On the day that
Nigeria celebrated its 53rd anniversary as an independent nation, a new study
released today by the UN backed Help Age International advocacy group ranked
Nigeria among the worst countries in the world that least care about their old
population.
The Global AgeWatch
Index ranked 91 countries, with Nigeria ranked 85th, the sixth worst, with a
poor record of catering for the well-being of the elderly, people older than
60.
Though Nigeria has
the highest GDP among the African Index countries, it ranks third lowest for
income security, the report said.
“This reflects its limited pension coverage,
at 5 per cent. It ranks 84th in the health domain and, with Rwanda, has the
lowest life expectancy at age 60 – 16 years.
“For employment and
education, Nigeria ranks 70 with the fourth highest proportion of older people,
17.4%, with secondary or higher education among its African Index counterparts.
“Nigeria ranks second
lowest regionally, at 76, in the enabling environment domain, with only 53% of
older Nigerians enjoying civic freedom.
The report indicated
that older Nigerians are taking part in the Age Demands Action campaign for the
first time this year.
In contrast, Sweden
offers the best environment to grow old. Expectedly, Afghanistan is the worst –
but general affluence does not necessarily mean better conditions for the
over-60s, reports the London Guardian.
While Sweden’s top
ranking – followed by Norway, Germany, the Netherlands and Canada – may be
predictable, the Global AgeWatch index throws up some surprising results.
The US, the world’s
richest country, languishes in eighth place, while the UK fails to make the top
10, residing instead at No 13. Sri Lanka ranks 36, well above Pakistan at 89,
despite similar levels of gross domestic product (GDP). Bolivia and Mauritius
score higher than the size of their economies may suggest, while the emerging
economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China are a mixed bag. Brazil and China
rank relatively high on the index; India and Russia sit much lower.
The ageing index is
calculated using 13 indicators under four headings: income security,
healthcare, employment and education, and an enabling environment. All indicators
have equal weight, except for pension income coverage, life expectancy at 60,
healthy life expectancy at 60, and psychological wellbeing. These categories
were given increased weighting because of better data quality, and countries
were included only if there was sufficient data.
The best and worst
countries to grow old: the UN rankings
The index was compiled by the HelpAge International advocacy group and funded by the UN Population Fund
The index was compiled by the HelpAge International advocacy group and funded by the UN Population Fund
Top 10
1. Sweden
2. Norway
3. Germany
4. Netherlands
5. Canada
6. Switzerland
7. New Zealand
8. USA
9. Iceland
10. Japan
Britain came in at
13, ahead of Australia (14) and France (18).
Lower down in the
rankings were the emerging economies of Brazil (31), China (35), South Africa
(65), India (73) and Russia (78).
Bottom 10:
82. Honduras
83. Montenegro
84. West Bank and
Gaza
85. Nigeria
86. Malawi
87. Rwanda
88. Jordan
89. Pakistan
90. Tanzania
91. Afghanistan
Tags
Society
Infact Nigeria needs God's intervention
ReplyDeleteWot a rich country dat re been control by poor nd weak leaders may God have mercy on dem!!
ReplyDeleteDat is y we need national conference and we need to divide Nigerian bcause every Nigerians don't believe in Nigeria;d richest are been selfish n fight 4 themselves and not Nigeria populace while d masses are suffering and tired of been a Nigerian and remain poor and suffering.To avoid revolution n war we need national conference n most important divisions cause there is no true Nigeria it is far dead long time ago
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