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Office workers sit along the river during lunch break in the financial district of Raffles Place in Singapore on February 19, 2018. Singapore tops the World Bank’s new human capital list. Photo: AFP

Singapore comes first, Hong Kong fourth according to World Bank’s human capital rankings

The rankings, based on health, education and survivability measures, assess the future productivity and earnings potential for citizens of 157 of the World Bank’s member nations

Singapore has topped a new World Bank list ranking success in developing human capital, while Hong Kong took the fourth spot. Asian countries dominated the list, with South Korea and Japan ranking second and third respectively.

The World Bank Group unveiled the system on Thursday in an effort to prod governments to invest more effectively in education and health care. The index showed poor African countries fared the worst in the rankings, with Chad and South Sudan taking the two lowest spots.

The rankings, based on health, education and survivability measures, assess the future productivity and earnings potential for citizens of 157 of the World Bank’s member nations, and ultimately those countries’ potential economic growth.

The index was unveiled at the World Bank and International Monetary Fund annual meetings on the Indonesian island of Bali.

It found that on average 56 per cent of children born today will forego more than half their potential lifetime earnings because governments were not investing adequately to ensure their people are healthy, educated and ready for an evolving workplace.

World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said he hoped the new index would encourage governments to take steps aimed at moving up the rankings, much as they seek to with the bank’s popular “Doing Business” survey, which ranks countries based on ease of doing business, with low-tax, low regulation economies faring better.

World Bank president Jim Yong Kim. Photo: AFP

Kim acknowledged that the rankings would be controversial, but told reporters that the need for more and better investment in people was “such that we couldn’t shy away from making leaders uncomfortable”.

“This is about drawing their attention to a crisis that we think is real. This is connected to productivity, this is connected to economic growth,” Kim said.

He said there was “unanimous” acceptance among World Bank member countries and the bank’s board.

This is about drawing their attention to a crisis that we think is real. This is connected to productivity, this is connected to economic growth
World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim

The index measures the mortality rate for children under five, early childhood stunting rates due to malnutrition and other factors, and health outcomes based on the proportion of 15-year-olds who survive until age 60. It measures a country’s educational achievement based on the years of schooling a child can expect to obtain by age 18, combined with a country’s relative performance on international student achievement tests.

Countries in Africa with high childhood stunting rates and low access to formal education fared worst, while wealthier nations with strong educational systems fared best.

In Chad, the lowest-ranked country on the list, the World Bank said productivity and earnings potential would be only about 29 per cent of what their potential would be under ideal conditions there.

In top-ranked Singapore, the earnings potential was 88 per cent of potential, while in the United States, ranked 24th between Israel and Macau, productivity and earnings were measured at 76 per cent of potential.

Hong Kong failing to cash in on ‘silver economy’ as elderly feel let down

Kim said there were 28 countries, from Indonesia to Lesotho to Ukraine, who signed on as “early adopters” of the index to work with the World Bank to devise plans to improve their investment in health and education.

The bank has warned that a wave of automation and artificial intelligence will eliminate many low-skilled jobs in coming years, making it harder for people with low levels of education and poor health to compete for work.

The index showed that a country ranked at 50 per cent, such as Morocco and El Salvador, would lose 1.4 percentage points of annual GDP growth compared to its potential under ideal health and education conditions.

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