Graphic detail | Turning a corner

Global democracy is in better shape than you think

EIU’s annual index suggests an end to the democracy recession

Grumbling about the health of democracy can sound abstract. But its decline shows up in wars, coups, contested elections and curbs on civil liberties across the world. EIU, our sister organisation, has tracked that slide since 2006. But the latest update to its democracy index suggests a modest break in the trend: the scores of nearly three-quarters of countries held steady or improved over the past year, and the global index rose by 0.02 points—one of the biggest increases since 2012.
AuthoritarianregimeHybridregimeFlaweddemocracyFulldemocracy
EIU grades 167 countries out of ten according to the state of their democracy, and sorts them into four camps: full and flawed democracies, and hybrid and authoritarian regimes. By that measure, Norway remains the world’s most democratic country—a position it has held for the past 16 years. New Zealand ranks second; the next four places are filled by the other Nordic countries. Most of this year’s improvements came in the middle of the table.
AuthoritarianregimeHybridregimeFlaweddemocracyFulldemocracy
The most improved region was Latin America and the Caribbean. After nine years of decline, scores rose in more than half the region’s countries, helped by higher political participation. That trend may happen elsewhere, too. Asia and sub-Saharan Africa have young populations, and recent protests in Nepal, Kenya and Madagascar have drawn large numbers into politics.
AuthoritarianregimeHybridregimeFlaweddemocracyFulldemocracy
012345678910
In some countries, higher turnout might owe something to Donald Trump. Elections from Canada to Romania drew unusually large numbers to the polls last year. Canada rose five places to ninth after its highest turnout in over 30 years. Mark Carney’s win was widely regarded as a rebuke to MAGA-style politics. Romania climbed from a hybrid regime to a flawed democracy, boosted by a strong turnout that contributed to the defeat of a nationalist candidate favoured by Mr Trump’s allies. Denmark rose four places to third, helped by its handling of threats towards Greenland, which lifted its score for how well the government functions.
Mr Trump had the opposite effect at home. Efforts to redraw electoral boundaries, the use of the military to quell protests and continued political polarisation weighed on America’s score. The Department of Government Efficiency disrupted the functioning of government, and attempts to muzzle the media hit civil liberties. America lost 0.2 points from last year and remains a flawed democracy. The long decline in global democracy may be easing a little. But in America, it is not abating.

Source: EIU