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<div class="gmail_quote">From: <b class="gmail_sendername">HDR Announcements</b> <span dir="ltr"><a href="mailto:announcements@hdrdistribution.org">announcements@hdrdistribution.org</a></span><br><br><img width="1" height="1"> <img width="1" height="1">
<div style="FONT: 10px Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; COLOR: #696969" align="left"><font color="#3333ff">A MUST READ, I THINK.</font></div>
<div style="FONT: 10px Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; COLOR: #696969" align="left"><font color="#3333ff">CLAUDIO</font></div>
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<p>Related coverage of the HDI in the New York Times Magazine</p>
<h3>The Rise and Fall of the G.D.P.</h3>
<p><b>10 May 2010</b></p>
<p>So far only one measure has succeeded in challenging the hegemony of growth-centric thinking. This is known as the <a href="http://e2ma.net/go/6678281643/208198029/212694239/36353/goto:http://hdr.undp.org/en/" target="_blank">Human Development Index</a>, which <a href="http://e2ma.net/go/6678281643/208198029/212694240/36353/goto:http://hdr.undp.org/en/" target="_blank">turns 20 this year</a>. The H.D.I. is a ranking that incorporates a nation’s G.D.P. and two other modifying factors: its citizens’ education, based on adult literacy and school-enrollment data, and its citizens’ health, based on life-expectancy statistics. The H.D.I., which happens to be used by the United Nations, has plenty of critics. For example, its three-part weightings are frequently criticized for being arbitrary; another problem is that minor variations in the literacy rates of developed nations, for example, can yield significant differences in how countries rank.</p>
<p>One economist who helped create the Human Development Index was Amartya Sen, a Nobel laureate in economics who teaches at Harvard. When I met with Sen on a recent evening in New York, he suggested that if I wanted to place the recent arguments about G.D.P., progress and economic growth into a historical context, I should really take a minute to hear why and how the Human Development Index came together.</p>
<p><a href="http://e2ma.net/go/6678281643/208198029/212694241/36353/goto:http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/16/magazine/16GDP-t.html?emc=eta1" target="_blank">Read More</a></p><br></td></tr>
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