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Pakistan among bottom 5 on income, wellbeing ranking

third eye

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Another survey..

From what is written below it appears the basics are in place. Stability & good governance is the missing link
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Pakistan among bottom 5 on income, wellbeing ranking | Newspaper | DAWN.COM

KARACHI: An index that measures prosperity as a function of both income and wellbeing for 110 countries around the world has placed Pakistan fourth from the bottom, below Sudan and Yemen.

At 107, Pakistan is ahead of only Ethiopia, Zimbabwe and the Central African Republic. In the Asia-Pacific region, it is ranked last out of 22 nations.

London-based research organisation Legatum Institute released on Tuesday the 2011 Legatum Prosperity Index, in which countries are ranked in eight areas before being given an overall prosperity rank.

Nordic countries dominate the overall rankings, with Norway and Denmark bagging the top two spots and Sweden and Finland also appearing in the top 10. Others in that group include Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland, the Netherlands and, lastly, the United States

Pakistan is listed at 86 for Entrepreneurship & Opportunity, 96 for both Economy and Health, 98 for Governance, 100 for Social Capital, 104 for Personal Freedom, 105 for Education and 109 for Safety & Security. In this last category it is preceded by Colombia and followed only by Sudan.

The numbers for Social Capital and Personal Freedom may provide some cause for scepticism. As the report itself admits, Pakistan has relatively strong social networks, and at times these have functioned as private social welfare nets. And the Personal Freedom score seems low compared to some other countries listed above Pakistan, such as Saudi Arabia, China and Syria.

. Some of the reasons listed for Pakistan’s poor performance include an unstable economy with uncertain growth prospects, limited access to technology, income inequality, lack of competition and accountability in the political system, limited spending on public health, low school enrolment rates and poor quality of education, political violence, demographic pressures, and limitations on civil liberties.

There are few bright spots in the Pakistan analysis, but the report does claim that start-up costs for new businesses are moderate in the global context, that Pakistan has relatively strong family and religious networks and a moderate level of social cohesion, and that despite poor social and economic indicators, two-thirds of Pakistanis, or about the global average, say they are satisfied with their standard of living. The statistics used to arrive at these rankings include both objective data such as inflation, life expectancy, pupil-to-teacher ratios, and crime, marriage and emigration rates, and subjective input such as opinion surveys, particularly the Gallup World Poll, and expert evaluations.

Pakistan’s performance on many of these statistics paints a bleak picture. The country ranks 85th for citizens’ ability to afford food and shelter, 105th for political stability and 103rd for infant mortality (7 per cent). Per-capita spending on healthcare is the 10th lowest in the world and Pakistan has the 11th highest rate of emigration of intellectuals, professionals, political dissidents and members of the middle class.

But Social Capital measures are positive; about half of Pakistanis surveyed had donated to charity, for example, and the country is ranked 24th in terms of people volunteering their time for an organisation.

On the composite rankings, however, Pakistan’s performance is considerably worse than on others that have a narrower focus, including GDP per capita, Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Index and the United Nations Development Programmes’ Human Development Index.

India dropped 13 places to number 91, more than any other country except for Nicaragua. Its ranking was affected by such factors as high business start-up costs, income inequality, low school enrolment, poor healthcare, and political violence, displacement and crime.

China beat the US economically but has an overall rank of 52, dragged down by low performance on Personal Freedom and on Safety & Security, including state-sponsored violence and repression against specific groups.

The report also offers a number of international comparisons: sub-Saharan Africans are relatively optimistic about entrepreneurial opportunities but are held back by poor infrastructure; Turkey may look like a role model for Arab Spring countries but Indonesia and Malaysia provide better models of economic growth; a comparison of EU member states reveals vast gaps between richer and poorer states on a number of economic and social dimensions and thus points to the failures of European integration; and countries in the Americans perform better on income than on life satisfaction, while in Asia Pacific the reverse is true.

