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Wednesday, 24 July, 2002, 17:14 GMT 18:14 UK
Norway 'best place to live'
Oslo harbour
Norway wins on income and education
For the second year running, Norway has been named as the best place in the world to live, according to an annual report from the United Nations.

Norway was followed by Sweden, Canada, Belgium, Australia and the US - but the bottom of the chart is dominated by African countries.


Have you spent winter in Norway, with the cold and darkness?

Olav Kjoerven
Norway's Deputy Foreign Minister

Sierra Leone was placed last, and the bottom 24 countries are all in Africa.

The UN's Human Development Report, ranks 173 countries for their quality of life, using indicators such as life expectancy and income per person.

In Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union - as well the 24 lowest-ranking African nations - people were poorer and died sooner than at the end of the Cold War, the report said.

The poor performance went hand-in-hand with a relapse in many places to authoritarian rule or conflict.

This was especially true in sub-Saharan Africa, where the report says that one in four countries saw the military intervene in politics.

"Around the world, there is a growing sense that democracy has not delivered development such as more jobs, schools, health care for ordinary people," said Sakiko Fukuda-Parr, the UN report's chief author.

Tanzania classroom
Despite its low income Tanzania is doing well on schooling

But the report argues that moving toward democracy actually makes for more stable societies - rebutting an argument made by China, Pakistan and other countries that a slower shift to democracy is necessary to maintain order.

"History and academic research provide no evidence that authoritarian regimes are better at promoting economic and social progress," the report's author said.

In addition, democratic countries are far less likely to go to war against each other, the report says.

Translating wealth to benefits

Although wealthy countries ranked high on the index, the report stressed that per capita income alone did not translate into quality of life.

Pakistan and Vietnam had similar incomes but Vietnam was far better at using that income to provide improved health care and education, the report said.

Guatemala had more than seven times the national income of Tanzania, but is falling way behind the African nation on schooling for girls.

Russia, in 60th place, and Bulgaria, in 62nd, scored well in the education category, but fell down in their failure to curb infant mortality.

Norway's Deputy Foreign Minister Olav Kjoerven expressed satisfaction that his country had come out on top again.

But he joked that it may have been a very different story if climate had been a factor.

"Have you spent winter in Norway, with the cold and darkness?" he said.


Top 15 countries:

HDI rank 2002
Life expectancy (years) Infant mortality (per 1,000 live births) GDP per capita ($) Adult literacy (%)
1 Norway 78.5 4 29,918 99%*
2 Sweden 79.7 3 24,277 99%*
3 Canada 78.8 6 27,840 99%*
4 Belgium 78.4 6 27,178 99%*
5 Australia 78.9 6 25,693 99%*
6 United States 77 7 34,142 99%*
7 Iceland 79.2 4 29,581 99%*
8 Netherlands 78.1 5 25,657 99%*
9 Japan 81 4 26,755 99%*
10 Finland 77.6 4 24,996 99%*
11 Switzerland 78.9 3 28,789 99%*
12 France 78.6 4 24,223 99%*
13 UK 77.7 4 23,509 99%*
14 Denmark 76.2 6 27,627 99%*
15 Austria 78.1 4 26,765 99%*

* For Human Development Index a value of 99% was applied

Bottom 15 countries:

HDI rank 2002 Life expectancy (years) Infant mortality (per 1,000 live births) GDP per capita ($) Adult literacy (%)
159 Guinea 47.5 112 1,982 41
160 Gambia 46.2 92 1,649 36.6
161 Angola 45.2 172 2,187 42
162 Rwanda 40.2 100 943 66.8
163 Malawi 40 117 615 60.1
164 Mali 51.5 142 797 41.5
165 Central African Republic 44.3 115 1,172 46.7
166 Chad 45.7 118 871 42.6
167 Guinea Bissau 44.8 132 755 38.5
168 Ethiopia 43.9 117 668 39.1
169 Burkina Faso 46.7 105 976 23.9
170 Mozambique 39.3 126 854 44
171 Burundi 46.7 114 591 48
172 Niger 45.2 159 746 15.9
173 Sierra Leone 38.9 180 490 36


 WATCH/LISTEN
 ON THIS STORY
The BBC's Peter Biles
"The report says that many countries in East Asia have made striking progress"
The BBC's Lars Bevanger
"There's no dragging me back to London, even for cheap beer"

Talking PointTALKING POINT
Quality of life
Where is the best and worst place to live?
See also:

02 Jul 02 | Middle East
28 Jun 02 | Business
04 Sep 00 | Business
19 Mar 02 | Business
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