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Topic 4.8Economics SL30 flashcards

Measuring development

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Card 1 of 304.8.1
Question

What is GDP per capita and why is it used to measure development?

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Card 1definition
Question

What is GDP per capita and why is it used to measure development?

Answer

GDP per capita is the total GDP divided by the population. It gives an average income per person, indicating the material standard of living. Higher GDP/capita generally correlates with better access to goods and services.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Total output รท population = average income.

Card 2concept
Question

What is the main limitation of single indicators?

Answer

Development is multidimensional โ€” no single indicator can capture all aspects. GDP/capita misses health and education; life expectancy misses income; literacy misses health. Each gives only a partial picture.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Development is too complex for one number.

Card 3concept
Question

What health indicators are used to measure development?

Answer

Life expectancy at birth, infant/child mortality rate, maternal mortality rate, access to clean water and sanitation, physicians per 1,000 people, and prevalence of infectious diseases.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Life expectancy, infant mortality, clean water access.

Card 4concept
Question

What education indicators are used to measure development?

Answer

Adult literacy rate, mean years of schooling, expected years of schooling, school enrollment rates (primary, secondary, tertiary), and pupil-to-teacher ratios.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Literacy, years of schooling, enrollment.

Card 5comparison
Question

What is GNI per capita and how does it differ from GDP per capita?

Answer

GNI per capita includes income earned by citizens abroad and excludes income earned domestically by foreigners. For countries with large worker remittances or foreign-owned industries, GNI gives a more accurate picture of citizens' living standards.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

GNI = GDP + net income from abroad.

Card 6concept
Question

Why do averages (like GDP per capita) hide important information?

Answer

Averages mask inequality. A country with $10,000 GDP/capita could have a few billionaires and millions in poverty. The Gini coefficient or income distribution data is needed to see how wealth is actually shared.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Average of $100 could mean $1 and $199.

Card 7concept
Question

Why is life expectancy considered a good indicator of development?

Answer

It reflects access to healthcare, nutrition, clean water, sanitation, and a safe environment. Higher life expectancy indicates that basic human needs are being met. It captures both economic and social dimensions.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Reflects healthcare, nutrition, and safety.

Card 8concept
Question

Why should GDP/GNI be measured in PPP (purchasing power parity)?

Answer

PPP adjusts for differences in the cost of living between countries. $1 buys much more in India than in Switzerland. PPP figures give a more meaningful comparison of real purchasing power and living standards across countries.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Adjusts for different price levels between countries.

Card 9concept
Question

What does the informal economy have to do with measuring development?

Answer

In developing countries, a large share of economic activity (subsistence farming, street trading, domestic work) is informal and unreported. This means GDP figures understate true economic activity and development levels.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Unrecorded activity makes GDP too low.

Card 10concept
Question

What are the limitations of using GDP per capita to measure development?

Answer

It is an average (hides inequality), ignores non-market activity (subsistence farming, unpaid care), excludes environmental costs, does not reflect quality of life, health, education, or freedom, and can be distorted by underground economies.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Average hides inequality; ignores quality of life.

Card 11concept
Question

Why is data quality a problem when measuring development?

Answer

Many developing countries lack the statistical capacity to collect reliable data. Census data may be old, health records incomplete, and economic activity underreported. Poor data leads to misleading comparisons.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Bad data โ†’ bad conclusions.

Card 12concept
Question

What does a high infant mortality rate indicate about a country?

Answer

It suggests poor healthcare systems, limited access to clean water and nutrition, low levels of maternal education, and poverty. It is one of the strongest indicators of low development and is highly correlated with other social indicators.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Poor healthcare, nutrition, and sanitation.

Card 13concept
Question

Why is education important for development?

Answer

Education builds human capital, increases productivity, improves health outcomes (educated mothers have healthier children), empowers women, and drives innovation and economic growth. It is both a cause and result of development.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Human capital โ†’ productivity โ†’ growth โ†’ development.

Card 14example
Question

Why might a country have high GDP per capita but low development?

Answer

Oil-rich states (e.g. Equatorial Guinea) can have high GDP/capita due to resource exports, but wealth is concentrated among elites. Most citizens lack quality healthcare, education, and political freedoms โ€” high income but low development.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Resource wealth doesn't always reach the people.

Card 15concept
Question

Why do economists prefer composite indicators for measuring development?

Answer

Composite indicators combine multiple dimensions (income, health, education) into one measure, giving a more holistic picture than any single indicator. The HDI is the most widely used example.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Multiple dimensions โ†’ fuller picture.

4.8.215 cards

Card 16definition
Question

What is the Human Development Index (HDI)?

