Misplaced Pages

Developed country: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively
← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 10:01, 29 December 2008 edit211.179.112.158 (talk) Undid revision 260647439 by Pds0101 (talk)← Previous edit Revision as of 10:03, 29 December 2008 edit undo211.179.112.158 (talk) World Bank high-income economiesNext edit →
Line 229: Line 229:
| • {{flag|Austria}} || • {{flag|Denmark}} || • {{flag|Ireland}} || • {{flag|New Caledonia}} || • {{flag|Sweden}} | • {{flag|Austria}} || • {{flag|Denmark}} || • {{flag|Ireland}} || • {{flag|New Caledonia}} || • {{flag|Sweden}}
|- |-
| • {{flag|Bahamas, The}} || • {{flag|Estonia}} || • {{flag|Isle of Man}} || • {{flag|New Zealand}} || • {{flag|Switzerland}} | • {{flag|The Bahamas}} || • {{flag|Estonia}} || • {{flag|Isle of Man}} || • {{flag|New Zealand}} || • {{flag|Switzerland}}
|- |-
| • {{flag|Bahrain}} || • {{flag|Faroe Islands}} || • {{flag|Israel}} || • {{flag|Northern Mariana Islands}} || • {{flag|United Arab Emirates}} | • {{flag|Bahrain}} || • {{flag|Faroe Islands}} || • {{flag|Israel}} || • {{flag|Northern Mariana Islands}} || • {{flag|United Arab Emirates}}

Revision as of 10:03, 29 December 2008

The term developed country, or advanced country, is used to categorize countries that have achieved a high level of industrialization in which the tertiary and quaternary sectors of industry dominate. Countries not fitting this definition may be referred to as developing countries.

This level of economic development usually translates into a high income per capita and a high Human Development Index (HDI). Countries with high gross domestic product (GDP) per capita often fit the above description of a developed economy. However, anomalies exist when determining "developed" status by the factor GDP per capita alone.

Synonyms

Modern terms synonymous with the term developed country or advanced country include industrialized country, more developed country (MDC), more economically developed country (MEDC), Global North country, first world country, and post-industrial country. The term industrialized country may be somewhat ambiguous, as industrialization is an ongoing process that is hard to define. The term MEDC is one used by modern geographers to specifically describe the status of the countries referred to: more economically developed. The first industrialised country was England, followed by Germany, France, the remainder of the United Kingdom and other Western European countries. According to economists such as Jeffrey Sachs, however, the current divide between the developed and developing world is largely a phenomenon of the 20 century.

Definition

Traditionally, Canada and the United States in North America, Japan in Asia, Australia and New Zealand in Oceania, and most countries in Northern Europe and Western Europe have been considered "developed countries".

Additionally, the original East Asian Tiger countries —Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea— along with Cyprus, Israel, Malta and Slovenia, are now considered to be at or near to fully developed status.

Hong Kong is a Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China, a developing country; however, it is a separate economic entity with its own currency and customs controls, and is recognized as developed. Taiwan has limited diplomatic recognition and is claimed by the People's Republic of China; however it functions as a de facto independent state, and is also recognized as developed.

In the old international reports, the countries of Eastern Europe (including Slovenia which still belongs to "Eastern Europe Group" in the UN institutions) as well as the former Soviet Union (U.S.S.R.) countries (including those in Asia) and Mongolia, were not included under either developed or developing regions, but rather were referred to as "countries in transition"; however they are now widely regarded as "developing countries" (except for Slovenia, see above).

Human Development Index

World map showing the Human Development Index as presented by the United Nations in 2007.
Main articles: Human Development Index and List of countries by Human Development Index

The UN HDI is a statistical measure that gauges a country's level of human development. While there is a strong correlation between having a high HDI score and a prosperous economy, the UN points out that the HDI accounts for more than income or productivity. Unlike GDP per capita or per capita income, the HDI takes into account how income is turned "into education and health opportunities and therefore into higher levels of human development." A few examples are Italy and the United States. Despite a relatively large difference in GDP per capita, both countries rank roughly equal in term of overall human development. Since 1980, Norway (2001-2006), Japan (1990-91 and 1993), Canada (1992 and 1994-2000) and Iceland (2007-08) have had the highest HDI score. Countries with a score of over 0.800 are considered to have a "high" standard of human development. The top 30 countries have scores ranging from 0.912 in Cyprus to 0.968 in Iceland. Several small countries, such as Andorra, Liechtenstein and Macau were not reviewed by the United Nations. Thus, these countries have not received an official HDI score.

