For a Kinder, Gentler Society
Quality of Life, Balance of Power and Nuclear Weapons:
A Statistical Yearbook for Statesmen and Citizens (2008)
  • Alexander V. Avakov
Reviews Table of Contents Introduction «Back
Quality of Life, Balance of Power and Nuclear Weapons:. A Statistical Yearbook for Statesmen and Citizens (2008)
Sound Bite
Economic, demographic and military indicators establish the pecking order for 230 countries, with estimates of all nuclear arsenals including non-signatory nations; the quality of life and balance of power are measured since 1500, with detailed data on the developed market economies. The first sections of economic and military data are updated in annual yearbooks; the last section of this volume establishes a baseline of historic economic data. � 

About the Author

Alexander V. Avakov was born in the USSR. Interested in economic statistics since childhood, he accomplished his formal university education in mathematics and mathematical economics with additional studies in economics, philosophy, law, politics, anthropology, sociology and psychology.

As a result of early political maturity he was arrested in 1975 for distributing liberal-minded leaflets at the university. Sentenced to a year and half of hard labor, he was sent to a KGB-run camp for political prisoners. After completing the prison term, he emigrated from the Soviet Union and has since settled with his family in the United States.

Mr. Avakov has published several books with Algora, including Plato’s Dream Realized: Surveillance and Citizen Rights, from KGB to FBI, and a variety of statistical studies analyzing the relative power of nations in terms both economic and military, including undeclared nuclear weapons. Previously published books in Russian include, among others, Autobiography of the Soviet Anti-Soviet Philosopher, and Welcome to the New Security State

