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Revision as of 03:04, 23 November 2003 by TwinsFan48 (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Developed nations are countries that have achieved (currently or historically) a high degree of industrialization, and which enjoy the higher standards of living which wealth and technology make possible. There is a strong correlation between countries having this type of status and their possessing robust democratic institutions.
Countries not belonging in this category are sometimes euphemistically called "developing nations", underdeveloped nations, or, in extreme cases least developed countries. Other terms sometimes used to describe the dichotomy are first world/third world (the second world was once reserved for Communist countries), North/South, or industrialized countries/non-industrialized countries. The term "Western countries" has similar, though not identical, connotations.
The United Nations Human Development Index for 2003 indicates that the following countries have a "high level of human development." They are, in statistical order:
- Norway
- Iceland
- Sweden
- Australia
- Netherlands
- Belgium
- United States
- Canada
- Japan
- Switzerland
- Denmark
- Republic of Ireland
- United Kingdom
- Finland
- Luxembourg
- Austria
- France
- Germany
- Spain
- New Zealand
- Italy
- Israel
- Portugal
- Greece
- Cyprus
- Hong Kong
- Barbados
- Singapore
- Slovenia
- South Korea
- Brunei Darussalam
- Czech Republic
- Malta
- Argentina
- Poland
- Seychelles
- Bahrain
- Hungary
- Slovakia
- Uruguay
- Estonia
- Costa Rica
- Chile
- Qatar
- Lithuania
- Kuwait
- Croatia
- United Arab Emirates
- The Bahamas
- Latvia
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Cuba
- Belarus
- Trinidad and Tobago
- Mexico
It should be noted, however, that a high level of "human" development may not necessarily indicate a high level of economic development.