Many countries listed by IMF or CIA as "advanced" (as of 2008), possess an HDI over 0.9 (as of 2006). Many countries possessing an HDI of 0.9 and over (as of 2004), are also listed by IMF or CIA as "advanced" (as of 2007). Thus, many "advanced economies" (as of 2008) are characterized by an HDI score of 0.9 or higher (as of 2006).

The latest index was released on December 18, 2008. This so-called "statistical update" covers the period up to 2006 and was published without an accompanying report on human development. The update is relevant due to newly released estimates of purchasing power parities (PPP), implying substantial adjustments for many countries, resulting in changes in HDI values and, in many cases, HDI ranks.

  1.  Iceland 0.968 (Steady)
  2.  Norway 0.968 (Steady)
  3.  Canada 0.967 (Increase 1)
  4.  Australia 0.965 (Decrease 1)
  5.  Ireland 0.960 (Steady)
  6.  Netherlands 0.958 (Increase 3)
  7.  Sweden 0.958 (Decrease 1)
  8.  Japan 0.956 (Steady)
  9.  Luxembourg 0.956 (Increase 9)
  10.  Switzerland 0.955 (Decrease 3)


  1.  France 0.955 (Decrease 1)
  2.  Finland 0.954 (Decrease 1)
  3.  Denmark 0.952 (Increase 1)
  4.  Austria 0.951 (Increase 1)
  5.  United States 0.950 (Decrease 3)
  6.  Spain 0.949 (Decrease 3)
  7.  Belgium 0.948 (Decrease 1)
  8.  Greece 0.947 (Increase 6)
  9.  Italy 0.945 (Increase 1)
  10.  New Zealand 0.944 (Decrease 1)


  1.  United Kingdom 0.942 (Decrease 4)
  2.  Hong Kong 0.942 (Decrease 1)
  3.  Germany 0.940 (Decrease 1)
  4.  Israel 0.930 (Decrease 1)
  5.  South Korea 0.928 (Increase 1)
  6.  Slovenia 0.923 (Increase 1)
  7.  Brunei 0.919 (Increase 3)
  8.  Singapore 0.918 (Decrease 3)
  9.  Kuwait 0.912 (Increase 4)
  10.  Cyprus 0.912 (Decrease 2)

Lists of prosperous economies

While there is no official guideline for which country may or may not be considered developed, different institutions have created certain categories for the economically most prosperous countries. The IMF identifies 32 "advanced economies", while the CIA identifies 34 "developed countries" and 35 "advanced economies". The World Bank identifies 66 "high income countries", which are classified either as developed or developing by the UN. The criteria used to create these lists differ across these organizations as does the placement of certain countries.

CIA developed country list

  Map of Developed Countries (DCs) as described by the CIA

The CIA World Factbook classifies 34 economic entities as "developed countries (DCs):"

the top group in the hierarchy of developed countries (DCs), former USSR/Eastern Europe (former USSR/EE), and less developed countries (LDCs); includes the market-oriented economies of the mainly democratic nations in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Bermuda, Israel, South Africa, and the European ministates; also known as the First World, high-income countries, the North, industrial countries; generally have a per capita GDP in excess of $10,000 although four OECD countries and South Africa have figures well under $10,000 and two of the excluded OPEC countries have figures of more than $10,000; the 34 DCs are: Andorra, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bermuda, Canada, Denmark, Faroe Islands, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Holy See, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, NZ, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, UK, US; note - similar to the new International Monetary Fund (IMF) term "advanced economies" that adds Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan but drops Malta, Mexico , South Africa, and Turkey.

