recently I wrote about the trend of low HDI scores in the US South and Appalachia. This time I want to focus on a metric found from the same source. The metric of life expectancy from birth is actually a good way of comparing US congressional districts to other countries.
The CIA World Factbook has a listing of most nations’ average life expectancy from birth here. It’s important to note that because this is an actual year-based estimate, the rankings for congressional districts and countries is tightly ranked, and misreporting statistics from developing countries is a possibility. I want to stress that these are averages so while someone living 2 years less might not seem like much, but this is the result of everyone in a district/country living longer or shorter lives. Some of these statistics will make you question the world.
While I’ll mention the regional disparity briefly, I’d like to focus on the comparison of life expectancy with certain US congressional districts (CDs) and other countries as well.
Here is a map of the bottom 100 CDs in the US:
Many things stand out compared to the HDI graph representing the bottom 100, though the US South+Appalachia region is similarly represented in this map.
Firstly, the West Coast does considerably better than the East Coast, with only a single CD making the list west of Texas. Second, cities in many Eastern States have lower comparative life expectancies than their HDI suggests. Regions of the Rust Belt including North Ohio and the Detroit metro area score poorly. The mid-Atlantic cities Philadelphia and Baltimore do poorly, but the rest of the Northeast does well.
This map shows the bottom 25 districts in the US, these districts only live 72 to to 75 years on average (I’ll provide a complete table of average life expectancy later).
Much like the bottom 25 districts by HDI, the bottom 25 in life expectancy are almost all inside the US South and Appalachian regions. The Mississippi embayment and the Kentucky-West Virginia border are the worst hit.
Here is a listing of the bottom 100 districts by age. But I’ve added a column for countries with similar life expectancies for the bottom 50. I got these numbers here and here.
West Virgini | 3 | 72.9 | Egypt | 72.66 |
Kentucky | 5 | 73.6 | Thailand | 73.6 |
Mississippi | 2 | 73.6 | Bulgaria | 73.59 |
Alabama | 4 | 74.3 | Serbia | 74.32 |
Pennsylvania | 2 | 74.4 | Mauritius | 74.48 |
Oklahoma | 2 | 74.5 | Algeria | 74.5 |
Pennsylvania | 1 | 74.5 | Colombia | 74.55 |
Georgia | 2 | 74.6 | China | 74.68 |
Alabama | 3 | 74.7 | Syria | 74.69 |
Alabama | 7 | 74.7 | Cook Islands | 74.7 |
Louisiana | 7 | 74.8 | Hungary | 74.79 |
Arkansas | 1 | 74.8 | Tunisia | 75.01 |
Tennessee | 8 | 75.0 | Lebanon | 75.01 |
Tennessee | 9 | 75.0 | West Bank | 75.01 |
Mississippi | 3 | 75.0 | Macedonia | 75.14 |
North Caroli | 1 | 75.0 | Tonga | 75.16 |
Louisiana | 5 | 75.0 | ” “ | |
Arkansas | 4 | 75.1 | ” “ | |
Georgia | 1 | 75.1 | ” “ | |
Missouri | 8 | 75.1 | ” “ | |
Alabama | 1 | 75.1 | ” “ | |
Georgia | 8 | 75.1 | ” “ | |
Mississippi | 4 | 75.2 | ” “ | |
South Caroli | 6 | 75.3 | Lithuania | 75.34 |
Florida | 4 | 75.3 | ” “ | |
Louisiana | 4 | 75.3 | ” “ | |
Mississippi | 1 | 75.4 | Antigua and Barbuda | 75.48 |
Georgia | 12 | 75.4 | ” “ | |
Arkansas | 2 | 75.4 | ” “ | |
Michigan | 13 | 75.4 | ” “ | |
Michigan | 14 | 75.4 | ” “ | |
Kentucky | 1 | 75.5 | ” “ | |
Maryland | 7 | 75.5 | ” “ | |
Louisiana | 6 | 75.5 | ” “ | |
District of Columbia | 75.6 | ” “ | ||
Louisiana | 1 | 75.6 | ” “ | |
Oklahoma | 4 | 75.6 | ” “ | |
South Caroli | 5 | 75.7 | Ecuador | 75.73 |
Louisiana | 3 | 75.7 | Croatia | 75.79 |
Alabama | 2 | 75.7 | ||
Alabama | 6 | 75.7 | ||
Tennessee | 1 | 75.7 | ||
Virginia | 9 | 75.7 | ||
West Virgini | 2 | 75.9 | Morocco | 75.9 |
Louisiana | 2 | 75.9 | ||
Tennessee | 4 | 75.9 | ||
Oklahoma | 5 | 76.0 | Poland | 76.05 |
North Caroli | 7 | 76.0 | ||
Oklahoma | 3 | 76.0 | ||
Oklahoma | 1 | 76.0 | ||
Virginia | 3 | 76.0 | ||
Alabama | 5 | 76.1 | ||
Texas | 1 | 76.1 | ||
Ohio | 6 | 76.2 | ||
Kentucky | 4 | 76.3 | ||
Illinois | 12 | 76.3 | ||
South Caroli | 3 | 76.3 | ||
Texas | 13 | 76.4 | ||
Tennessee | 7 | 76.4 | ||
Virginia | 4 | 76.5 | ||
Georgia | 3 | 76.5 | Mexico | 76.47 |
Texas | 8 | 76.5 | ||
Michigan | 5 | 76.6 | ||
Tennessee | 6 | 76.6 | ||
Kentucky | 3 | 76.6 | ||
Tennessee | 3 | 76.6 | ||
Indiana | 7 | 76.6 | ||
Texas | 5 | 76.6 | ||
Michigan | 11 | 76.7 | ||
North Caroli | 10 | 76.7 | ||
Missouri | 5 | 76.7 | ||
West Virgini | 1 | 76.7 | ||
North Caroli | 3 | 76.7 | ||
South Caroli | 4 | 76.7 | ||
Texas | 19 | 76.8 | ||
North Caroli | 8 | 76.8 | ||
Texas | 2 | 76.8 | ||
Georgia | 11 | 76.9 | ||
