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The Philippines: Human Development Index (0 - 1): The latest value from 2023 is 0.72 points, an increase from 0.71 points in 2022. In comparison, the world average is 0.744 points, based on data from 185 countries. Historically, the average for the Philippines from 1980 to 2023 is 0.656 points. The minimum value, 0.566 points, was reached in 1980 while the maximum of 0.72 points was recorded in 2023.
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Philippines: Human Development Index (0 - 1): Pour cet indicateur, The United Nations fournit des données pour la Philippines de 1980 à 2023. La valeur moyenne pour Philippines pendant cette période était de 0.656 points avec un minimum de 0.566 points en 1980 et un maximum de 0.72 points en 2023.
Explore The Human Capital Report dataset for insights into Human Capital Index, Development, and World Rankings. Find data on Probability of Survival to Age 5, Expected Years of School, Harmonized Test Scores, and more.
Low income, Upper middle income, Lower middle income, High income, Human Capital Index (Lower Bound), Human Capital Index, Human Capital Index (Upper Bound), Probability of Survival to Age 5, Expected Years of School, Harmonized Test Scores, Learning-Adjusted Years of School, Fraction of Children Under 5 Not Stunted, Adult Survival Rate, Development, Human Capital, World Rankings
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Last year edition of the World Economic Forum Human Capital Report explored the factors contributing to the development of an educated, productive and healthy workforce. This year edition deepens the analysis by focusing on a number of key issues that can support better design of education policy and future workforce planning.
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Philippines Multidimensional Poverty Headcount Ratio: UNDP: % of total population data was reported at 5.800 % in 2017. Philippines Multidimensional Poverty Headcount Ratio: UNDP: % of total population data is updated yearly, averaging 5.800 % from Dec 2017 (Median) to 2017, with 1 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 5.800 % in 2017 and a record low of 5.800 % in 2017. Philippines Multidimensional Poverty Headcount Ratio: UNDP: % of total population data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by World Bank. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Philippines – Table PH.World Bank.WDI: Social: Poverty and Inequality. The multidimensional poverty headcount ratio (UNDP) is the percentage of a population living in poverty according to UNDPs multidimensional poverty index. The index includes three dimensions -- health, education, and living standards.;Alkire, S., Kanagaratnam, U., and Suppa, N. (2023). ‘The global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) 2023 country results and methodological note’, OPHI MPI Methodological Note 55, Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI), University of Oxford. (https://ophi.org.uk/mpi-methodological-note-55-2/);;
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Continued growth in the drivers for transportation demand such as economic growth, population growth, urbanization, and rapid motorization in the Philippines highlights the importance of changing the course of transportation towards sustainability.Economic growth between 2010-2017 accelerated to an average of 6.4 percent annually, exceeding structural and regional peers. Although many challenges remained, including high inequality, still low human capital development, and severe air pollution, the Philippines seemed to be on an upward path. During 2000-2020, the country’s population has been growing at an annual rate of 1.7 percent and is projected to continue increasing at 0.9 percent 2020-2050. The total population was 109.6 million in 2020 and will increase to 144.5 million by 2050. The urbanization rate outpaced population growth and will continue doing so in the years to come. In2020, it was estimated that 47.4 percent of the population were living in urban areas, by 2050, 61.8 percent of the population would be living in urban areas.
The World Values Survey (WVS) is an international research program devoted to the scientific and academic study of social, political, economic, religious and cultural values of people in the world. The project’s goal is to assess which impact values stability or change over time has on the social, political and economic development of countries and societies. The project grew out of the European Values Study and was started in 1981 by its Founder and first President (1981-2013) Professor Ronald Inglehart from the University of Michigan (USA) and his team, and since then has been operating in more than 120 world societies. The main research instrument of the project is a representative comparative social survey which is conducted globally every 5 years. Extensive geographical and thematic scope, free availability of survey data and project findings for broad public turned the WVS into one of the most authoritative and widely-used cross-national surveys in the social sciences. At the moment, WVS is the largest non-commercial cross-national empirical time-series investigation of human beliefs and values ever executed.