About the Book
Members of the US Congress and others who care about the foundations of power politics in the nuclear age will find facts that speak for themselves in this novel yearbook. This statistical annual presents fundamental data in four sections: (1)...
Members of the US Congress and others who care about the foundations of power politics in the nuclear age will find facts that speak for themselves in this novel yearbook. This statistical annual presents fundamental data in four sections: (1) Quality of Life, (2) Balance of Power, (3) Developed Market Economies since 1960, and (4) Economic History since 1500. It contains data that is generally not available elsewhere. Sections 1 and 2 give statistics for 230 countries. The World Bank and Encyclopedia Britannica provide statistical data for a maximum of about 160 countries. The actual number of countries in World Bank statistical tables is even smaller. The CIA World Factbook gives data for about 230 countries but that data is limited in scope and is imprecise. Other statistical publications are even less satisfactory. The author has managed to increase the number of countries tallied by writing proprietary software utilizing statistical regressions, selecting data which, first of all, is important and, second, which allows for high correlation coefficients for these regressions. Section 2 includes data about nuclear delivery systems and the number of nuclear warheads of all nuclear powers. This is based on information from reputable sources. Among others, it includes estimates of the Israeli nuclear arsenal which usually do not appear in the press. Official estimates of Russian military expenditures distributed by US and British intelligence communities are methodologically flawed. Such estimates claim to give a picture of military expenditures of the countries of the world at market exchange rates; at the same time, they apparently cite Russian military expense figures at purchasing power parities, thus inflating these numbers in comparison to those of other countries. Such deceptive practices of the Anglo-American intelligence services are counter-balanced by presenting two different tables, showing military expenditures estimates both at market exchange rates and by purchasing power parities. Section 3 gives data on the topic of health care. It seems that public health expenditures as a share of total health expenditures has a stronger correlation with the comparative level (and the rates of improvement) of the main health care indicators than the absolute level (measured as a percent of GDP) of total health expenditures. The data demonstrates that the US has the lowest public health expenditure of developed market economies and is increasingly lagging behind other countries by main health care indicators. The proposed introduction of national health insurance in the US would probably mean some sort of tax increase. The author therefore also seeks to shed light on modern ideological debates about the share of taxation in GDP and its influence on rates of growth. Surprisingly enough, the empirical data for the developed market economies do not seem to support the popular idea that low taxes are strongly correlated with higher rates of growth; depending on how the data are analyzed, the appropriate correlations are either low or even the reverse of what is commonly believed. Section 4 primarily uses data which has become available through the groundbreaking works of Angus Maddison. Using interpolation techniques explained in that section to slightly adjust Maddison's data, the author received numbers for population, GDP per capita, and total GDP for 48 countries for the period since year 1500, figures which seem to be credible and which are not readily available elsewhere.
Table of Contents
1. Quality of Life 5 Table 1.1 Gross National Income at Market Exchange Rates Per Capita, 2005 5 Table 1.2 Infant Mortality Rate per 1,000 Live Births, 2005 10 Table 1.3 Life Expectancy at Bir
1. Quality of Life 5 Table 1.1 Gross National Income at Market Exchange Rates Per Capita, 2005 5 Table 1.2 Infant Mortality Rate per 1,000 Live Births, 2005 10 Table 1.3 Life Expectancy at Birth, 2005 15 Table 1.4 Gross Domestic Product at PPP Per Capita, 2005 20 Table 1.5 Economic Quality-of-Life Index, 2005 25 Table 1.6 Societal Integration Index, Degree of Openness in Political Process, 2005 30 Table 1.7 Civil and Political Rights Index, 2005 35 Table 1.8 Human Development Index, 2004 40 Table 1.9 Gini Coefficient of Income Inequality, 2005 45 Table 1.10 Human Rights Index, 2005 50 Table 1.11 Economico-Political Quality-of-Life Index, 2005 55 2. Balance of Power 61 Table 2.1 Population, Thousands, 2005 61 Table 2.2 GDP at Purchasing Power Parities, 2005 66 Table 2.3 GNI at Market Exchange Rates, 2005 71 Table 2.4 Armed Forces, Thousands, 2005 76 Table 2.5 Military Expenditures as Share of GDP, Percent, 2005 81 Table 2.6 Foreign Military Aid, 2005 86 Table 2.7 Military Expenditures at PPP, 2005 91 Table 2.8 Military Expenditures at Market Exchange Rates, 2005 96 Table 2.9 Operational Offensive Nuclear Delivery Systems, 2006 101 Table 2.10 Operational Nuclear Warheads, 2006, Strategic 106 Table 2.11 Operational Nuclear Warheads, 2006, Sub-Strategic 106 Table 2.12 Operational Nuclear Warheads, 2006, Total Strategic and Sub-Strategic 106 Table 2.13 States and Weapons of Mass Destruction, 2006 107 3. Developed Market Economies 109 TABLE 3.1 GNI PER CAPITA AT MARKET EXCHANGE RATE by Decade TABLE 3.2 GDP PER CAPITA AT PPP OF DEVELOPED MARKET ECONOMIES 115 TABLE 3.3 INFANT MORTALITY OF DEVELOPED MARKET ECONOMIES 121 TABLE 3.4 LIFE EXPECTANCY, DEVELOPED MARKET ECONOMIES 128 TABLE 3.5 HEALTH EXPENDITURES OF YEAR 2004 135 TABLE 3.6 TAXES IN DEVELOPED MARKET ECONOMIES 137 4. Economic History, 1500'2005 143 TABLE 4.1 POPULATION, THOUSANDS Since 1500 TABLE 4.2 GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT AT PURCHASING POWER PARITIES Since 1500 TABLE 4.3 GROSS NATIONAL INCOME AT MARKET EXCHANGE RATES Since 1500 TABLE 4.4 GDP AT PURCHASING POWER PARITIES PER CAPITA, Since 1500 TABLE 4.5 GNI AT MARKET EXCHANGE RATES PER CAPITA, Since 1500 TABLE 4.6 POPULATION GROWTH RATES 243 TABLE 4.7 GDP/GNI GROWTH RATES 261 TABLE 4.8 GDP/GNI PER CAPITA GROWTH RATES 279 APPENDIX: Methodology and Definitions Selection of Indicators Principal Component The Economic Quality-of-Life Index The Human Rights Index The Economico-Political Quality-of-Life Index Gross National Income at Market Exchange Rates Infant Mortality Life Expectancy Gross Domestic Product at Purchasing Power Parities The Societal Integration Index The Civil and Political Rights Index The Human Development Index The Gini Coefficient of Income Inequality Population Armed Forces Personnel Military Expenditures Operational Offensive Nuclear Delivery Systems Operational Nuclear Warheads States Possessing, Pursuing or Capable of Acquiring Weapons of Mass Destruction Developed Market Economies The Scope of Data for Developed Market Economies Total Health Expenditures Public Health Expenditures Taxes as Share of GDP Growth Rates of Taxes as Share of GDP Historical Data Since 1500 References

Pages 326
Year: 2007
LC Classification: HC59.3.A83
Dewey code: 306.09'0511021'dc22
BISAC: REF027000
BISAC: HIS027000
BISAC: BUS023000
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ISBN: 978-0-87586-594-2
Price: USD 26.95
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Price: USD 45.00
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