 Andorra  Faroe Islands  Ireland  Monaco  Spain
 Australia  Finland  Israel  Netherlands  Sweden
 Austria  France  Italy  New Zealand   Switzerland
 Belgium  Germany  Japan  Norway  Turkey
 Bermuda  Greece  Liechtenstein  Portugal  United Kingdom
 Canada  Holy See  Luxembourg  San Marino  United States
 Denmark  Iceland  Malta  South Africa

CIA advanced economy list

The official classification of "advanced economies" was originally made by the IMF. The CIA intends to follow the IMF but also to add non-IMF members. Thus, until March 2001, the CIA list was more comprehensive than the IMF list. Since 2001, however, Cyprus, and more recently Slovenia and Malta, were added to the IMF list but not to the CIA advanced economy list. Below is the current CIA advanced economy list, consisting of 35 countries:

 Andorra  Faroe Islands  Iceland  Monaco  South Korea
 Australia  Finland  Ireland  Netherlands  Spain
 Austria  France  Israel  New Zealand  Sweden
 Belgium  Germany  Italy  Norway   Switzerland
 Bermuda  Greece  Japan  Portugal  Taiwan
 Canada  Holy See  Liechtenstein  San Marino  United Kingdom
 Denmark  Hong Kong  Luxembourg  Singapore  United States

IMF advanced economy list

  Countries described as Advanced Economies by the IMF.

According to the International Monetary Fund the following 32 countries are classified as "advanced economies:"

 Australia  Germany  Luxembourg  Slovenia
 Austria  Greece  Malta  South Korea
 Belgium  Hong Kong  Netherlands  Spain
 Canada  Iceland  New Zealand  Sweden
 Cyprus  Ireland  Norway   Switzerland
 Denmark  Israel  Portugal  Taiwan
 Finland  Italy  San Marino  United Kingdom
 France  Japan  Singapore  United States

World Bank high-income economies

Main article: High income economy
  High income   Upper-middle income   Lower-middle income   Low income

"High income economies" are defined by the World Bank as countries with a Gross National Income per capita of $11,456 or more. According to the United Nations definition some high income countries may also be developing countries. Thus, a high income country may be classified as either developed or developing.

According to the World Bank the following 61 countries and territories are classified as "high-income economies" which are not eligible for any lending programs:

 Andorra  Taiwan  Hong Kong  Monaco  Singapore
 Aruba  Cyprus  Hungary  Netherlands  Slovenia
 Australia  Czech Republic  Iceland  Netherlands Antilles  Spain
 Austria  Denmark  Ireland  New Caledonia  Sweden
 The Bahamas  Estonia  Isle of Man  New Zealand   Switzerland
 Bahrain  Faroe Islands  Israel  Northern Mariana Islands  United Arab Emirates
 Barbados  Finland  Italy  Norway  United Kingdom
 Belgium  France  Japan  Oman  United States
 Bermuda  French Polynesia  Kuwait  Portugal  Virgin Islands, U.S.
 Brunei  Germany  Liechtenstein  Puerto Rico
 Canada  Greece  Luxembourg  Qatar
 Cayman Islands  Greenland  Macau  San Marino
JerseyGuernsey Channel Islands  Guam  Malta  Saudi Arabia

A further five economies are classified as high-income but are eligible for lending programs:

Quality-of-life survey

Main article: Quality-of-life index

Research about standards of living and quality of life by the Economist Intelligence Unit resulted in a quality-of-life index. As of 2005, the 30 countries with the highest index are:

  1. Republic of Ireland Ireland
  2. Switzerland Switzerland
  3. Norway Norway
  4. Luxembourg Luxembourg
  5. Sweden Sweden
  6. Australia Australia
  1. Iceland Iceland
  2. Italy Italy
  3. Denmark Denmark
  4. Spain Spain
  5. Singapore Singapore
  6. Finland Finland
  1. United States United States
  2. Canada Canada
  3. New Zealand New Zealand
  4. Netherlands Netherlands
  5. Japan Japan
  6. Hong Kong Hong Kong
  1. Portugal Portugal
  2. Austria Austria
  3. Taiwan Taiwan
  4. Greece Greece
  5. Cyprus Cyprus
  6. Belgium Belgium
  1. France France
  2. Germany Germany
  3. Slovenia Slovenia
  4. Malta Malta
  5. United Kingdom United Kingdom
  6. South Korea South Korea

Welfare states

Currently modern, expansive welfare states are still the exclusive domain and hallmark of the developed nations, commonly constituting at least 20% of GDP, with the largest Scandinavian welfare states constituting over 40% of GDP. Prominent sociologist Gosta Esping-Andersen states that the developed nations have developed a new kind of capitalism exclusive to them, which he dubbs "welfare capitalism." This type of capitalism seeks to ensure economic security, independence, stablity and opportunity by creating expansive public sectors that fuse public policy and market forces. According to Esping-Andersen, welfare state policies and economic forces are completely interwoven in these nations, with public policy shaping such basic market attributes as consumer demand, capital stock build-up, labor pariticipation rates, worker productivity and the extent and ramifications of the business cycle. These modern welfare states, which largely arose in the late 19 and early 20 centuries, seeing their greatest expansion in the mid 20 century, have proven themselves highly effective in reducing relative as well as absolute poverty in all high-income OECD countries.

