The story every year with the Human Development
Report of the United Nations Development Programme is that it attracts
notice for a short while, only to be forgotten quickly. This will be the
case in 2003 as well. The global ranking of countries according to their
human development index (HDI), which is, in many ways, the centrepiece
of the UNDP Report, has shown that India had slipped three places in 2001.
Since India's position has been steadily rising in the HDI list since
1990, the decline this year was the source of some embarrassment. It was
a reminder that India's development story today is not only about the
accumulation of $ 80 billion of foreign exchange reserves, of booming
information technology and of new growth areas such as business process
outsourcing. It is a reminder also about low life expectancy, high adult
illiteracy and discrimination in schooling of girls and boys in India.
But we will be disappointed if we expect the 2003 Report to provoke some
soul-searching that would result in a serious public debate of human development
issues.
The brief and passing notice of the HDI rankings every year encapsulates,
in many ways, the larger story of the very limited place the human development
approach has come to occupy in national and international development
policy. This is the story not just in India but in most countries. This
may be an odd statement to make given the considerable notice the HDI
and the HDR receive every year. The UNDP Report now enjoys a far greater
standing in the international community than the World Bank's much older
annual World Development Report. Yet, for all the attention that the HDR
gets and in spite of all the national and regional HDRs that are prepared
in the world every year, the human development approach is still to make
a concrete impact on development policy. A good example can be found at
home. In recent years, much of the debate within the Government and outside
has been only about how to accelerate growth of the Indian economy to
8 or 9 per cent a year, even as the basic social indicators in education
and health are showing signs of regression.
There are three broad reasons for the failure of the human development
approach to evolve into much more than an instrument in the hands of critics
of the economic growth paradigm.
The first is that the human development approach has become a victim of
the success of the HDI. When the first set of HDIs was prepared in 1990,
it addressed a widespread unease with the use of per capita gross domestic
product (GDP) as the sole yardstick to measure a nation's progress. A
single monetary measure of development, as contained in GDP per capita
or its equivalent, does not distinguish between commodities and services
of differing value to society. As Mahbub ul Haq, the Pakistani economist
who was the driving force behind the publication of the HDR, once famously
wrote, "any measure that values a gun several hundred times more
than a bottle of milk is bound to raise serious questions about its relevance
for human progress." The HDI, a single composite measure of income
and basic education and health standards, was the first serious attempt
to assess development differently. The simplicity of the HDI, the transparency
with which it was prepared and the reams of statistics on a number of
economic and social indicators that accompanied the HDI lists ensured
the global acceptability of the new index. However, the popularity of
the HDI has not been translated into making the human development approach
the centre of policy. With so much of the UNDP Report focussed on the
HDI and its measurement, the country rankings have become more important
than the processes that lead to where each country stands on the global
list. There is a need, as some have said, to rescue the human development
approach from the HDI.
The second reason is that the human development approach has been equated
with only progress in education and health. The idea of human development
has a long history, but as elaborated more recently in the work of Amartya
Sen it is about enlarging the choices people have to lead useful lives.
What is called the "capabilities approach" is difficult to concretise.
Therefore, in the first instance it has been interpreted to mean the ability
to live a healthy and productive life. Hence, the importance given to
health and education in the UNDP discussions on human development and
to their inclusion in the HDI. But human development is also about people's
participation, both as an instrument for enlarging people's choices and
as an end in itself. But the identification of human development with
education and health has meant that its larger and more holistic nature
is lost sight of. It becomes correspondingly more easy to incorporate
a few stray elements of human development (i.e. education and health)
into national economic programmes, or at least suggest that they have
been addressed.
The third and most important reason for the failure of the human development
approach to move out of global, national and regional reports is the inability
to integrate economic growth policies into this alternative perspective.
The UNDP-variant of the human development approach took some time to shake
off the criticism that it was "anti-economic growth". Such misplaced
criticism was inevitable since initially the emphasis was on showing that
a higher GDP per capita was not an end in itself but only the means. The
early HDRs repeatedly drew attention to country experiences, which illustrated
that there was no one-to-one correspondence between per capita GDP and
human development levels. Sri Lanka and at that time China enjoyed reasonably
high levels of human development even at low levels of per capita income.
At the other end, there was Saudi Arabia where incomes were high but human
development relatively low. Important as it was to draw attention to these
contrasting experiences, they were wrongly interpreted to mean that economies
could manage with low per capita incomes. The HDR later therefore had
to argue that while human development need not await the generation of
high per capita incomes, economic growth was needed to sustain human development.
It now goes to some length to stress that economic growth is important
- both for instrumental reasons and as a goal in itself. The 2003 edition,
for instance, points out that there is a two-way relationship between
human development and economic growth, which can be a virtuous or vicious
circle. Investments in human development feed into faster growth, and
a more rapid growth leads to higher levels of human development.
But all this still leaves unanswered the question, what kind of economic
growth facilitates human development? The response used to be that what
is required is broad-based, labour intensive and participatory growth.
This, however, is devoid of policy content.
Increasingly, the talk is of using globalisation for human development,
to correct the rules of global trade to drive economic growth or even
for "adjustment with a human face". These are suggestive of
incorporating human development concerns into conventional economic growth
strategies. But the human development perspective is the larger. Therefore,
economic strategies should be suitably tailored and incorporated into
the human development approach that facilitates the expansion of capabilities,
not the other way round. It is not surprising then that while international
organisations such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund,
and national governments all now talk of human development, they do so
in a very limited sense. For them, it only means highlighting the need
to address education, health, housing, water, sanitation and other "social"
concerns. This is neither new nor exceptional. Nor does it reflect a departure
from the conventional emphasis on economic growth. "Human development
issues" thus formulated can and have been accommodated within conventional
economic policies without altering the underlying premises of a "growth
first" approach.
It is perhaps too early to expect the idea of human development to be
translated into effective and coherent policy programmes that would replace
"economic growth first" approaches. While it has been 13 years
since the first HDR report was published, this is a short period in a
battle of ideas. The human development approach has succeeded in pointing
out the inherent flaws in policies that emphasise only GDP growth. It
has also become a valuable tool to highlight failures in the social sector.
But if the human development approach is to lead anywhere in the formulation
of alternative policy perspectives, its advocates - in academics, in civil
society and in international organisations - have to look at taking it
further than refinement of the human development index.
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