In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
A Nation's Report Card, Not Just Its Bank Balance
Judging a country only by its income is like judging a student on one test score. Development is the full report card — income plus health plus education — and even that report card leaves things out.
Think of a school report. A high Maths mark is good news, but it does not tell you whether the student is thriving. To see the whole picture you also want their English and Science results, their attendance, and their well-being. The Human Development Index does the same for a country: it blends income with life expectancy and schooling into one score. But like any report, an average grade can hide a struggling student sitting behind a strong class average.
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Separate growth (more real national income) from development (a wider rise in living standards, health, education and freedom).
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Use single indicators — GNI per capita, life expectancy, schooling, access to electricity — noting what each shows and misses.
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Combine them with a composite indicator: the HDI's three dimensions of health, education and income.
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Recognise the limits — averages hide inequality — and why extra indices (IHDI, GII) are needed alongside the HDI.
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Key formulas
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Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
Growth is not development
It is essential not to use these terms interchangeably. Economic growth is the increase in a country's real national output over time — a quantitative measure, usually the percentage change in real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) or Gross National Income (GNI). Economic development is broader and qualitative: it is a sustained, multidimensional improvement in human well-being, covering health, education, living standards, and the freedom to make choices. Growth is often a necessary condition for development because it provides the resources to fund schools, clinics and infrastructure — but it is not sufficient on its own.
Growth — an increase in real GDP/GNI. It is a means.
Development — a broad rise in living standards, health, education and freedom. It is the end.
Growth can occur without development if the gains are captured by a few, are short-lived (e.g. from a single resource boom), or come at heavy social or environmental cost.
Development without growth is harder to sustain, because improving health and education over the long run needs resources that growth provides.
Single indicators of development
A single indicator measures one dimension of development. Each is useful but partial, so economists read several together as a 'dashboard'. Income is captured by GNI per capita (PPP$). Health is captured by life expectancy at birth and by infant and maternal mortality rates. Education is captured by the adult literacy rate and by mean and expected years of schooling. Living conditions and productive capacity are captured by energy and infrastructure indicators such as the share of the population with access to electricity, clean water, sanitation, or the internet.
Income: GNI per capita (PPP$) — average income, adjusted for the cost of living.
Health: life expectancy at birth; infant and maternal mortality rates.
Education: adult literacy rate; mean and expected years of schooling.
Energy / infrastructure: access to electricity, clean water, sanitation, mobile and internet coverage.
Each single indicator lights up one dimension and leaves the rest dark — which is exactly why composite measures were created.
The Human Development Index (HDI)
The best-known composite indicator is the United Nations' Human Development Index (HDI). It summarises average achievement in three dimensions of human development and reports a single score between 0 and 1: the closer to 1, the higher the development. The HDI is calculated as the geometric mean of three normalised sub-indices, which means a country cannot compensate for a very weak dimension simply by excelling in another — balanced progress matters.
Conceptually, the HDI is the geometric mean of its three sub-indices: HDI = cube root of (Health Index x Education Index x Income Index)
Because it blends income with health and education, the HDI corrects the biggest weakness of GNI per capita: it recognises that a rich country with poor health or schooling is not fully developed, and that a middle-income country with long lives and strong education may be more developed than its income alone suggests. That is its central strength — but it still leaves out inequality, gender gaps, freedom and the environment.
Dimension 1 — a long and healthy life: measured by life expectancy at birth.
Dimension 2 — knowledge: measured by mean years of schooling (adults aged 25+) and expected years of schooling (children entering school).
Dimension 3 — a decent standard of living: measured by *GNI per capita (PPP
The score runs from 0 to 1, and countries are grouped into four tiers: low, medium, high and very high human development.
Other measures — and why we need them
Because the HDI is an average of just three dimensions, the UN and others publish complementary indices that fill specific gaps. The inequality-adjusted HDI (IHDI) discounts the HDI according to how unequally each dimension is distributed: where distribution is perfectly equal, IHDI equals HDI; the wider the gap between them, the greater the internal inequality. The Gender Inequality Index (GII) captures disparities between women and men in reproductive health, empowerment and labour-market participation. The Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) counts overlapping deprivations at household level, and measures such as the Happy Planet Index bring in environmental sustainability.
IHDI — the HDI adjusted downwards for inequality within its three dimensions; the HDI-IHDI gap measures the 'loss' due to inequality.
GII — measures gender disparities; a higher value means greater inequality between women and men.
MPI — measures the incidence and intensity of overlapping deprivations (health, education, living standards) at the individual/household level.
