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Mawratanews.lk | Sri Lanka Latest Sinhala News and Headlines
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Human Development progress slows to a 35-year low, according to UN Development Programme report

May 7, 2025
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Sixty per cent of people hopeful Artificial Intelligence will create new job opportunities

Human development progress is experiencing an unprecedented slowdown according to a new report released today by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). The report shows how Artificial Intelligence (AI) could reignite development.

Instead of seeing sustained recovery following the period of exceptional crises of 2020-2021, the report reveals unexpectedly weak progress. Excluding those crisis years, the meagre rise in global human development projected in this year’s report is the smallest increase since 1990.

The 2025 Human Development Report -“A matter of choice: people and possibilities in the age of Artificial Intelligence (AI)” analyses development progress across a range of indicators known as the Human Development Index (HDI), which encompasses achievements in health and education, along with levels of income. Projections for 2024 reveal stalled progress on the HDI in all regions across the world.

Beyond the alarming rate of deceleration in global development, the report finds widening inequalities between rich and poor countries. As traditional paths to development are squeezed by global pressures, decisive action is needed to move the world away from prolonged stagnation on progress.

While large disparities continue to exist, the Asia-Pacific region showed some of the fastest gains in human development since 1990 to 2023, with both East Asia and the Pacific and South Asia raising their Human Development Index value by more than 50% to 0.775 and 0.672, respectively. The HDI measures the average achievement in three basic dimensions of human development: a long and healthy life, knowledge and a decent standard of living.

Relative to 2022, South Asia saw in 2023 the most rapid increase in the HDI value, increasing by 4.8%. East Asia and the Pacific saw an improvement of 1.2%.  This helped South Asia recover from the pandemic losses, with the HDI now 5.8 per cent higher than the pre-pandemic value in 2019.  East Asia and the Pacific has risen 2.4% above the 2019 data point. 

Compared to last year, the region saw major improvements in UNDP’s Gender Inequality Index, which measures inequality in achievement between women and men in reproductive health, empowerment, and the labor market. The indicator improved by 7.4% in East Asia and the Pacific, and 4.2% in South Asia. 

“For decades, we have been on track to reach a very high human development world by 2030, but this deceleration signals a very real threat to global progress,” said Achim Steiner, UNDP Administrator. “If 2024’s sluggish progress becomes ‘the new normal’, that 2030 milestone could slip by decades – making our world less secure, more divided, and more vulnerable to economic and ecological shocks.”

For the fourth year in a row inequality between Low HDI and Very High HDI countries continues to increase, according to the report. This reverses a long-term trend that has seen a reduction in inequalities between wealthy and poor nations.

Development challenges for countries with the lowest HDI scores are especially severe, driven by increasing trade tensions, a worsening debt crisis and the rise of jobless industrialisation.

“Amidst this global turmoil, we must urgently explore new ways to drive development,” Mr. Steiner said. “As Artificial Intelligence continues its rapid advance across so many aspects of our lives, we should consider its potential for development. New capabilities are emerging almost daily, and while AI is no panacea, the choices we make hold the potential to reignite human development and open new pathways and possibilities.”

The report contains the results of a new survey that showed people are realistic yet hopeful about the change AI can bring.

Half of respondents worldwide think that their jobs could be automated.  An even larger share—six in ten—expect AI to impact their employment positively, creating opportunities in jobs that may not even exist today.

Only 13 per cent of survey respondents fear AI could lead to job losses. In contrast, in low- and medium-HDI countries, 70 per cent expect AI to increase their productivity, and two-thirds anticipate using AI in education, health, or work within the next year.

The report advocates for a human-centred approach to AI, which has the potential to fundamentally redesign approaches to development. The survey results show that across the world people are ready for this kind of ‘reset’.

The report outlines three critical areas for action:

  • Building an economy where people collaborate with AI rather than compete against it
  • Embedding human agency across the full AI lifecycle, from design to deployment
  • Modernizing education and health systems to meet 21st-Century demands

Democratisation of AI is already underway. Around one in five of the survey respondents report already using AI. And two-thirds of respondents across lower human development countries anticipate using AI in education, health, or work within the next year. That makes closing electricity and internet gaps more urgent than ever, so no one is excluded from emerging possibilities. Yet, access alone is not enough: the real divide will hinge on how effectively AI complements and augments what people do.

“The choices we make in the coming years will define the legacy of this technological transition for human development,” said Pedro Conceição, Director of UNDP’s Human Development Report Office. “With the right policies and focus on people, AI can be a crucial bridge to new knowledge, skills, and ideas that can empower everyone from farmers to small business owners.”

The 2025 Human Development Report is available at https://hdr.undp.org/content/human-development-report-2025

The local launch of the Global Human Development Report will take place on 20 June 2025 in Colombo, Sri Lanka.  

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