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Moscow Times
July 25, 2002
UN Says Russia 60th Best Place to Live
By Robin Munro
Staff Writer
Norway is ranked first and Russia slid from 55th to 60th as the best country
in which to live, according to a United Nations report released Wednesday.
However, officials at the UN Development Program, which compiled the annual
report on 173 countries, said the quality of life in Russia was steadily rising
and had only dropped in this year's report because other countries had
progressed more quickly.
"The changes in ranking are due to other countries' actions rather than
a slip in Russia's performance," UNDP spokesman Nikolai Dyuzhev said.
The Human Development Index measures a country's achievements in terms of
life expectancy, educational attainment and adjusted real income.
Norway led the list for a second year, followed by Sweden, Canada, Belgium,
Australia and the United States. Russia is topped by the former Soviet republics
of Estonia (42), Lithuania (49), Latvia (53) and Belarus (56). Ukraine (80) is
sandwiched between Kazakhstan (79) and Georgia (81).
From 168th to 173rd place on the index are Ethiopia, Burkina Faso,
Mozambique, Burundi, Niger and Sierra Leone.
The rankings were based on indices reflecting the situation in 2000, the
latest year for which the statistics are available.
"Since than an economic growth process has been launched, so there
should be a change in Russia's position quite soon," said Blanche de
Bonneval, deputy resident representative for the UNDP in Russia.
The report said Russia's ranking has slipped by 20 places since 1990, when
135 nations were ranked.
The comparatively low ranking does not mean that Russia was a poor performer
on all indices; for instance, the report rated literacy among the population
aged 15 and above at 99.6 percent.
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