The Gender Inequality Index (GII) is a composite measure of gender inequality based on three dimensions: reproductive health, empowerment, and labor-market participation. A higher GII score means greater inequality between men and women, and it is a core development measure in AP Human Geography Topic 7.3.
The Gender Inequality Index (GII) is a composite statistic that measures how unequal outcomes are between men and women in a country. It pulls from three dimensions, and you need to know all three: reproductive health (things like maternal health and adolescent birth rates), empowerment (women's representation in government and access to education), and labor-market participation (the share of women working compared to men).
The scoring runs opposite to what your gut expects. A GII near 0 means men and women have nearly equal outcomes, while a score closer to 1 means severe inequality. So a low GII is the good outcome. The big idea behind the GII is that money alone doesn't tell you how developed a country is. GDP per capita can look healthy while half the population is shut out of school, jobs, and political power. The GII exists to catch exactly that gap.
The GII lives in Topic 7.3 (Measures of Development) in Unit 7 and directly supports learning objective 7.3.A, which asks you to describe social and economic measures of development. The CED names it explicitly in EK SPS-7.C.2, listing its three components: reproductive health, indices of empowerment, and labor-market participation. That makes the GII one of the few measures you're expected to know piece by piece, not just by name. It also feeds the bigger Unit 7 argument that development is multidimensional. GDP measures output, HDI measures human well-being, and the GII measures whether that well-being is actually shared across genders.
Keep studying AP Human Geography Unit 7
Human Development Index (HDI) (Unit 7)
The HDI measures a country's overall well-being using income, education, and life expectancy, but it averages everyone together. The GII is the follow-up question. It asks whether women are getting an equal share of that development. A country can post a solid HDI and still have a high (bad) GII.
Gender Development Index (GDI) (Unit 7)
The GDI compares men's and women's HDI scores directly, while the GII uses its own three dimensions (reproductive health, empowerment, labor participation). Think of the GDI as 'HDI split by gender' and the GII as a separate inequality scorecard.
Feminization of Poverty (Unit 7)
The GII puts a number on the pattern the feminization of poverty describes. Where women are locked out of formal jobs, education, and political power, poverty falls hardest on them, and that shows up as a high GII score.
Gender Gap (Units 2 & 7)
Gender gaps in education and employment connect Unit 7 back to Unit 2 population concepts. When women gain schooling and workforce access (lowering the GII), fertility rates typically fall, which links gender equality directly to the demographic transition.
The GII shows up most often in multiple-choice questions, and they test it in predictable ways. Expect stems that ask which component is NOT part of the GII (so memorize the three: reproductive health, empowerment, labor-market participation), what a high GII score indicates (greater inequality, not greater equality), what policy would improve a country's score (expanding girls' education, increasing women's political representation, or improving maternal health care), and what spatial pattern GII scores show on a world map (generally higher inequality in peripheral and semi-peripheral countries, lower in the core). No released FRQ has used the term verbatim, but the GII is a strong piece of evidence for any free-response question about why GDP alone is an incomplete measure of development.
Both measure gender disparity, but they work differently. The GDI takes the HDI and splits it by gender, comparing women's HDI to men's. The GII is its own index built from three distinct dimensions: reproductive health, empowerment, and labor-market participation. Quick check for the exam: if the question mentions reproductive health or political representation, it's the GII. If it's comparing male and female HDI values, it's the GDI.
The GII measures gender inequality across exactly three dimensions: reproductive health, empowerment, and labor-market participation.
A higher GII score means greater inequality between men and women, so a score near 0 is the goal, not a score near 1.
The GII is named in EK SPS-7.C.2 under Topic 7.3, so its three components are fair game for direct multiple-choice questions.
Countries improve their GII by expanding girls' education, increasing women's political representation, improving maternal health, and bringing more women into the formal workforce.
Mapped globally, GII scores tend to be lower (better) in core countries and higher in peripheral countries, mirroring overall development patterns.
The GII exists because GDP and even HDI can hide gender disparities; a country can look developed on average while women are systematically excluded.
The GII is a composite measure of gender inequality built from three dimensions: reproductive health, empowerment, and labor-market participation. It appears in Topic 7.3 (Measures of Development) and is named in the CED under EK SPS-7.C.2.
No, it's the opposite. GII scores run from 0 to 1, where 0 means men and women have nearly equal outcomes and scores closer to 1 mean severe inequality. This reversal is a favorite multiple-choice trap.
The GDI compares women's HDI to men's HDI, so it's built on income, education, and life expectancy split by gender. The GII uses its own three dimensions: reproductive health, empowerment, and labor-market participation. If a question mentions maternal health or seats in parliament, it's the GII.
Reproductive health (maternal health and adolescent birth rates), empowerment (education and political representation for women), and labor-market participation (women's share of the workforce). The exam loves asking which item is NOT a GII component, so know these cold.
No. GDP, GNP, and GNI are separate economic measures of development listed in EK SPS-7.C.1. The GII deliberately leaves national income out because the whole point is to measure gender disparity that income statistics can hide.
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