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2007/2008 Report
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The latest global Report on the theme of climate change has been launched on 27 November 2007.

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Cuba

The Human Development Index - going beyond income

Each year since 1990 the Human Development Report has published the human development index (HDI) which looks beyond GDP to a broader definition of well-being. The HDI provides a composite measure of three dimensions of human development: living a long and healthy life (measured by life expectancy), being educated (measured by adult literacy and enrolment at the primary, secondary and tertiary level) and having a decent standard of living (measured by purchasing power parity, PPP, income). The index is not in any sense a comprehensive measure of human development. It does not, for example, include important indicators such as gender or income inequality and more difficult to measure indicators like respect for human rights and political freedoms. What it does provide is a broadened prism for viewing human progress and the complex relationship between income and well-being.

The HDI for Cuba is 0.838, which gives the country a rank of 51st out of 177 countries with data (Table 1).

Table 1: Cuba’s human development index 2005
HDI value Life expectancy at birth
(years)
Adult literacy rate
(% ages 15 and older)
Combined primary, secondary and tertiary gross enrolment ratio
(%)
GDP per capita
(PPP US$)
1. Iceland (0.968) 1. Japan (82.3) 1. Georgia (100.0) 1. Australia (113.0) 1. Luxembourg (60,228)
49. Bahamas (0.845) 30. Denmark (77.9) 2. Cuba (99.8) 33. Belarus (88.7) 92. Fiji (6,049)
50. Seychelles (0.843) 31. United States (77.9) 3. Estonia (99.8) 34. Germany (88.0) 93. Peru (6,039)
51. Cuba (0.838) 32. Cuba (77.7) 4. Latvia (99.7) 35. Cuba (87.6) 94. Cuba (6,000)
52. Mexico (0.829) 33. Portugal (77.7) 5. Slovenia (99.7) 36. Brazil (87.5) 95. Cape Verde (5,803)
53. Bulgaria (0.824) 34. Slovenia (77.4) 6. Lithuania (99.6) 37. Singapore (87.3) 96. Lebanon (5,584)
177. Sierra Leone (0.336) 177. Zambia (40.5) 139. Burkina Faso (23.6) 172. Niger (22.7) 174. Malawi (667)

Human poverty in Cuba: focusing on the most deprived in multiple dimensions of poverty

The HDI measures the average progress of a country in human development. The Human Poverty Index for developing countries (HPI-1), focuses on the proportion of people below a threshold level in the same dimensions of human development as the human development index - living a long and healthy life, having access to education, and a decent standard of living. By looking beyond income deprivation, the HPI-1 represents a multi-dimensional alternative to the $1 a day (PPP US$) poverty measure.

The HPI-1 value of 4.7 for Cuba, ranks 6th among 108 developing countries for which the index has been calculated.

The HPI-1 measures severe deprivation in health by the proportion of people who are not expected to survive age 40. Education is measured by the adult illiteracy rate. And a decent standard of living is measured by the unweighted average of people without access to an improved water source and the proportion of children under age 5 who are underweight for their age. Table 2 shows the values for these variables for Cuba and compares them to other countries.


Table 2: Selected indicators of human poverty for Cuba
Human Poverty Index
(HPI-1)
2004
Probability of not surviving past age 40
(%)
2004
People without access to an improved water source
(%)
2004
Children underweight for age
(% ages 0-5)
2004
1. Chad (56.9) 1. Zimbabwe (57.4) 1. Ethiopia (78) 1. Nepal (48)
101. Saint Lucia (6.5) 136. Hungary (3.4) 85. Brazil (10) 117. Kazakhstan (4)
102. Singapore (5.2) 137. Poland (3.2) 86. Nepal (10) 118. Moldova (4)
103. Cuba (4.7) 138. Cuba (3.1) 87. Cuba (9) 119. Cuba (4)
104. Costa Rica (4.4) 139. Slovakia (3.0) 88. Pakistan (9) 120. Argentina (4)
105. Argentina (4.1) 140. Portugal (3.0) 89. Trinidad and Tobago (9) 121. Armenia (4)
108. Barbados (3.0) 173. Iceland (1.4) 125. Hungary (1) 134. Chile (1)

Building the capabilities of women

The HDI measures average achievements in a country, but it does not incorporate the degree of gender imbalance in these achievements. The gender-related development index (GDI), introduced in Human Development Report 1995, measures achievements in the same dimensions using the same indicators as the HDI but captures inequalities in achievement between women and men. It is simply the HDI adjusted downward for gender inequality. The greater the gender disparity in basic human development, the lower is a country's GDI relative to its HDI.

Cuba's GDI value, 0.839 should be compared to its HDI value of 0.838. Its GDI value is 100.1% of its HDI value. Out of the 156 countries with both HDI and GDI values, one country has a better ratio than Cuba's.