Ohio | 15 | 76.9 | ||
North Caroli | 2 | 76.9 | ||
Maryland | 3 | 76.9 | ||
Indiana | 1 | 76.9 | ||
California | 2 | 76.9 | ||
Georgia | 10 | 76.9 | ||
Maryland | 2 | 77.0 | ||
Ohio | 17 | 77.0 | ||
Ohio | 9 | 77.0 | ||
Missouri | 4 | 77.1 | ||
North Caroli | 5 | 77.1 | ||
Virginia | 5 | 77.1 | ||
Kansas | 4 | 77.1 | ||
Indiana | 8 | 77.1 | ||
Wisconsin | 4 | 77.2 | ||
Missouri | 3 | 77.2 | ||
Tennessee | 2 | 77.2 | ||
Ohio | 10 | 77.2 | ||
Ohio | 11 | 77.2 | ||
Tennessee | 5 | 77.2 | ||
Indiana | 6 | 77.2 | ||
Texas | 14 | 77.2 |
Surprisingly, many countries perform better than US congressional districts. Eastern Kentucky has the same life expectancy of someone in Thailand, think about that for a second. Not only are parts of the US much lower than the US average, they’re actually much lower than most developed countries. The US ranks 50th overall on the CIA World Factbook, th0ugh a number of meaningless micro-states and dependent territories distort this ranking somewhat. US life expectancy raises many important questions about access to healthcare and our dietary habits among other things.
Finally, I want to point out that some of these statistics are hard to accept. Jordan ranks higher than the Netherlands, for example. and Bosnia, despite its violent recent history has a higher life expectancy than Denmark. I’m not necessarily accusing these countries of outright dishonesty, but perhaps their methodology was vulnerable to inaccuracies. There are hundreds of thousands of Bedouin in Jordan, many of them weren’t born in hospitals so its possible that age estimates could be wrong. This isn’t the first time I’ve suspected this, in a much earlier blog on female literacy I found that the country of Georgia claims 100% literacy, despite having a GDP per capita lower than Syria, and a very rare and complicated language, in addition to smaller languages like Tsez being spoken. Take these statistics for what you will, its intriguing no less.
The United States is really composed of a bunch of little countries. It is really cool to see how there are different rules in each state and how each of them keep order. I am surprised that there isn’t more war between states but I think someday there will be. There is too much pride in each one for bad things not to happen some day. It might not be a bad idea to just have one law for all states instead of them being able to make their own. Thoughts?
wordpress says you’re a spam bot, but I’m not so sure. I think regional identity in the US has the potential to increase over time, if polarization of politics in Washington continues. I think this because recent events and polls have shown a very divided America. I think US regional divisions will increase if we find more logjams in Washington DC like the debt debacle because Americans might find regional solutions more palatable than a constantly divided national government. But I think this would take a considerable amount of economic distress to be realized anytime soon.
This is a well written article that I have bookmarked for future reference. Have a fun.
So Obama signs and the debt bill becomes law. Everybody heaves a sigh of relief and life carries on as before – but for what time frame? There’s only so much road you can kick the can down and America is getting close to the end of it. What then?
I think the biggest issues pertaining to US debt in the medium and long term will be our entitlement spending and tax policy. Specifically, the US is going to have to raise taxes to pre-bush levels if we ever hope to maintain a neutral budget, and secondly, we will have to change our entitlement policy at some point to offset the rising costs associated with healthcare, as our population is aging quickly and without some sort of overhaul, is set to increase. If I had control of the world, I would say we need a single payer system like those in the UK, the Netherlands, or Germany, where efficiency is either comparable or better than in the US and spending is SIGNIFICANTLY less. the US currently spends 16% of GDP on healthcare (8.7% private, 7.3% public) compared to 8.4% for the UK (6.9% public, 1.5% private), 10.4% for Germany (8% public, 2.4% private), or 9% for Holland (7.3% public, 1.7% private). I might even write a blog about this, I think people fail to realize that while the US has some 40 million uninsured, we still spend an enormous amount on healthcare. Costs are key. here are my sources.
Thanks, when countries develop unevenly part 1b: life expectancy US vs other countries. sperg lord is a really lovely reading. I love the information posted here regurarly and I keep coming back here for more. Just keep updating it.