The project’s overall aim is to analyze people’s values, beliefs and norms in a comparative cross-national and over-time perspective. To reach this aim, project covers a broad scope of topics from the field of Sociology, Political Science, International Relations, Economics, Public Health, Demography, Anthropology, Social Psychology and etc. In addition, WVS is the only academic study which covers the whole scope of global variations, from very poor to very rich societies in all world’s main cultural zones.
The WVS combines two institutional components. From one side, WVS is a scientific program and social research infrastructure that explores people’s values and beliefs. At the same time, WVS comprises an international network of social scientists and researchers from 120 world countries and societies. All national teams and individual researchers involved into the implementation of the WVS constitute the community of Principal Investigators (PIs). All PIs are members of the WVS.
The WVS seeks to help scientists and policy makers understand changes in the beliefs, values and motivations of people throughout the world. Thousands of political scientists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists and economists have used these data to analyze such topics as economic development, democratization, religion, gender equality, social capital, and subjective well-being. The WVS findings have proved to be valuable for policy makers seeking to build civil society and stable political institutions in developing countries. The WVS data is also frequently used by governments around the world, scholars, students, journalists and international organizations such as the World Bank, World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the United Nations Headquarters in New York (USA). The WVS data has been used in thousands of scholarly publications and the findings have been reported in leading media such as Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Economist, the World Development Report, the World Happiness Report and the UN Human Development Report.
The World Values Survey Association is governed by the Executive Committee, the Scientific Advisory Committee, and the General Assembly, under the terms of the Constitution.
Strategic goals for the 7th wave included:
Expansion of territorial coverage from 60 countries in WVS-6 to 80 in WVS-7; Deepening collaboration within the international development community; Deepening collaboration within NGOs, academic institutions and research foundations; Updating the WVS-7 questionnaire with new topics & items covering new social phenomena and emerging processes of value change; Expanding the 7th wave WVS with data useful for monitoring the SDGs; Expanding capacity and resources for survey fieldwork in developing countries. The 7th wave continued monitoring cultural values, attitudes and beliefs towards gender, family, and religion; attitudes and experience of poverty; education, health, and security; social tolerance and trust; attitudes towards multilateral institutions; cultural differences and similarities between regions and societies. In addition, the WVS-7 questionnaire has been elaborated with the inclusion of such new topics as the issues of justice, moral principles, corruption, accountability and risk, migration, national security and global governance.
For more information on the history of the WVSA, visit https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSContents.jsp ›Who we are › History of the WVSA.
Philippines.
The WVS has just completed wave 7 data that comprises 64 surveys conducted in 2017-2022. With 64 countries and societies around the world and more than 80,000 respondents, this is the latest resource made available for the research community.
The WVS-7 survey was launched in January 2017 with Bolivia becoming the first country to conduct WVS-7. In the course of 2017 and 2018, WVS-7 has been conducted in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Andorra, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Turkey, Russia, Germany, Thailand, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria, Iraq and over dozen of other world countries. Geographic coverage has also been expanded to several new countries included into the WVS for the first time, such as Bolivia, Greece, Macao SAR, Maldives, Myanmar, Nicaragua, and Tajikistan.
Household, Individual
The sample type preferable for using in the World Values Survey is a full probability sample of the population aged 18 years and older. A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the country specific sample design documentation available for download from WVS.
A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the Philippines 2019 sample design documentation available for download from WVS and also from the Downloads section of the metadata.
Paper Assisted Personal Interview [papi]
The survey was fielded in the following language(s): Bikol, Cebuano, Filipino, Ikolo,Tausug, Waray, Hiligaynon. The questionnaire is available for download from the WVS website.
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Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Philippines: Human Development Index (0 - 1): The latest value from 2023 is 0.72 points, an increase from 0.71 points in 2022. In comparison, the world average is 0.744 points, based on data from 185 countries. Historically, the average for the Philippines from 1980 to 2023 is 0.656 points. The minimum value, 0.566 points, was reached in 1980 while the maximum of 0.72 points was recorded in 2023.