Table 3 shows how Cuba’s ratio of GDI to HDI compares to other countries, and also shows its values for selected underlying values in the calculation of the GDI.

Table 3: The GDI compared to the HDI – a measure of gender disparity
GDI as % of HDI Life expectancy at birth
(years)
2004
Adult literacy rate
(% ages 15 and older)
2004
Combined primary, secondary and tertiary gross enrolment ratio
2004

Female as % male Female as % male Female as % male
1. Maldives (100.4%) 1. Russian Federation (123.1%) 1. Lesotho (122.5%) 1. United Arab Emirates (126.0%)
2. Cuba (100.2%) 140. Viet Nam (105.3%) 33. Uzbekistan (100.0%) 18. Slovenia (110.6%)
3. Sweden (99.9%) 141. Yemen (105.2%) 34. Estonia (100.0%) 19. Jamaica (110.2%)
4. Romania (99.9%) 142. Cuba (105.2%) 35. Cuba (100.0%) 20. Cuba (110.2%)
5. Lithuania (99.9%) 143. Saint Lucia (105.2%) 36. Slovenia (99.9%) 21. Russian Federation (110.2%)
6. Kenya (99.9%) 144. Ethiopia (105.2%) 37. Latvia (99.9%) 22. United States (109.9%)
156. Yemen (92.7%) 194. Niger (96.9%) 152. Afghanistan (29.2%) 194. Afghanistan (55.3%)

The gender empowerment measure (GEM) reveals whether women take an active part in economic and political life. It tracks the share of seats in parliament held by women; of female legislators, senior officials and managers; and of female professional and technical workers- and the gender disparity in earned income, reflecting economic independence. Differing from the GDI, the GEM exposes inequality in opportunities in selected areas.

Cuba ranks 26th out of 93 countries in the GEM, with a value of 0.661.

Fighting climate change

As a result of past emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases (GHGs), the world is now on course for future climate change. This year’s Human Development Report identifies 2ºC as the threshold above which irreversible and dangerous climate change will become unavoidable. It also explains why we have less than a decade to change course and start living within a sustainable global carbon budget identified at 14.5 gigatonnes of CO2 (Gt CO2) per annum for the remainder of the 21st Century. Currently, emissions are running at twice this level. If these trends continue, the carbon budget will be set for expiry during the 2030's, setting in motion processes that can lead to temperature increases of 5ºC or above by the end of this century---roughly similar to temperature changes since the last ice age 10,000 years ago.

With 0.2% of the world's population, Cuba accounts for 0.1% of global emissions - an average of 2.3 tonnes of CO2 per person. These emission levels are below those of Latin America and the Caribbean (table 4). If all countries in the world were to emit CO2 at levels similar to Cuba's, we would exceed our sustainable carbon budget by approximately 3%.

High-income OECD countries meanwhile lead the league of "CO2 transgressors". With just 15% of the world’s population, they account for almost half of all emissions. If the entire world emitted like High-income OECD countries -an average of 13.2 tonnes of CO2 per person, we would be emitting 6 times our sustainable carbon budget.

Cuba has signed and ratified the Kyoto Protocol. As a non-Annex I Party to the Protocol, Cuba is not bound by specific targets for greenhouse gas emissions.

Table 4: Carbon dioxide emissions

Total emissions
(MtCO2)
CO2 emissions annual change
(%)
CO2 emissions share of world total
(%)
Population share
(%)
CO2 emissions per capita
(tCO2)
CO2 emitters 1990 2004 1990-2004 1990 2004 2004 1990 2004
United States 4,818.3 6,045.8 1.8 21.2 20.9 4.6 19.3 20.6
China 2,398.9 5,007.1 7.8 10.6 17.3 20.2 2.1 3.8
Russian Federation 1,984.1 1,524.1 -1.9 8.8 5.3 2.2 13.4 10.6
Mexico 413.3 437.8 0.4 1.8 1.5 1.6 5.0 4.2
Brazil 209.5 331.6 4.2 0.9 1.1 2.9 1.4 1.8
Trinidad and Tobago 16.9 32.5 6.6 0.1 0.1 0.0 13.9 24.9
Cuba 32.0 25.8 -1.4 0.1 0.1 0.2 3.0 2.3
Paraguay 2.3 4.2 6.1 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.5 0.7
Bahamas 1.9 2.0 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 7.6 6.7
Haiti 1.0 1.8 5.5 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.2
Global aggregates
High-income OECD 10,055.4 12,137.5 1.5 44.3 41.9 14.3 12.0 13.2
Latin America and the Caribbean 1,087.7 1,422.6 2.2 4.8 4.9 8.5 2.5 2.6
Low human development 77.6 161.7 7.7 0.3 0.6 7.8 0.3 0.3
World 22,702.5 28,982.7 2.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 4.3 4.5

Cuba was mentioned in the Report in pages 21, 183, and 184.