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Economia Global e Gestão

versão impressa ISSN 0873-7444

Economia Global e Gestão vol.17 no.2 Lisboa set. 2012

 

Composite indicators of development – the importance of dimensional weights

Sandrina B. Moreira*, Nádia Simões** & Nuno Crespo**

 

* PhD in Economics (ISCTE-IUL – University Institute of Lisbon). Professor at Instituto Politécnico de Setúbal, Department of Economics and Management. Researcher at BRU-IUL (Business Research Unit – ISCTE-IUL – University Institute of Lisbon). E-mail:sandrina.moreira@esce.ips.pt

** PhD in Economics (ISEG-UTL). Professor at ISCTE-IUL – University Institute of Lisbon, ISCTE Business School, Economics Department. Researcher at BRU-IUL (Business Research Unit – ISCTE-IUL – University Institute of Lisbon). E-mail:nadia.simoes@iscte.pt

*** PhD in Economics (ISEG-UTL). Professor at ISCTE-IUL – University Institute of Lisbon, ISCTE Business School, Economics Department. Researcher at BRU-IUL (Business Research Unit – ISCTE-IUL – University Institute of Lisbon). E-mail:nuno.crespo@iscte.pt

 

ABSTRACT

Measuring and quantifying development makes increasing use of composite indicators. This raises the issue of the determination of the proper weighting of the various dimensions considered. Using a public-opinion survey conducted in Portugal, we evaluate the importance of the main dimensions of development and examine if the dimensional weights depend on the respondents’ individual characteristics such as gender, age, or educational level. The evidence suggests that both education and health regularly stand out as the most highly-rated factors.

Key words:Composite Indicators, Development, Dimensional Weights

 

Indicadores compósitos do desenvolvimento – a importância dos ponderadores

RESUMO

A medição do desenvolvimento tem recorrido crescentemente à utilização de indicadores compósitos. Nesse âmbito, uma questão fundamental é a definição dos ponderadores para as diferentes dimensões do desenvolvimento. Com base num inquérito à opinião pública realizado em Portugal, testamos quais as dimensões consideradas mais relevantes no desenvolvimento de um país e avaliamos em que medida os ponderadores dimensionais dependem de características individuais dos inquiridos, como sexo, idade ou nível educacional. A evidência obtida aponta, sistematicamente, a educação e a saúde como as dimensões mais valorizadas.

Palavras-chave:Indicadores Compósitos, Desenvolvimento, Ponderadores Dimensionais

 

INTRODUCTION

Measuring countries’ levels of development is one of the most complex tasks in economics. The recognized multidimensionality of the phenomenon has increasingly led to the use of composite indicators in order to overcome the limitations usually identified in such measures as the income per capita (Bandura, 2008; Saisana, 2008). Using indicators such as this to assess development raises two crucial issues. On the one hand, one needs to identify the dimensions of development for each indicator as well as the content of each dimension. On the other hand, it is also necessary to assign weights to each dimension in order to have an aggregated indicator.

This second issue has drawn little attention in the literature, and usually equal weights are attributed to all the dimensions of a given indicator. In the absence of any systematic analysis of their correspondence to the public perception regarding the importance of each dimension of development, these weights are arbitrarily fixed. This is so despite the fact that individuals are the ultimate beneficiaries of countries’ development. The present paper seeks to close this gap in the literature by explicitly discussing the importance of the weights of each dimension of development.

More specifically, our aim is to answer three research questions based on responses to a survey conducted in Portugal. First, do the results of the survey sustain the predominant adoption in the literature of equal weights for several issues affecting a country’s development? Second, does the importance of the different dimensions of development vary according to respondents’ individual characteristics, such as gender, age, or educational level? Third, does any relationship emerge between the different dimensional weights?

The paper is structured in six sections. The second section discusses the progressive enlargement of the concept of development as well as the importance of its composite measurement approach. The third section proposes a development nomenclature and discusses the issue of the weights by evaluating the importance that Portuguese public opinion attributes to each dimension. The fourth section compares the results identified in the third section with what has been most frequently adopted in a broad set of available composite indicators. The fifth section evaluates the relevance of some conditioning factors to the weights obtained in the third section. The sixth section investigates the relationships between the different dimensions of development. Finally, the seventh section presents some final remarks.

