I can't wait until the day schools are over-funded and the military is forced to hold bake sales to buy planes.
"It's a great thing when you realize you still have the ability to surprise yourself. Makes you wonder what else you can do that you've forgotten about"
"It's a great thing when you realize you still have the ability to surprise yourself. Makes you wonder what else you can do that you've forgotten about"
Right... because Norway, Sweden, Austrailia and Canada have tremendous amounts of enemies in the world eh? I'd rather have the best quality of life then be the sucker whose trying to protect the world.
I can't wait until the day schools are over-funded and the military is forced to hold bake sales to buy planes.
"It's a great thing when you realize you still have the ability to surprise yourself. Makes you wonder what else you can do that you've forgotten about"
"It's a great thing when you realize you still have the ability to surprise yourself. Makes you wonder what else you can do that you've forgotten about"
Right, and those countries would know peace and prosperity just as well if nobody chose to stop Nazi Germany or Socialist Russia. Its easy to say, "look we don't need to fight" when somebody else does it for you. Just ask France.
Of course you won't have enemies when you let somebody else do your dirty work for you.
Of course you won't have enemies when you let somebody else do your dirty work for you.
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- starseed_10
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Pointless? Or preventing more World Wars?
Let's face it. If the US didn't have the largest military, somebody else would. For the MOST part, the US uses it to ensure sovereignty around the World. That's not so bad compared to what others COULD be doing with it. There are several nations that would be up a creek if it weren't for the US flexing its muscles at their opponents.
Let's face it. If the US didn't have the largest military, somebody else would. For the MOST part, the US uses it to ensure sovereignty around the World. That's not so bad compared to what others COULD be doing with it. There are several nations that would be up a creek if it weren't for the US flexing its muscles at their opponents.
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- lemonphile4
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If you got your head out of your ass and into a world history book, you'd realize that it wasn't the US's benevolence for the rest of the world that led to the downfall of Nazi Germany or Socialist USSR.Corey wrote:Right, and those countries would know peace and prosperity just as well if nobody chose to stop Nazi Germany or Socialist Russia.
The US actually sat back and watched what was happening for a few years. Eventually they gave support to Western Europe until the US was attacked at Pearl Harbor, and then they got involved. It was far from a "here comes the heroes to save the day" story, and the US was definitely not the only one getting rid of Nazis.
In the case of the USSR, the Cold War was a power struggle about which country is better, not a war to stop communism. The whole thing cost a lot of money and gave a generation of people nightmares about nuclear war. All we learned about it was that if you spend too much money making weapons and you've got a weak economy, your citizens are going to suffer and eventually you're not going to be a country.
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- lemonphile4
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Ahhh, Manifest Destiny, that brings me back to my AP US History class. Don't ever bring me back there again.
I faced death. I went in with my arms swinging. But I heard my own breath and had to face that I'm still living. I'm still flesh. I hold on to awful feelings. I'm not dead... My chest still draws breath. I hold it. I'm buoyant. There's no end.
- lemonphile4
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