Country Absolute poverty rate
(threshold set at 40% of U.S. median household income)
Relative poverty rate
Pre-transfer Post-transfer Pre-transfer Post-transfer
 Sweden 23.7 5.8 14.8 4.8
 Norway 9.2 1.7 12.4 4.0
 Netherlands 22.1 7.3 18.5 11.5
 Finland 11.9 3.7 12.4 3.1
 Denmark 26.4 5.9 17.4 4.8
 Germany 15.2 4.3 9.7 5.1
  Switzerland 12.5 3.8 10.9 9.1
 Canada 22.5 6.5 17.1 11.9
 France 36.1 9.8 21.8 6.1
 Belgium 26.8 6.0 19.5 4.1
 Australia 23.3 11.9 16.2 9.2
 United Kingdom 16.8 8.7 16.4 8.2
 United States 21.0 11.7 17.2 15.1
 Italy 30.7 14.3 19.7 9.1

Summary

Legend
CIA DCs CIA's The World Factbook, Developed countries CIA AE CIA's The World Factbook, Advanced economies
IMF AE International Monetary Fund, Advanced economies WB HIE NL World Bank, High-income economies not eligible for lending programs
HDI≥0.9 Human Development Index at or above 0.9 QoL≥7 Quality-of-life index at or above 7.0
Countries CIA DCs CIA AE IMF AE WB HIE NL HDI≥0.9 QoL≥7 All
 Australia YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Austria YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Belgium YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Canada YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Denmark YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Finland YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 France YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Germany YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Greece YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Iceland YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Ireland YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Italy YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Japan YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Luxembourg YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Netherlands YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 New Zealand YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Norway YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Portugal YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Spain YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 Sweden YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
  Switzerland YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 United States YES YES YES YES YES YES 6
 China, Republic of (Taiwan) NO YES YES YES YES YES 5
 Hong Kong NO YES YES YES YES YES 5
 Israel YES YES YES YES YES NO 5
 San Marino YES YES YES YES YES 5
 Singapore NO YES YES YES YES YES 5
 United Kingdom YES YES YES YES YES NO 5
 Andorra YES YES YES YES 4
 Cyprus NO NO YES YES YES YES 4
 Liechtenstein YES YES YES YES 4
 Monaco YES YES YES YES 4
 Bermuda YES YES YES 3
 Faroe Islands YES YES YES 3
 Korea, South NO YES YES NO YES NO 3
 Malta YES NO YES YES NO NO 3
 Slovenia NO NO YES YES YES NO 3
 Bahrain NO NO NO YES YES NO 2
 Brunei NO NO NO YES YES NO 2
 Greenland NO NO YES YES 2
 Holy See YES YES 2
 Kuwait NO NO NO YES YES NO 2
 Macau NO NO YES YES 2
 Puerto Rico NO NO YES YES 2
 United Arab Emirates NO NO NO YES YES NO 2
 Aruba NO NO NO YES 1
 Bahamas, The NO NO NO YES NO 1
 Barbados NO NO NO YES NO NO 1
 Cayman Islands NO NO YES 1
JerseyGuernsey Channel Islands NO NO YES 1
 Czech Republic NO NO NO YES NO NO 1
 Estonia NO NO NO YES NO NO 1
 French Polynesia NO NO YES 1
 Guam NO NO YES 1
 Hungary NO NO NO YES NO NO 1
 Isle of Man NO NO YES 1
 Netherlands Antilles NO NO YES 1
 New Caledonia NO NO YES 1
 Northern Mariana Islands NO NO YES 1
 Oman NO NO NO YES NO NO 1
 Qatar NO NO NO YES NO NO 1
 Saudi Arabia NO NO NO YES NO NO 1
 South Africa YES NO NO NO NO NO 1
 Turkey YES NO NO NO NO NO 1
 Virgin Islands, U.S. NO NO YES 1

