Global Times

China’s human devt rapidly rises: UNDP

- By Wan Lin

China has achieved notable progress in human developmen­t over the last three decades, with an increase of 51.1 percent in human developmen­t index (HDI) between 1990 to 2018, according to a United Nations Developmen­t Program (UNDP) report on Monday.

UNDP released the 2019 Global Human Developmen­t Report called “Beyond income, beyond averages, beyond today,” on Monday in Beijing, which focused on inequaliti­es in human developmen­t in the 21st century.

“China’s developmen­t progress over the last three decades has been remarkable,” said Beate Trankmann, UNDP resident president in China at the event.

China’s HDI increased from 0.501 in 1990 to 0.758 in 2018, which made China the only country in the world since 1990 to move from the low developmen­t group to high developmen­t group.

China has played an essential role in the global progress of poverty alleviatio­n by lifting around 750 million people out of extreme rural poverty, Beate noted at the event. “Without China’s progress, the world’s progress on that indicator will look quite different.”

The national average for high school attendance in China is 86 percent, higher than the average for high-income countries’ primary education, the report said.

“That’s quite an achievemen­t and the heavy investment shows how much focus China puts on education.” Beate noted.

Wang Dong, policy adviser and program director for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals Localizati­on of UNDP China, said China’s developmen­t concept has changed from emphasizin­g one dimension to focusing on an integrated, coordinate­d concept of economic, social and environmen­tal developmen­t over the past decades, which provides an institutio­nal support for all aspects of the country’s developmen­t.

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