Tibet Human Development Dashboard — Canada Tibet Committee
Tibet Human Development Monitor · 2010–2025
Data Report

Development in TibetTold by China's Own Numbers

Beijing claims historic progress in Tibet. The data — drawn exclusively from Chinese official sources, national census bulletins, and government budget reports — tell a more complicated story. Tibet ranks last in China on every major human development indicator. After decades of massive state investment, the gap is not closing.

Primary Sources PRC Official Statistics
Period Covered 2010 – 2025
Analytical Framework UNDP HDI Dimensions
Province Ranking 31st of 31 (Last)
⚠  Key Finding: Tibet is the only province in China where life expectancy remains below the global average of 73.7 years. It has ranked last in every census since 1990.
31st / Last
Life Expectancy (2020)
72.2
years  ·  National avg: 77.9 yrs  ·  Gap: −5.7 yrs
31st / Last
Urban Illiteracy — Lhasa (2020)
13.2%
National urban avg: 2.67%  ·  Nearly 5× higher
31st / Last
Maternal Mortality (2023)
38.6
per 100,000 births  ·  National ~15  ·  2.6× higher
~92%
Central Transfers (2023)
12:1
Expenditure-to-revenue ratio  ·  ¥280.9B spent vs ¥23.7B earned
+100%
University Attainment (2020)
11,019
per 100,000  ·  National avg: 15,467  ·  Still 29th of 31
+81%
Han Population Growth in TAR
443K
Han residents in TAR (2020)  ·  Tibetan growth: +15.5% same period
01

Health & Longevity

Life Expectancy: TAR vs National Average Census data 1990–2020
31st Place — Every Census Since 1990

Tibet has ranked dead last among all 31 Chinese provinces in life expectancy across every national census: 1990, 2000, 2010, and 2020. The gap narrowed from 8.9 years in 1990 to 5.7 years in 2020. At this rate of convergence, Tibet would reach the national average around 2070.

Tibet is the global outlier

Tibet is the only province in China where life expectancy (72.2 years in 2020) remains below the global average of 73.7 years. All other 30 provinces have exceeded this threshold.

Life expectancy 2020 (selected)
Shanghai
82.6
National Avg
77.9
Global Avg
73.7
Tibet (TAR)
72.2
Maternal Mortality Rate (per 100,000)
Infant Mortality Rate (per 1,000 live births)
Health Indicator TAR Value Year National Avg TAR/National Ratio TAR Rank
Life expectancy at birth72.19 yrs202077.93 yrs−5.74 yrs31st / Last
Maternal mortality rate38.63 / 100k2023~15 / 100k~2.6×31st / Last
Infant mortality rate5.37‰2023~5.0‰~1.1×~30th
Hospital delivery rate99.15%2023~99%Parity
Physicians per 1,0003.32024~3.5Near parity~25th
02

Education & Knowledge

University Attainment — per 100,000 people
Running to Stand Still

University attainment in the TAR doubled between 2010–2020, growing faster than the national average in percentage terms. Yet the absolute gap widened: from 3,423 per 100,000 below the national average to 4,448 below. The TAR moved from 29th to 29th.

Education IndicatorTARNational
Lhasa illiteracy rate (2020)13.23%2.67%
Lhasa illiteracy rate (2010)16.70%4.08%
University per 100,000 (2020)11,01915,467
University per 100,000 (2010)5,5078,930
9-yr education consolidation (2022)97.73%~95%
Kindergarten gross enrolment (2022)89.52%~90%
The Linguistic Barrier

The illiteracy rate in Lhasa — the most urbanised, most invested city in the TAR — was 13.23% in 2020, nearly five times the national average. The TAR's educational expansion is occurring alongside a shift to Mandarin-medium instruction that creates a structural mismatch between credentials and the language competency required to access formal employment, civil service positions, and professional careers. A student can complete nine years of schooling and still face systematic barriers in the Mandarin-medium job market.

