Just How ‘Socially Advanced’ Is the U.S.? You Might Be
Surprised
By Roisin Davis
Data from
the Social Progress Index 2015. (The
Social Progress Imperative)
April 10, 2015 "ICH"
- "Truthdig"
- Although the United States, in the words of columnist Nicholas Kristof, is
“the most powerful colossus in the history of the world,” it lags significantly
in quality of life for its citizens. In the
Social Progress Index 2015 the U.S. does not make the top 10, or even top
15. The global study measured “basic human needs,” “foundations of wellbeing”
and opportunity.
Overall, the U.S comes in at 16th, and some indices are
particularly startling.
As
Kristof writes in The New York Times: “The index ranks the United States
30th in life expectancy, 38th in saving children’s lives, and a humiliating 55th
in women surviving childbirth. O.K., we know that we have a high homicide rate,
but we’re at risk in other ways as well. We have higher traffic fatality rates
than 37 other countries, and higher suicide rates than 80. We also rank 32nd in
preventing early marriage, 38th in the equality of our education system, 49th in
high school enrollment rates and 87th in cellphone use.”
The top countries in the study are Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Iceland, New
Zealand and Canada. Of the 133 countries rated, Central African Republic comes
in last, right after Chad and Afghanistan.
“One way of looking at the index,” says Kristof, “is to learn
from countries that outperform by having social indicators better than their
income levels. By that standard, the biggest stars are Costa Rica and Uruguay,
with New Zealand and Rwanda also outperforming.”
In a time of ever-greater economic inequality, it’s worth
remembering that everything isn’t just dandy if some Americans are doing
extremely well. What counts is how we are doing as a people.
—Posted by
Roisin
Davis