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14 July 2012

HDI and Gini


Ceni’s HDI and Gini coefficient both are in good condition, says the Coalition of Independent Nations, COIN, in its annual report about the state of these two indicators. Ceni’s Human Development Index, or HDI, is valued at .983, and its Gini coefficient is rated at .260. Other nations on the report included Waterloo, Zebrika, the Holy Land, Vampyrico, and the Bloody Empire. Zebrika is closest to Ceni in HDI, having .833. In order, other nations were Jacobia, with .865, Waterloo, with .827, Holy Land, .793, Vampyrico, .670, and Bloody Empire, .475. Bloody Empire scored low enough on HDI that it was ranked as a Least Developed Country. On the Gini coefficient, which rates income equality, Zebrika scored first place with .252. Third place went to Holy Land, .388, and fourth place, Vampyrico, with .464. In Waterloo, Jacobia, and the Bloody Empire, less people controlled the most wealth with ratings of .606, .608, and .702, respectively. A lower Gini score reflects higher income equality. The Inequality Adjusted Index, IAI, was won by Ceni, with 1.944. Zebrika had 1.924, Holy Land was third best with 1.430, Vampyrico had 1.202, Jacobia just beat out Waterloo 1.193 to 1.170, respectively. And unequal, poorly developed Bloody Empire had a score of .817. Ceni scored 83.4 life expectancy, the maximum, and had 16 years of mean and expected schooling.

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