Development and Human Welfare - Key Terms & Definitions
Across
- 3. When producers in LICs are given a better price for the goods they produce. Often this is form farm products like cocoa, coffee or cotton. The better price improves income and reduces exploitation.
- 5. The ability to read and write. In HICs literacy rates are often around 99% of the adult population, but in LICs they are much lower.
- 6. When HICs, and banks in HICs, write‐off some LIC country debt so the LIC has to pay less back.
- 7. Countries which are developing and industrializing rapidly. They are MICs which are seeing their per capita GNI grow rapidly. Examples include Brazil, India, China, Mexico and Malaysia.
- 9. The average number of years a person might be expected to live.
- 11. Any difference between one group of people, or region, and another.
- 13. The difference in standards of living and wellbeing between the world’s richest and poorest countries (between HICs and LICs).
- 18. The progress of a country in terms of economic growth, the use of technology and human welfare.
- 20. The simple, easily learned and maintained technology used in a range of economic activities serving local needs in LICs.
- 21. When people lack the income needed to have a reasonable quality of life.
- 22. Whether people in a country have the right to vote in fair elections and speak freely. It is often seem as an important part of development.
- 24. The general condition of a population in terms of diet, housing, healthcare, education, etc.
- 25. A way of dividing the world up into the richer ‘North’ (HICs) and poorer ‘South’ (LICs and MICs); it can be thought of as the worlds’ ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’.
Down
- 1. The most economically / politically dominant area in a country or region is referred to as the ‘core’. Periphery areas are more isolated, have fewer businesses and well paid jobs and are less politically influential.
- 2. When trade between countries is not restricted by, for example, import duties or not being a member of a group of trading nations.
- 4. The general level of prosperity enjoyed by a population.
- 8. These are countries which have developed rapidly over the last 20‐30 years are moved from being LICs to MICs. The term is very similar to ‘emerging economy’.
- 10. (GNI) GNI is very similar to GDP, but GNI takes into account that some countries are in debt and pay money in debt interest. This reduces GNI relative to GDP.
- 11. The number of deaths in a year per 1000 of the total population.
- 12. index (HDI) Used as a measure of development in a country and for making international comparisons.
- 14. The number of births in a year per 1000 of the total population.
- 15. The average number of deaths of infants under 1 year of age, per 1000 live births, per year.
- 16. (GDP) The total value of goods and services produced by a country during a year. When expressed as per head of population (per capita), it provides a widely used measure of national prosperity and development.
- 17. Know‐how and equipment that are suited to the basic conditions prevailing in the receiving country.
- 19. Difficult to define, but it is often thought of as an umbrella term that takes into account a number of different development strands.
- 23. The 4 countries of Brazil, Russia, India and China. All are emerging economies.