2. Australia – (HDI Score: 0.933)
In Australia, the average household net-adjusted disposable income per capita is $31,197. In general, the Australians are satisfied with their lives. Around 83 percent of people say that they have more positive experiences in an average day than negative experiences.
1. Norway – (HDI Score: 0.944)
In Norway, the average household net-adjusted disposable income per capita is $32,093. Life expectancy at birth is 81 years. There is a strong sense of community and high levels of civic participation.
The policies adopted by the above-mentioned countries are worth emulation.
You may also be interested in least developed countries in the world.
zen says
i live in australia – this line ‘the average household net-adjusted disposable income per capita is $31,197’ is extremely misleading. there is no way your average australian has that much disposable income. i earn a very good wage and there is no way i have that much after paying for a mortgage, daycare, food, petrol, utities etc. over the year – the cost of living here is very high. if this is across the population, the stats are being skewed by the extremely high income earners, like gina rineheart.
burpmuch says
dude its as it says, the AVERAGE not the median.. the rich people always pull things up