 

THE RELEVANCE OF THE COMPOSITE MEASUREMENT OF DEVELOPMENT

Development is undoubtedly one of the most discussed concepts in economics. For many years, and especially since the end of the Second World War, development of countries has been evaluated almost exclusively in terms of their level of economic growth. Economic growth has been seen as a necessary and sufficient condition for development and, therefore, improvement in the well-being of the population has been viewed as relying on it. Regarding the quantitative assessment of a country’s level of development, the more immediate implication of this strict link between the two concepts is the heavy reliance on indicators of economic activity, notably the level of income per capita.

However, since the 1970s a decisive turning point in the practices and approaches to development has led to the emergence of new and broader concepts of development. These new concepts are couched mainly in an interdisciplinary and multidimensional perspective, spawning the current concepts of sustainable, local, participative, human, and social development.

In the same vein, several attempts have been advanced to amend, complement, or replace the income per capita as a summary measure of development, and in turn, the approach to measuring development has progressively evolved from a uni- to a multi-dimensional character. Composite indicators of development have gained great importance as a result, and many have appeared in recent years, allowing for a more textured assessment of the phenomenon of development (Booysen, 2002; Bandura, 2008; Saisana, 2008; Soares and Quintella, 2008).

Composite indicators are mathematical combinations of a set of indicators. Their extensive use has led to a spirited debate over the conceptual and methodological arguments in favor of and against this measurement approach. In a detailed analysis of the relevance of these types of indicators, Booysen (2002) stresses some of their most important limitations: (i) composite indicators always exclude one or more essential elements of the domain at issue; (ii) particular components of the index may be quantified with the aid of different variables (possibly better ones); (iii) composite indicators may be unable to reveal more than what a single variable alone reveals; (iv) the selection process of the variables may be ad hoc, which is to say, politically or ideologically motivated, or simply determined by the availability and accuracy of data; (v) the data employed in composite indicators are often inaccurate and non-comparable; (vi) often no clear rationale is presented for the selected weighting and aggregation techniques; (vii) composite indicators may lack practical value if they give no specific and focused policy advice.

However, there are also many elements in favor of composite indicators, notably the following (Saisana and Tarantola, 2002): (i) composite indicators synthesize complex or multidimensional issues; (ii) they are easier to interpret than a battery of separate indicators; (iii) they facilitate the task of comparing the performance across countries and their progress over time, and thereby attract public interest; (iv) they reduce the size of a list of indicators without losing basic information. Indeed, the main advantage of composite indicators is their multidimensionality, since they represent aggregate and relatively simple measures of a combination of components of complex phenomena (Booysen, 2002).

Currently, a considerable variety of composite indicators have been proposed to quantitatively assess the performance of countries in terms of development[1]. These development indicators are employed with the aim of measuring the main constituents of the phenomenon, thereby reflecting its multidimensional nature. The literature offers many proposals of disaggregation of the phenomenon into its main dimensions[2].

 

THE IMPORTANCE OF DIMENSIONAL WEIGHTS – FINDINGS FROM PORTUGAL

Based on the criteria of intrinsic relevance and recurring inclusion in alternative attempts of development disaggregation, we propose a nomenclature that disaggregates development into eight dimensions encompassing crucial features that determine the level of countries’ development: (i) income; (ii) income distribution (inequality and poverty); (iii) education; (iv) health; (v) employment (in quantitative as well as qualitative terms); (vi) infrastructure; (vii) values (economic freedom, socio-political liberty, including the political regime, corruption, and respect for human rights); (viii) environment.

We conducted a small survey in order to measure the importance of each of the above dimensions. The questionnaire contained a brief description of the key elements of each dimension, and individuals were asked to indicate their opinion of the relative importance of each dimension to the development of a given country. Additionally, certain characteristics of the respondents were collected (gender, age, and level of education). The survey was conducted between April and July 2010 and included a total sample of 2892 observations.

