The following table presents a listing of Mexico's 32 federal states, ranked in order of their Human Development Index, as reported by the United Nations Development Programme with data from 1990 to 2017.[1] In 2019, only Mexico City and five states – specifically, the five highest on the chart below – had very high human development. The remaining states, aside from Chiapas, all had high human development. Between 2019 and 2022, the five highest states, but not Mexico City, all dropped below the 0.800 threshold, while three other states near the bottom dropped below 0.700.
Mexican States
editRank | Federal Entity | HDI (2022)[2] |
---|---|---|
Very high human development | ||
1 | Mexico City | 0.839 |
2 | Baja California | 0.811 |
3 | Nuevo León | 0.809 |
4 | Baja California Sur | 0.806 |
5 | Sinaloa | 0.805 |
6 | Sonora | 0.804 |
High human development | ||
7 | Coahuila | 0.799 |
8 | Aguascalientes | 0.798 |
9 | Tamaulipas | 0.793 |
10 | Jalisco | 0.790 |
11 | Colima | |
12 | Querétaro | 0.789 |
13 | Chihuahua | 0.786 |
14 | State of Mexico | 0.785 |
15 | Quintana Roo | 0.782 |
– | Mexico (average) | 0.781 |
16 | Morelos | 0.778 |
17 | Nayarit | 0.777 |
18 | Tabasco | 0.774 |
19 | Yucatán | |
20 | Tlaxcala | 0.772 |
21 | Campeche | 0.771 |
22 | Durango | |
23 | Zacatecas | 0.766 |
24 | San Luis Potosí | 0.761 |
25 | Hidalgo | 0.760 |
26 | Guanajuato | 0.758 |
27 | Michoacán | 0.745 |
28 | Veracruz | 0.744 |
29 | Puebla | 0.743 |
30 | Guerrero | 0.715 |
31 | Oaxaca | 0.709 |
Medium human development | ||
32 | Chiapas | 0.697 |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Permanyer, Iñaki; Smits, Jeroen (31 May 2018). "The Subnational Human Development Index: Moving beyond country-level averages". Human Development Reports. United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
- ^ "Mexico - Sub-national HDI". Global Data Lab. Radboud University Institute for Management Research. Retrieved 26 Sep 2024.