No single measure is enough: development spans income, health, education, equality, freedom, security and the environment — any one number must leave dimensions out and any average hides distribution.
When evaluating an indicator, always give a balanced argument. For GNI per capita: strength = simple, widely available, correlates with other outcomes; weakness = an average that hides inequality and ignores non-marketed output and externalities. For the HDI: strength = multidimensional, so it corrects income-only measures; weakness = it still omits inequality (the IHDI addresses this), gender gaps (the GII addresses this), political freedom and environmental damage. The examiner rewards you for naming which index fixes which gap — not just saying 'the HDI is limited'.
Common mistakes examiners penalise
Treating growth as development — rising GDP is growth; development also needs the gains to raise health, education and living standards across the population. State this distinction explicitly.
Claiming GDP/GNI per capita measures development — it is one income average. It ignores distribution, non-marketed and informal output, and externalities, so it cannot on its own show how developed a country is.
Muddling the three HDI dimensions — the HDI is health (life expectancy), education (mean and expected years of schooling) and income (GNI per capita, PPP). Do not add inflation, unemployment or the environment; do not drop education.
Reading an HDI value as a guarantee for everyone — it is a national average, so a high HDI can still hide deep inequality. Bring in the IHDI or GII to discuss distribution.
Saying the HDI captures all of development — it deliberately omits inequality, gender, freedom and sustainability. The mark comes from explaining why one number cannot capture a multidimensional concept.
Where this leads
How we measure development shapes the policies that follow. Once you accept that development is multidimensional, the natural next questions are about the barriers to it and the strategies to overcome them — the focus of the rest of Unit 4. Keep two key concepts in view here: economic well-being (development is ultimately about human flourishing, not just output) and equity (averages such as GNI per capita and the HDI can hide who actually benefits, which is why distribution-sensitive measures matter).
Worked examples
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Country X has a Gross National Income (GNI) of 450 billion dollars and a population of 20 million. Country Y has a GNI of 1,200 billion dollars and a population of 150 million.
(a) Calculate GNI per capita for each country. (b) State which country has the higher average income on this indicator. (c) Explain one reason why this single indicator may still mislead about which country is more developed.
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(a) GNI per capita = Total GNI / Population.
- Country X: 450,000,000,000 / 20,000,000 = 22,500 dollars per person.
- Country Y: 1,200,000,000,000 / 150,000,000 = 8,000 dollars per person.
The table shows illustrative data for two countries.
| Indicator | Coastland | Highvale |
|---|---|---|
| HDI value | 0.915 (very high) | 0.535 (low) |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Life expectancy at birth | 82 years | 61 years |
| Expected years of schooling | 17 years | 9 years |
| GNI per capita (PPP$) | 55,000 | 3,400 |
(a) Compare the level of development in the two countries using the HDI. (b) Support your comparison with each of the three HDI dimensions. (c) Explain one thing these HDI values still do NOT tell you about either country.
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(a) Coastland is far more developed than Highvale: its HDI of 0.915 places it in the 'very high' tier, while Highvale's 0.535 sits in the 'low' tier — a gap of 0.38 on a 0-to-1 scale, meaning Coastland's population is on average much healthier, better educated and better off.
Paper 1, part (a): Explain, using the Human Development Index, why composite indicators may measure development better than GDP per capita alone. [10 marks]
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Model answer: Economic development is a multidimensional improvement in well-being — covering income, health and education — and is broader than economic growth, which is simply a rise in real output. GDP (or GNI) per capita measures only the income dimension: it is the average income of the population. Because it is a single, income-based average, it has two major weaknesses. First, it ignores non-income dimensions of development such as health and education; a country could have high income yet low life expectancy and poor schooling. Second, being an average, it hides the distribution of income, so a high figure can coexist with widespread poverty behind a wealthy elite.
How it all connects
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Glossary
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Quick check
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Revision flashcards
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Economic Growth
An increase in an economy's real output over time, usually the percentage change in real GDP or GNI. It is quantitative and a means to an end.
Key takeaways
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Growth — an increase in real GDP/GNI. It is a means.
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Development — a broad rise in living standards, health, education and freedom. It is the end.
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Growth can occur without development if the gains are captured by a few, are short-lived (e.g. from a single resource boom), or come at heavy social or environmental cost.
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Development without growth is harder to sustain, because improving health and education over the long run needs resources that growth provides.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Get a Paper 1 (a) answer marked: use the HDI to explain why composite indicators can beat GDP per capita
Get a Paper 1 (a) answer marked: use the HDI to explain why composite indicators can beat GDP per capita
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