DW44
T20I Debutant
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2009
- Runs
- 7,314
Came across this chart yesterday though it's pretty old (from late 2015):

For larger image: http://assets.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2015/12/FT_15.12.17_religiousSalience.png
Unsurprisingly, the top of the list is dominated by some of the poorest, least developed countries in the world while the bottom of the list is mostly occupied by relatively prosperous states including some of the richest, most developed countries on the face of the planet.
The GDP per capita (PPP) and HDI figures for the top 10 and bottom 10:
(Note: HDI is human development index, a composite of education levels, income levels and life expectancy. The classifications are as follows: 0.8 or more is very high, 0.7-0.8 is high, 0.55 to 0.7 is medium and less than 0.55 is low. Global average per capita GDP is $15800).
Ethiopia - $1946 - 0.44
Senegal - $2577 - 0.46
Indonesia - $11720 - 0.68
Uganda - $2068 - 0.48
Pakistan - $5106 - 0.54
Burkina Faso - $1782 - 0.40
Tanzania - $3080 - 0.52
Nigeria - $5942 - 0.51
Philippines - $7728 - 0.67
The corresponding figures for the bottom 10, or least religious countries:
China - $15399 - 0.73
Japan - $41275 - 0.89
France - $42314 - 0.89
Australia - $48899 - 0.94
South Korea - $37740 - 0.90
Russia - $26490 - 0.80
UK - $42481 - 0.91
Spain - $36416 - 0.88
Germany - $48111 - 0.91
Ukraine - $8305 - 0.75
Ukraine is an outlier mainly because of the decades they spent as part of the Soviet Union but even they, despite their lower per capita GDP than Indonesia, the only member of the top 10 that has a higher per capita GDP than any member of the bottom ten, have a higher human development index reflecting the fact that education levels and healthcare there is superior to Indonesia.
The correlation between a given society's level of religiosity and it's level of economic progress is something that has been established for a long time but the causation has been a subject of debate for long. This correlation can best be observed in the United States, a continent sized country that is also ridiculously wealthy. Within the United States, there are great regional disparities and the poorest states like Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama are visibly more religious than the richest ones on the coast, particularly the eastern seaboard with the likes of Massachusetts, Vermont and NH (the three least religious states and also three of the richest).
Depending on which side of the argument one falls on, you can hold one factor responsible for the prevalence of the other but in reality, it's somewhere in between with both religion and poverty feeding off of each other and perpetuating their hold. The question is what's everyone's take on how this relation works, what are the factors that push nations towards religion or poverty and to what extent do people think that this correlation really exists (that question is pertinent because this being PP, the majority position will likely be to deny the existence of any correlation)?

For larger image: http://assets.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2015/12/FT_15.12.17_religiousSalience.png
Unsurprisingly, the top of the list is dominated by some of the poorest, least developed countries in the world while the bottom of the list is mostly occupied by relatively prosperous states including some of the richest, most developed countries on the face of the planet.
The GDP per capita (PPP) and HDI figures for the top 10 and bottom 10:
(Note: HDI is human development index, a composite of education levels, income levels and life expectancy. The classifications are as follows: 0.8 or more is very high, 0.7-0.8 is high, 0.55 to 0.7 is medium and less than 0.55 is low. Global average per capita GDP is $15800).
Ethiopia - $1946 - 0.44
Senegal - $2577 - 0.46
Indonesia - $11720 - 0.68
Uganda - $2068 - 0.48
Pakistan - $5106 - 0.54
Burkina Faso - $1782 - 0.40
Tanzania - $3080 - 0.52
Nigeria - $5942 - 0.51
Philippines - $7728 - 0.67
The corresponding figures for the bottom 10, or least religious countries:
China - $15399 - 0.73
Japan - $41275 - 0.89
France - $42314 - 0.89
Australia - $48899 - 0.94
South Korea - $37740 - 0.90
Russia - $26490 - 0.80
UK - $42481 - 0.91
Spain - $36416 - 0.88
Germany - $48111 - 0.91
Ukraine - $8305 - 0.75
Ukraine is an outlier mainly because of the decades they spent as part of the Soviet Union but even they, despite their lower per capita GDP than Indonesia, the only member of the top 10 that has a higher per capita GDP than any member of the bottom ten, have a higher human development index reflecting the fact that education levels and healthcare there is superior to Indonesia.
The correlation between a given society's level of religiosity and it's level of economic progress is something that has been established for a long time but the causation has been a subject of debate for long. This correlation can best be observed in the United States, a continent sized country that is also ridiculously wealthy. Within the United States, there are great regional disparities and the poorest states like Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama are visibly more religious than the richest ones on the coast, particularly the eastern seaboard with the likes of Massachusetts, Vermont and NH (the three least religious states and also three of the richest).
Depending on which side of the argument one falls on, you can hold one factor responsible for the prevalence of the other but in reality, it's somewhere in between with both religion and poverty feeding off of each other and perpetuating their hold. The question is what's everyone's take on how this relation works, what are the factors that push nations towards religion or poverty and to what extent do people think that this correlation really exists (that question is pertinent because this being PP, the majority position will likely be to deny the existence of any correlation)?