03

Income, Inequality & Poverty

Urban vs Rural Per Capita Income (CNY)
Subsidies vs Productivity

Tibet's rural income growth ranked 1st nationally for approximately 18 consecutive years. But in 2023, transfer income (government subsidies) grew at 14.0% while wage income grew at 8.5%. Tibetan incomes are rising because Beijing is paying more subsidies — not because Tibetans are gaining productive economic positions.

Income Indicator2023 ValueTrend
Urban per capita disposable income¥51,900↑ +5.4%
Rural per capita disposable income¥19,924↑ +12.8%
Urban–rural income ratio2.60 : 1↓ Narrowing
Rural transfer income growth+14.0%Subsidy-driven
Rural wage income growth+8.5%Below transfer
Rural minimum guarantee recipients144,548↑ Rising
Urban minimum guarantee recipients23,126Stable
Poverty elimination timeline
2015
25.32% poverty rate — all 74 counties designated national poverty counties. 590,000 registered poor.
2019
Absolute poverty declared eliminated. 628,000 lifted out of poverty. Per capita income of poor rose from ¥1,499 to ¥9,328.
2023
144,548 on rural minimum living guarantee. 23,126 on urban guarantee. Administrative reclassification, not structural exit from vulnerability.
2024
Former poor income +12.5% — growth continues but remains transfer-payment-dependent. Private investment fell 32.7% in 2022.
Urban–Rural Income Ratio Comparison (2023)
TAR 2001
5.5:1
TAR 2015
3.1:1
TAR 2023
2.6:1
National 2023
2.4:1
Beijing 2023
1.5:1
04

Fiscal Dependency & Economic Structure

TAR Public Revenue vs Expenditure (billion CNY)
The Indicator China Does Not Discuss

In 2023, the TAR earned ¥23.66 billion in public revenue and spent ¥280.91 billion — a ratio of nearly 12:1. Central transfers covered approximately 92% of all public expenditure. After two decades of double-digit GDP growth, this ratio has not meaningfully improved.

YearRevenue (B¥)Expenditure (B¥)Transfer %
2010~7.0~74.0~90%+
2015~12.0~138.0~91%
2020~20.0~230.0~91%
2022~22.0~260.0~91%
202323.66280.91~92%
For Comparison

China's average provincial reliance on central transfers is approximately 20–30% of public expenditure. The TAR's 92% is not a sign of generous investment — it is a sign of structural economic non-viability that two decades of rapid GDP growth has failed to address.

05

Demographic Shifts & Labour Market

Population Growth in TAR: Tibetan vs Han (2010–2020)
The Demographic Scissors

Between 2010 and 2020, the Han population in the TAR grew by 81% (from ~245,000 to 443,370) while the Tibetan population grew by only 15.5%. This occurred during the decade of fastest urbanisation — when the urban share of the population rose 13 percentage points. The people filling the urbanising, formally employed economy are disproportionately non-Tibetan.

Demographic Indicator20102020Change
Han population in TAR~245,000443,370+81%
Tibetan population in TAR~2,716,000~3,137,901+15.5%
Urban share of population22.7%35.7%+13 pts
Total TAR population~3,002,0003,648,100+21.5%
Farmer/herder employment transfers~630–693K/yr
The Missing Data: No Ethnic Disaggregation in Economic Statistics

Chinese official statistics track ethnicity in population census data — but never disaggregate employment, wages, enterprise ownership, or professional attainment by ethnicity. This absence is not neutral. It makes the structural marginalisation of Tibetans in their own modernising economy invisible in official accounts, while being structurally implied by the demographic data that is published. The 8th National Census (due ~2030) will be the decisive data point: if Han population growth again substantially outpaces Tibetan growth in the TAR's urbanising economy, the structural trajectory described here will be confirmed beyond reasonable doubt — using only China's own data.