Table I presents the overall findings, highlighting for each dimension the average, the standard deviation, the maximum value, the number of responses with zero weight to that dimension, the distance from the average (which is 12.5%), and the number of observations above the average. We have designated the best situation in bold and the worst situation in italics[3].

 

TABLE I

Dimensional weights – overall results

 

As Table I reveals, there is not a very great difference between the weights assigned to the different dimensions, thereby supporting the option frequently adopted in the literature of applying equal dimensional weights to all included dimensions. However, a more in-depth analysis of the survey’s findings points to some additional points of interest. We emphasize three of them.

First of all, two dimensions – education and health – are identified as being more relevant than the others. If we use the number of responses above the average (12.5%) as the analysis criterion, this finding is very clear. Indeed, with regard to education, 72.10% of the respondents assigned a weight above the average. The value for the health dimension is 65.21%, and employment is the other dimension to which more than half of the respondents attributed an importance greater than the average (52.84%). On the other hand, only 36.62% of the respondents evaluated infrastructure as greater than the average.

Second, the results for income distribution (inequality and poverty) should also be noted. This dimension presents the greatest disparity of responses as evidenced by the largest standard deviation, the largest number of responses that assigned a zero weight to that dimension, and finally, by including the response that attributed the greatest weight to any dimension (68.97%).

Third, somewhat surprisingly the income dimension has a low weight, which seems to support the notion that evaluating development focused exclusively on that dimension is clearly reductive and does not correspond to public opinion’s perception of the fundamental components of the process of development.

 

THE DIMENSIONAL WEIGHTS IN THE MEASUREMENT OF DEVELOPMENT

Let us now compare the findings above to those reported in the literature. The first of the three research questions posed in the Introduction can be further subdivided into two parts:

Do the most valued dimensions (revealed in our survey) correspond to those most frequently included in composite indicators of development?

Do the weights found correspond to those applied in the main composite indicators of development (as reported in the literature)?

This section seeks to answer these two questions. To achieve this, we follow a four-step procedure. First, we identify surveys and other recent studies that include a list of composite indicators of development. Second, we establish a selection criterion for the indicators included in those studies. In particular, we consider the indicators that simultaneously include at least two of the different proposed dimensions and are mentioned in at least two of the selected studies[4]. Third, the selected indicators are analyzed in order to identify the dimensions included in each indicator. Fourth, we evaluate the weights adopted in each case.

The studies selected for the first step are the following: (i) Booysen (2002); (ii) Morse (2004); (iii) Gadrey and Jany-Catrice (2007); (iv) Goossens et al. (2007); (v) Afsa et al. (2008); (vi) Bandura (2008); (vii) Eurostat (2008); (viii) Saisana (2008); (ix) Soares and Quintella (2008); (x) Singh et al. (2009). Applying the selection criterion presented in the second step led to the choice of 54 composite indicators of development. In the third step we identified the dimensions of development included in each of the 54 indices selected, in order to address the first question presented above. Table II summarizes the results of this procedure.

 

TABLE II

Number and percentage of composite indicators taking into account

each dimension of development

 

As Table II reveals, the two dimensions most often included in composite indicators of development are also those that seem most valuable in the public opinion according to the findings of our survey – education and health. The greatest discrepancies between the findings of the survey and the inclusion of dimensions in indices of development are seen in the infrastructure and income dimensions. Both are deemed to be less valuable in the public opinion than the frequency with which they are considered in the 54 indices of development would lead one to believe. The opposite is observed with the employment and environment dimensions, which our survey finds to be more valuable in the public opinion.

We turn now to the second part of the question. Upon analyzing the weighting methods employed in the 54 composite indicators of development, four alternative methodologies stand out.

The first option (EW) is to employ equal weighting (i.e., not to use differentiated weights at all). In this option, the composite indicator is determined by the simple average of the corresponding indicators, which might, in turn, be simple or composite in nature.