Answer

A composite index created by the UNDP that measures development across three dimensions: health (life expectancy), education (mean and expected years of schooling), and income (GNI per capita in PPP). Scored 0โ€“1.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Health + education + income โ†’ score 0 to 1.

Card 17concept
Question

What are the strengths of the HDI?

Answer

More comprehensive than GDP alone (includes health and education); easy to understand and compare; published annually by UNDP; shifts focus from pure economic growth to human well-being; and uses PPP for fairer income comparison.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Broader than GDP, comparable, focuses on people.

Card 18definition
Question

What is the Gender Inequality Index (GII)?

Answer

A UNDP composite indicator measuring gender inequality across three dimensions: reproductive health, empowerment (education, political representation), and the labour market. Scored 0 (equality) to 1 (maximum inequality).

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Measures gender gaps in health, power, and work.

Card 19concept
Question

What are the three components of the HDI?

Answer

1) Health: life expectancy at birth. 2) Education: mean years of schooling (adults) + expected years of schooling (children). 3) Standard of living: GNI per capita at PPP. Each is converted to an index (0โ€“1) and the geometric mean is calculated.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Life expectancy + schooling + GNI per capita (PPP).

Card 20definition
Question

What is the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI)?

Answer

A composite indicator that measures poverty beyond income, examining deprivations in health (nutrition, child mortality), education (years of schooling, enrollment), and living standards (water, sanitation, electricity, housing). A person is MPI-poor if deprived in โ‰ฅ1/3 of weighted indicators.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Poverty in health + education + living conditions.

Card 21concept
Question

What does the HDI fail to measure?

Answer

Inequality within countries, political freedom, environmental sustainability, gender equality, happiness, safety/security, and cultural factors. It gives a national average that masks internal disparities.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Misses inequality, freedom, environment, gender.

Card 22definition
Question

What is the Happy Planet Index (HPI)?

Answer

An alternative index measuring how efficiently countries convert resources into well-being. It combines experienced well-being, life expectancy, and ecological footprint. Countries can score high by having good lives with low environmental impact.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Happiness + long life รท environmental damage.

Card 23concept
Question

Why is the HDI criticised for using only three dimensions?

Answer

Development encompasses far more than health, education, and income. By excluding governance, inequality, environmental quality, and human rights, the HDI provides an incomplete and potentially misleading picture of true well-being.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Only three dimensions โ€” too narrow for complex reality.

Card 24concept
Question

How are countries classified by HDI?

Answer

Very high (โ‰ฅ0.800), high (0.700โ€“0.799), medium (0.550โ€“0.699), low (<0.550). Norway, Switzerland, and Iceland typically rank highest; sub-Saharan African countries often rank lowest.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Four categories: very high, high, medium, low.

Card 25concept
Question

Why does the HDI use GNI per capita rather than GDP per capita?

Answer

GNI includes income earned by citizens abroad (remittances, investment returns). For many developing countries where workers migrate and send money home, GNI better reflects the actual income available to citizens.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

GNI counts what citizens earn, not just domestic output.

Card 26concept
Question

Why is using multiple indicators better than relying on just one?

Answer

Each indicator captures different dimensions. Used together, they reveal a more complete picture โ€” e.g., a country might rank high on HDI but poorly on GII (gender inequality) or MPI (poverty pockets). Multiple measures expose hidden problems.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Different angles โ†’ more complete picture.

Card 27concept
Question

How does the HDI handle inequality?

Answer

The standard HDI does not. However, the UNDP also publishes the Inequality-adjusted HDI (IHDI), which discounts each dimension for inequality. Countries with high inequality see a significant drop from HDI to IHDI.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Standard HDI ignores it; IHDI adjusts for it.

Card 28concept
Question

What is a common limitation of all composite indicators?

Answer

They involve subjective choices: which dimensions to include, how to weight them, and what data sources to use. Different weighting produces different rankings. All composites simplify a complex reality into a single number.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Subjective choices in what to measure and how to weight.

Card 29concept
Question

Despite limitations, why is the HDI still considered useful?

Answer

It provides a simple, comparable measure that goes beyond income; it forces policymakers to consider health and education alongside growth; and it is widely understood and referenced in development debates and IB Economics.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Simple, forces broader thinking, widely used.

Card 30example
Question

Can a country have a high GDP per capita but a low HDI?

Answer

Yes โ€” if income is concentrated and not invested in health and education. For example, an oil-rich country might have high GDP/capita but poor healthcare and education systems, resulting in a lower HDI score.

๐Ÿ’ก Hint

Money doesn't always reach health and education.

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