06

UNDP HDI Approximation — Tibet vs China

The UNDP does not publish sub-national HDI scores for China. The following applies the standard three-dimension methodology — longevity, knowledge, and standard of living — to the data assembled in this report. All figures from Chinese official sources.
HDI Dimension Indicator TAR Value National Average TAR Rank Assessment
Long & Healthy Life Life expectancy at birth72.19 yrs (2020)77.93 yrs31st / LastBelow global avg
Maternal mortality rate38.63/100k (2023)~15/100k31st / Last~2.6× national
Knowledge Adult illiteracy (Lhasa, 2020)13.23%2.67%31st / Last5× national rate
University attainment / 100k11,019 (2020)15,467~29thGap widening
Standard of Living Urban per capita income¥51,900 (2023)¥49,283Top 5Subsidy-inflated
Urban–rural income ratio2.60:1 (2023)~2.4:1~27thTransfer-driven
Structural Inclusion Central transfers as % of expenditure~92% (2023)~20–30%Extreme outlierNo fiscal autonomy
Han population growth 2010–20+81%~0% (net)Highest in ChinaDemographic shift
China's Claim
What the Data Show
📈 GDP growth averaging 9–10% annually
True — but driven entirely by central state subsidies and infrastructure investment flowing through non-Tibetan economic actors.
🔴 92% of public expenditure from Beijing
After 20 years of growth, fiscal self-sufficiency has not improved. Local revenue covers less than 1 yuan in 12 of public spending.
📉 Poverty eliminated in 2019
Formally accurate — 628,000 lifted from registered poverty. But 167,674 remain on minimum living guarantees in 2023.
🔴 Income growth is subsidy-driven
Transfer payments grew at 14% in 2023 vs 8.5% for wages. Rising incomes reflect increasing dependency, not productive empowerment.
🏥 Historic health improvements
Genuine — infant mortality fell 94% since 1990. Hospital delivery rate 99.15%. These are real achievements that cannot be dismissed.
🔴 Still last in every health indicator
At the current rate of convergence in life expectancy, Tibet reaches the national average around 2070. MMR remains 2.6× the national rate.
📚 Education access expanding rapidly
True — school enrolment rising, university attainment doubled 2010–2020. Infrastructure investment is real.
🔴 Literacy gap not closing proportionally
Lhasa illiteracy (13.23%) remains 5× the national rate. Mandarin-medium instruction creates structural barriers for Tibetan-background students.
07

Critical Assessment: Growth Is Not Development

The UNDP Human Development Report framework distinguishes explicitly between economic growth and human development. Growth is an increase in GDP. Development is the expansion of people's capabilities — their effective freedom to lead lives they have reason to value.

The Core Finding

Tibet has improved on every indicator. Tibet also remains last or near last on every indicator across all 31 Chinese provinces. Both things are simultaneously true, and their co-existence across three decades of massive state investment is precisely what requires explanation.

📌
Trajectory vs Structure
China's claim rests on trajectory — things are improving. The counter-argument rests on structure: improving toward what position? Who benefits? By what mechanism?
📌
The 2070 Problem
At the current rate of life expectancy convergence, Tibet reaches the Chinese national average around 2070. That is not a success story. That is a structural deprivation that expensive subsidies are slowly managing.
📌
Accepting the Evidence
This analysis does not dispute China's statistics. It accepts them entirely and demonstrates that those figures, placed in their proper comparative context, do not support the development claim.

Canada Tibet Committee (Canada Tibet)  ·  canadatibet.com

All data in this dashboard are drawn from official Chinese sources: TAR Statistical Bureau Communiqués 2019–2023; 7th National Population Census (2021); National Health Commission Statistics Yearbook 2023; China Population and Employment Statistical Yearbook 2024; TAR Government Budget Reports; State Council Information Office White Paper on Tibet Human Rights (2025). No data have been modified or disputed — only placed in comparative context.

Analytical framework: Fischer, A.M. — The Disempowered Development of Tibet in China (Lexington Books, 2013) and UNDP Human Development Report methodology.