Where dimensional weights are employed in a differentiated manner, the literature offers a variety of weighting methods, usually segregated into two broad categories – statistical methods (option two) and participatory methods (option three) (OECD and European Commission, 2008). In option two, statistical techniques of multivariate analysis, such as the principal component analysis or the factor analysis, are of particular interest. Both methods group individual indicators according to their degree of correlation. Option three (participatory methods) are based on expert or public opinion, and methodologies known as budget allocation (BA) or public opinion (PO) are well-known examples.

The fourth option is to employ unequal weightings based on an ad-hoc/subjective process that is based on authors’ (experts’) opinion and/or intuitive appeal.

Table III summarizes the methodology used in each of the 54 composite indicators of development considered in the present section.

 

TABLE III

Methodology of composite indicators of development

 

As can been seen in Table III, the weighting method that is based on public opinion is rarely used – being present in only one of the 54 indices. The simplest method – EW – is the one most favored and was used in 40 of the 54[5]. Note that the common procedure reported in the literature is not necessarily the option of no weighting, but rather that weights are implicitly equal.

In the most popular indicator for measuring development in a composite nature – the Human Development Index (HDI) – a weighting of 1/3 is attributed to each of its constituents – income, education and health. This stands in contrast to the findings of our survey, in which public opinion seems to place greater value on education and health, while de-emphasizing income.

 

CONDITIONING FACTORS OF THE WEIGHTS

The third section presented the overall findings of the survey conducted on dimensional weighting. The purpose of the present section is to evaluate whether or not these weights differ according to selected characteristics of the respondents: gender, age, and educational level. We start by comparing the dimensional weights assigned by men (1403 observations) and women (1480 observations). Table IV presents the results[6].

 

TABLE IV

Dimensional weights by gender

 

The evidence in Table IV confirms the importance given to education and also health by both women and men. 75.91% of men and 68.38% of women assigned a greater weight to education than the average. In comparative terms, we should highlight in particular the greater valuation that men attributed to both education and values (compared to women) and that women attributed to both employment and income distribution (compared to men), while the remaining dimensions show very similar values. The results also reveal the lower importance that women give to income, and that men give to income distribution as components of a country’s development.

We now examine the division of the sample according to age, considering four age groups: (i) up to and including 25 years of age; (ii) 26 to 39; (iii) 40 to 54; (iv) 55 and over. The data are presented in Table V[7].

 

TABLE V

Dimensional weights by age

 

As seen in Table V, education is always regarded as the most important component in the process of a country’s development by all age groups, even though the importance attributed increases with the age of the respondent. The relative weights of both values and infrastructure go in the same direction. Inversely, the greater the age, the lower the weight that is attributed to income. If we compute the correlation coefficient between the age of the respondents and the weights they assigned to each dimension of development, we obtain a negative association for income, income distribution, and employment. The relative importance of these dimensions is thus greater for the younger population. A positive correlation is present for the remaining dimensions.

Finally, we disaggregate the sample according to the schooling level. For this we consider four categories: (i) up to and including 9 years of education; (ii) 10 to 12 years; (iii) with an undergraduate degree; (iv) with a post-graduate degree, i.e., Masters, or Doctoral Degree. The data are presented in Table VI[8].

 

TABLE VI

Dimensional weights by educational level

 

Table VI reveals some interesting results. Respondents with intermediate levels of schooling (the categories of “10 to 12 years of schooling” and “with an undergraduate degree”) attributed greater importance to income. The same is found for both employment and environment, even though the difference between these two groups of schooling level and the remaining two is now less significant. As expected, the highest educational level group gave a very large weight to education, with 80.04% of the respondents in this group assigning a relative weight greater than the average[9]. There is also a strong depreciation of the income dimension in this group.

 

IS THERE A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN WEIGHTS?

In the sections above we analyzed how the respondents evaluated each of the different dimensions of development. In this section we investigate what type of relationship exists between the several dimensional weights. For instance, considering the findings of our survey, does a higher valuation for infrastructure correspond to a lower valuation for environment, or does a higher valuation of health correspond to a lower valuation of income?