The richest countries are not necessarily the happiest, with Norway outranking Germany, Canada outranking the US and China lagging far behind Singapore. And according to this broader measure, despite the 2008 financial crisis, the majority of countries in the world have become more prosperous rather than less over the last two years.
 
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China beat the US economically but has an overall rank of 52, dragged down by low performance on Personal Freedom and on Safety & Security, including state-sponsored violence and repression against specific groups.

52 is not bad, better than I thought.

India dropped 13 places to number 91, more than any other country except for Nicaragua. Its ranking was affected by such factors as high business start-up costs, income inequality, low school enrolment, poor healthcare, and political violence, displacement and crime.

How did India drop so far in such a short amount of time?
 
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Malaysia's economic model is better than indonesia. However, malaysia could be even better if they removed the special treatment they give to the malays.
 
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Bhoomiputra is essential to the upliftment of Malays. Otherwise those cockroach chinese will infect and consume their whole economy and civilization.
 
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Malaysia's economic model is better than indonesia. However, malaysia could be even better if they removed the special treatment they give to the malays.

Agreed. It would be best to follow the Singapore economic model.

The special treatment was a deal agreed by the Malays and the minorities during independence. At that time most of the Malays were poor and minorities were still foreign citizens, so the deal was, we give the non-Malays citizenship providing they agree to a economy plan which helps uplift the Malays.

Currently though, I feel those times have past, now it's time to create an economy package that will help poor Malaysians of all races.

Bhoomiputra is essential to the upliftment of Malays. Otherwise those cockroach chinese will infect and consume their whole economy and civilization.

"Cockroach Chinese" have done quite well with Singapore. I rather entrust them with handling the economy than some dumb corrupt politicians.
 
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Bhoomiputra is essential to the upliftment of Malays. Otherwise those cockroach chinese will infect and consume their whole economy and civilization.

Bhoomiputra has been in place for so long, yet the malays couldnt uplift themselves?? The government feeds them and the malays continue to take this for granted. Look at singapore, they do not have any discriminatory rules, thus they are able to progress. Furthermore, if the "cockroach chinese" werent in malaysia, malaysia wouldnt be economically strong
 
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Bhoomiputra has been in place for so long, yet the malays couldnt uplift themselves?? The government feeds them and the malays continue to take this for granted. Look at singapore, they do not have any discriminatory rules, thus they are able to progress. Furthermore, if the "cockroach chinese" werent in malaysia, malaysia wouldnt be economically strong

I would appreciate if you didn't generalize.

The current government uses this "Bumiputra rights" thing as a political tool, spreading fears among citizens that if the Opposition (a Chinese majority party) comes to power, Bumiputra rights will be abolished and Malays will be back to poor.

The irony is the Bumiputra rights is helping no one but the elite politicians. For me, the time has come for it to be abolished.

And yes, the Chinese have done a lot to help our economy. I'm very grateful to them for that.

I hope in the near future, we can create a system where all Malaysians are judge not by race and color, but by merit and character.
 
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Pakistan needs to get out of the war on terror first, then get rid of the corrupt Politicians and high taxes will be needed.
 
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I would appreciate if you didn't generalize.

The current government uses this "Bumiputra rights" thing as a political tool, spreading fears among citizens that if the Opposition (a Chinese majority party) comes to power, Bumiputra rights will be abolished and Malays will be back to poor.

The irony is the Bumiputra rights is helping no one but the elite politicians. For me, the time has come for it to be abolished.

And yes, the Chinese have done a lot to help our economy. I'm very grateful to them for that.

I hope in the near future, we can create a system where all Malaysians are judge not by race and color, but by merit and character.

Well im sorry for generalising bro:frown: . I agree with you that political parties are using bhumiputra model for vote bank politics.

---------- Post added at 12:08 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:06 PM ----------

Pakistan needs to get out of the war on terror first, then get rid of the corrupt Politicians and high taxes will be needed.

Even though this idea may be used for a nobel cause, this decision will cause the party in power to get kicked out of government in south asian politics
 
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91 is nothing to be proud of ... considering all nations after 100 are islands

even island on Lost was better
 
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