As of September 23, 2010, the United States ranked forty-ninth for both male and female life expectancy combined.
Just to underscore the rapidity of the decline, as recently as 1999, the U.S. was ranked by the World Health Organization as 24th in life expectancy. It's now 49th.But, there is a big mistake in this ranking. If you trace Glenn Greenwald's URLs, the 1999 figures come from here; the 2010 findings come from a paper, which when you trace the citation, comes from the CIA worldbook, here.
Sure enough, on first glance, the US has dropped from 24th to 49th place in just a decade.
First looks can be deceptive. Ask yourself the question which countries overtook the US during this decade, and where did they rank a decade ago?
Then you find that the following countries/entities are in the 2010 list and do not figure **anywhere** on the 1999 list:
1. Macau
2. Hong Kong
3. Anguilla
4. Cayman Islands
5. Bermuda
6. Liechtenstein
7. Guernsey
8. Jersey
9. Faroe Islands
10. Saint Pierre and Miguelon
11. Virgin Islands
12. Isle of Man
13. European Union
14. Gibraltar
15. Puerto Rico
16. Wallis and Futuna.
17. Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan de Cunha
When you remove these countries, which did not figure on the 1999 list, from the 2010 list, then the US goes to 28th place in 2010 from 24th place in 1999. The countries that were behind the US in the 1999 list and overtook the US by 2010 are (having removed the entities above from the 2010 list)
1. Singapore (#30 in 1999, #3 in 2010)
2. New Zealand (#31 in 1999, #12 in 2010)
3. Jordan (#102 in 1999, #17 in 2010)
4. South Korea (#51 in 1999, #27 in 2010)
It may be worth noting that e.g., Spain fell from #5 to #15; the UK from #14 to #25, so US's 4 place drop, while disappointing, is not terrifying.
PS: corrections:
Double checking my work, which I should have done before posting, Denmark, Ireland, Portugal and Bosnia Herzgovina are also ahead of the US now, so the US fell from 24th in 1999 to 32nd in 2010.
Ireland fell from 27th to 30th, Denmark fell from 28th to 29th, Portugal from 29th to 31st, answering the question I had started out with - namely whether drug legalization had improved Portugal's standings (too small an effect to tell is my conclusion).
Bosnia rose from 56th to 28th.
PPS:
The 1997 list:
- Japan
- Australia
- France
- Sweden
- Spain
- Italy
- Greece
- Switzerland
- Monaco
- Andorra
- San Marino
- Canada
- Netherlands
- UK
- Norway
- Belgium
- Austria
- Luxembourg
- Iceland
- Finland
- Malta
- Germany
- Israel
- United States
- Cyprus
- Dominica
- Ireland
- Denmark
- Portugal
- Singapore
- New Zealand
The 2010 list (minus the extra countries)
- Andorra
- Japan
- Singapore
- Australia
- Canada
- France
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- San Marino
- Israel
- Iceland
- New Zealand
- Italy
- Monaco
- Spain
- Norway
- Jordan
- Greece
- Austria
- Malta
- Netherlands
- Luxembourg
- Germany
- Belgium
- UK
- Finland
- Korea, South
- Bosnia and Herzgovina
- Denmark
- Ireland
- Portugal
- United States