Worlds apart james riley
Since 1900 the global average life expectancy has more than doubled and is now above 70 years. Many countries that not long ago were suffering from bad health are catching up rapidly. No country in the world has a lower life expectancy than the countries with the highest life expectancy in 1800. Over the last decades this global inequality decreased. Good health in the rich countries and persistently bad health in those countries that remained poor.
This led to a very high inequality in how health was distributed across the world. In the early 19th century, life expectancy started to increase in the early industrialized countries while it stayed low in the rest of the world. Life expectancy has increased rapidly since the Age of Enlightenment.
It tells us the average age of death in a population.Įstimates suggest that in a pre-modern, poor world, life expectancy was around 30 years in all regions of the world. Broader than the narrow metric of the infant and child mortality, which focus solely at mortality at a young age, life expectancy captures the mortality along the entire life course. Life expectancy is the key metric for assessing population health.