TopMyGrade

GCSE/Geography/CCEA

U2.CW.1Measuring development: GDP, HDI, GNI per capita; classification (HIC, MIC, LIC, NIC)

Notes

Measuring development

"Development" refers to improvements in the standard of living, economic output, and human wellbeing of a country's population. CCEA examiners expect you to know and evaluate a range of development indicators, and to understand how countries are classified by development level.

Economic indicators

Gross Domestic Product (GDP): the total value of all goods and services produced in a country in one year.

  • Often expressed per capita (per person) to allow comparison between countries of different sizes.
  • GDP per capita (2023 data): USA ~$80,000; UK ~$47,000; China ~$13,000; India ~$2,500; Malawi ~$650.

Gross National Income (GNI) per capita: similar to GDP but also includes income earned abroad by nationals. Considered a more accurate measure than GDP for countries with many workers abroad (remittances).

Problems with GDP/GNI as indicators:

  • Do not measure distribution — a country can have high GDP per capita but extreme inequality (e.g. South Africa).
  • Do not reflect access to healthcare, education, or political freedom.
  • Do not account for sustainability or environmental costs.

The Human Development Index (HDI)

Developed by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in 1990, the HDI combines three dimensions:

  1. Health: life expectancy at birth.
  2. Education: mean years of schooling + expected years of schooling.
  3. Income: GNI per capita (purchasing power parity adjusted).

HDI scores range from 0 to 1:

  • Very High HDI (>0.8): Norway, Switzerland, Ireland (0.945), UK (0.929).
  • High HDI (0.7–0.8): China, Brazil, Mexico.
  • Medium HDI (0.55–0.7): India, Egypt, Bolivia.
  • Low HDI (<0.55): many Sub-Saharan African countries; Niger (0.394).

Why HDI is better than GDP alone: captures health and education outcomes, not just wealth. A country with high oil revenues (high GDP) but poor health and education may score low on HDI.

Other development indicators

IndicatorWhat it measuresLIC typical valueHIC typical value
Literacy rate% of adults who can read/write40-60%99%+
Infant mortality rateDeaths per 1,000 live births before age 150-803-5
Life expectancyAverage age at death55-65 years80-85 years
Doctors per 1,000 populationAccess to healthcare<0.53-5
Access to clean water% with safe water40-60%99%+
Female literacy rateGender equality indicatorOften much lower than maleEqual to male

Classification of countries

The World Bank classifies countries by GNI per capita:

  • High Income Country (HIC): >$13,846/year (e.g. UK, USA, Germany, Japan, UAE).
  • Upper Middle Income Country: $4,466–$13,845 (e.g. China, Brazil, South Africa, Mexico).
  • Lower Middle Income Country: $1,136–$4,465 (e.g. India, Nigeria, Egypt).
  • Low Income Country (LIC): <$1,136 (e.g. Ethiopia, Mozambique, Mali, Niger).

Newly Industrialised Countries (NICs): countries that have undergone rapid industrialisation in recent decades but are not yet fully developed. Originally referred to the "Asian Tigers" — South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong (now all HICs). More recently: China, India, Brazil, Mexico. Characterised by: rapid growth of manufacturing exports, rising GDP per capita, expanding middle class.

Limitations of development indicators

  • Average figures mask internal inequality.
  • GDP counts harmful activities (e.g. oil spill cleanup adds to GDP).
  • HDI does not capture happiness, political freedom, or sustainability.
  • Composite indicators are better than single measures — they capture multiple dimensions.

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ccea-geography

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 16 marks

    GDP vs HDI — compare as development indicators

    Explain why the Human Development Index (HDI) is considered a better measure of development than GDP alone.

    [6 marks]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ccea-geography

  2. Question 26 marks

    Using development indicators

    The table below shows data for two countries.

    IndicatorCountry ACountry B
    GNI per capita$42,000$1,200
    Life expectancy81 years58 years
    Infant mortality rate4 per 1,00062 per 1,000
    Literacy rate99%51%

    (a) Using the data, identify which country is more developed. Justify your answer with reference to TWO indicators. (4 marks)
    (b) Explain ONE limitation of using GNI per capita alone to measure development. (2 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ccea-geography

Flashcards

U2.CW.1 — Measuring development: GDP, HDI, GNI per capita; classification (HIC, MIC, LIC, NIC)

8-card SR deck for CCEA GCSE Geography (GG2017) topic U2.CW.1

8 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)