See also

References

  1. Sachs, Jeffrey (2005). The End of Poverty. The Penguin Press. ISBN 1-59420-045-9. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); Unknown parameter |tlocation= ignored (help)
  2. http://www.businesspme.com/uk/articles/economics/78/East-Asian-Tigers-.html
  3. "UN. (2006). Human Development Report". Retrieved 2007-07-07.
  4. "UN. (2008). Human Development Index: A Statistical Update". Retrieved 2008-12-22.
  5. The official classification of "advanced countries" is originally made by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The IMF list doesn't deal with non-IMF members. The CIA intends to follow IMF list but adds few countries which aren't dealt with by IMF due to their not being IMF members. By May 2001, the advanced country list of the CIA was more comprehensive than the original IMF list. However, since May 2001, three additional countries (Cyprus, Malta and Slovenia) have been added to the original IMF list, thus leaving the CIA list not updated.
  6. Namely sovereign states, i.e. excluding Macau: In 2003 the government of Macau calculated its HDI as being 0.909 (the UN does not calculate Macau's HDI); In January 2007, the People's Daily reported (from China Modernization Report 2007): "In 2004...Macau...had reached the level of developed countries". However, Macau is not recognized by any international organisation as a developed/advanced territory, while the UNCTAD organisaion (of the UN), as well as the CIA, classify Macao as a "developing" territory. The World Bank classifies Macau as a high income economy (along with developed economies as well as with few developing economies).
  7. ^ IMF Advanced Economies List. World Economic Outlook, Database—WEO Groups and Aggregates Information, October 2008.
  8. ^ CIA (2008). "Appendix B. International Organizations and Groups. [[World Factbook]]". Retrieved 2008-04-10. {{cite web}}: URL–wikilink conflict (help)
  9. Mexico actually appears in neither list. Many authorities have classified Mexico as a newly industrialized country (see e.g., p. 164, Globalization and the Transformation of Foreign Economic Policy, Paweł Bożyk, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2006, ISBN 0-75-464638-6, or p. 126, The Limits of Convergence, Mauro F. Guillén, Princeton University Press, 2001, ISBN 0691057052.)
  10. World Economic Outlook, International Monetary Fund, October 2008, second paragraph, line 9-10.
  11. ^ "World Bank, Country Classification". Retrieved 2008-10-12.
  12. "UN. (2005). UNCTAD Handbook of Statistics" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-07-09.
  13. ^ World Bank - Country Groups. Accessed on October 12, 2008.
  14. ^ Country classification table, World Bank. Accessed on line December 22, 2008.
  15. The world in 2005: The Economist Intelligence Unit's quality-of-life index, The Economist. Accessed on line January 8, 2007.
  16. ^ Esping-Andersen, G. (1990). The three worlds of welfare capitalism. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  17. Barr, N. (2004). The economics of the welfare state. New York: Oxford University Press (USA).
  18. ^ Kenworthy, L. (1999). Do social-welfare policies reduce poverty? A cross-national assessment. Social Forces, 77(3), 1119-1139.
  19. ^ Bradley, D., Huber, E., Moller, S., Nielson, F. & Stephens, J. D. (2003). Determinants of relative poverty in advanced capitalist democracies. American Sociological Review, 68(3), 22-51.
  20. Smeeding, T. (2005). Public policy, economic inequality, and poverty: The United States in comparative perspective. Social Science Quarterly, 86, 955-983.
  21. Indicator Tables HDI 2008, United Nations Development Programme, December 18, 2008. Some entities are not included in this report. In this case an HDI figure from the UN's last available report has been used, except in the cases of the Republic of China (Taiwan) and Macau, which the UN has not calculated an HDI for; here, the figure of the entities' governments has been used.

External links

Economic classification of countries
Three/Four-World Model
Gross domestic product (GDP)
Nominal
Purchasing
power parity
(PPP)
Gross national income (GNI)
Wages
Wealth
Other national accounts
Human development
Digital divide
Net international
investment position
(NIIP)
Power in international relations
Types
Status
Geopolitics
History
Theory
Studies
Organizations and groups by region
Africa
Africa–Asia
Americas
Asia
Europe
Eurasia
North America–Europe
Africa–Asia–Europe
Africa–South America
Oceania–Pacific
Non–regional
Global

Template:Lists of countries

Categories:
Developed country: Difference between revisions Add topic