Table VII refers to the weights assigned by individuals to each dimension. Therefore, a negative correlation coefficient is expected in the majority of the bilateral comparisons. The evidence supports this in 25 out of the 28 possible relationships. Two of the three exceptions correspond to the relationship among key social dimensions of development – education, health, and employment – and the most significant association is between education and health (0.163). The other bilateral relationship with a positive association of attributed weights has to do with the relationship between values and environment. Here we find that individuals who give greater importance to the values dimension also seem to have a greater concern for the environment. The trade-off between environment and income is clearly evidenced by the corresponding bilateral relationship, which has the largest negative correlation coefficient.

 

TABLE VII

Correlation coefficients between dimensional weights

 

FINAL REMARKS

Composite indicators in the assessment of countries’ development have gained increasing importance vis-à-vis the enlargement of the concept and the subsequent need for indicators to capture that multidimensional nature in the quantitative evaluation of the domain. The crucial issues regarding composite indicators are the dimensions encompassed by each, and their respective weights. The second issue is less clarified in the literature and is thus at the center of this research.

The introduction posed three key research questions, and based upon the findings, our main conclusions can now be stated. The first question was about the correspondence between the public-opinion valuations of each dimension of development and the common procedure in the literature of assigning equal weight to each of these dimensions. Two major conclusions can be derived from our findings. On the one hand, respondents have assigned very similar weights to the different dimensions which seems to add legitimacy to the research option that predominates in the literature. On the other hand, some key dimensions of development are repeatedly identified as being more important than others – namely education and health. In contrast, both infrastructure and income are the dimensions that are least frequently identified as being of greater importance than the other dimensions of development. In short, even though the differences are not quantitatively significant, they are consistent in terms of the more important dimensions, thereby reducing the value of composite indicators that do not include them. However, the analysis of the main available indices in the literature confirms that these dimensions are, indeed, those that are most frequently included in the composite measurement of development.

The second question presented in the Introduction concerns the dependence of dimensional weights on some characteristics of the individuals – namely gender, age, and educational level. The evidence confirms the influence of these characteristics, although once again the impact is not great.

Finally, regarding the third research question on the possible existence of a relationship between dimensional weights, the data support a belief in such a relationship. The greatest positive relationship is between education and health. Respondents who assign more weight to the education dimension do the same for the health dimension. Other positive correlations are found between employment and health and between environment and values. The remaining bilateral relationships have a negative correlation, which comes as no surprise considering that relative weights are at the focus. The most significant inverse relationship is between income and environment.

There is still room for further research on the issue of weighting composite indicators of development. We emphasize some topics that seem most promising in the area. First of all, a larger survey would allow for a more robust look at the findings reported here. Second, a comparison of our findings with those obtained in different countries would be very beneficial, especially in comparisons between developed and developing countries. Third, broadening the elements of individual characterization of the respondents would enable a more in-depth evaluation of the factors determining the dimensional weights of development. Fourth, dimensional surveys questioning the relative importance of each sub-dimension is an extremely appealing avenue for further research. This procedure would have a double merit. First, it would enrich the corpus of information available, and second, it would allow for a more specific analysis, and thus a more insightful classification by respondents. Finally, a long-term study would permit monitoring individuals’ (possibly changing) attributions on the dimensions of development throughout their lives.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge the financial support from FCT PEst-OE/EGE/UI0315/2011. The usual disclaimer applies.

 

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NOTES

1 Even though some proposed indicators might not have the direct purpose of measuring development, they are likely to be interpreted as such.

2 See, for instance, Booysen (2002).

3 We adopt this procedure in all of the tables presented in this study.

4 The purpose of the mentioned criterion is to identify the most representative indicators and thereafter discard the least consolidated contributions in the literature.

5 The assignment of equal weights to all the dimensions might be followed by the option of unequal weighting for the possible sub-dimensions of each included dimension.

6 Nine respondents did not identify their gender and thus were excluded from the analysis.

7 292 respondents did not identify their age.

8 Eleven respondents did not identify their educational level.

9 Following the consultation of experts is the conventional practice of selecting weights in a participatory manner. Given that the higher educational level group proxies experts, a closer inspection on their perception about the fundamental components of the process of development would be valuable and very welcome.