The US ranks nearly last in a list of rich countries that improve lives in the developing world — here's the full ranking
Denmark ranks as the highest-performing wealthy country in a ranking of nations that improve lives in the developing world, according to this year's Commitment to Development Index.
The US placed 23rd out of 27 countries.
Created by the Center for Global Development, the CDI ranks the 27 richest countries in terms of aid, finance, technology, environment, trade, security, and migration — specifically in terms of how they help poorer countries.
Sweden, Finland, France, and Germany rounded out the top five.
"In our integrated world, decisions made by rich countries about their own policies and behavior have repercussions for people in developing nations," the report read. "The [CDI] celebrates countries whose policies benefit not only themselves, but also the development of others, and promote our common good."
Beyond just airlifting supplies during a disaster, the CDI rewards countries based on their financial investments, policies and actions fighting climate change, trade deals, and warmth toward refugees, among other considerations .
Denmark won top honors for its first-place rank in security and aid, in addition to placing highly across the other five metrics. Sweden and Finland, two other Scandinavian nations, also placed highly in most categories. The report noted Denmark still had "room for improvement," however.
"Even though it takes a large share of international refugees, Denmark accepts the lowest proportion of students from developing countries of all countries assessed," the report read.
Notably, the US placed below all of the Central European Visegrád countries, which include Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Poland, "whose income per head is less than half that in the United States." The US lagged in scores related to finance, environment, and aid. Despite a global agreement that countries would devote 0.7% of their national income to environmental efforts, the US commits just 0.18%, the report found.
Here is the full ranking:
1. Denmark
2. Sweden
3. Finland
4. France
5. Germany
6. Portugal
7. Netherlands
8. United Kingdom
9. Norway
10. New Zealand
11. Austria
12. Spain
13. Luxembourg
14. Italy
15. Belgium
16. Ireland
17. Canada
18. Australia
19. Hungary
20. Czech Republic
21. Slovakia
22. Poland
23. United States
24. Switzerland
25. Greece
26. Japan
27. South Korea
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