The Mo Ibrahim Index of African Governance
September 25, 2007 | posted by Nigerian Muse (Archives)


 

 


BBC

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7010846.stm

September 25, 2007

 

Rwanda 'most improved' in Africa

Rwandan children

Rwanda is recovering from a devastating genocide in 1994

Rwanda is the most improved sub-Saharan nation according to a survey looking at performances over the past five years.

The Ibrahim Index, financed by Sudanese mobile phone magnate Mo Ibrahim, names Mauritius as the best-governed and Somalia as the worst-governed state.

Harvard University academics analysed the criteria used to rank countries.

The Mo Ibrahim Foundation is next month due to award over $5m to a former African head of state who is judged to have demonstrated exemplary leadership.

The presidential prize is also aimed at encouraging best practice.

Human rights are healthy here - as a woman I can vouch that more priority is given to us than men

Priya, Mauritius

Views on good governance

Rate your own country

They assembled data from various sources including the United Nations, the anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International, and thinktanks such as Freedom House.

Countries are measured under categories like "Safety and Security" and "Human Development".

When these categories are put together an overall ranking is reached.

Ranking order

Correspondents say some may be surprised by Rwanda's ranking - it came 18th on the list of 48 and had improved by 18 places over five years.

Governance facts

Who will win the $5m prize?

See the complete ranking

Human rights organisations often portray Rwanda as a state in which the opposition is repressed and journalists harrassed and intimidated.

Two island nations top the list of the best governed, Mauritius (Number 1) and Seychelles (2).

Both are stable, relatively wealthy tourist destinations which have little in common with mainland Africa except for the fact that they are members of the African Union.

The BBC's Word Affairs correspondent Mark Doyle says the next batch of countries on the best-governed list are more typical of the bulk of African states.

Botswana, at Number 3, is a stable democracy that earns its money from diamonds and agriculture.

Cape Verde (4) is a former Portuguese colony which survives economically from remittances by expatriate Cape Verdeans - there are said to be more Cape Verdeans in Boston, Massachusetts, than there are on the islands themselves.

South Africa (5), Ghana (8) and Senegal (9) are all vibrant democracies that are proud to have politically well-informed populations.

Worst-governed, according to the list is Somalia, a country which has not had a functioning government since the overthrow of the dictator Siad Barre in 1991.

Other countries scoring badly include Democratic Republic of Congo (47), Chad (46) and Mo Ibrahim's home state of Sudan (45).

Merits of prize

A spokesman for the Mo Ibrahim foundation said there was no automatic link between the "best governed country" index and the "best former president".

Mo Ibrahim

Mo Ibrahim has launched the index to combat corruption in Africa

The $5m prize to be awarded on 22 October will be given to an ex-president as a personal retirement gift to be paid in annual tranches and a further sum of $200,000 per annum "may be granted" by the foundation for "good causes espoused by the winner".

Our correspondent says one keen observer of the African scene said granting such a large sum of money to an individual was "scandalous" and that all of it should go to causes like ending poverty on the continent.

Others said the prize had to be substantial to have any realistic prospect of actually encouraging good governance while in office - and that the $5m would spark a valuable debate in civil society about what it means to run a country well.

Nelson Mandela, a towering political figure who would almost certainly have won the prize had he retired within the stipulated 2004-2006 time-frame, said:

"This is an African initiative celebrating the successes of new African leadership. It sets an example that the rest of the world can emulate. We call for leaders across the world - in government, civil society and business - to endorse its aims and back its vision."

See http://www.moibrahimfoundation.org/index/index2.asp  for the complete ranking.

 

 


 

AIG

Ibrahim Index of African Governance

The Ibrahim Index measures the degree to which essential political goods are provided within the forty-eight African countries south of the Sahara. The 2007 Ibrahim Index uses data from 2005, the last year with reasonably complete available data for nearly all sub-Saharan African nation-states.

For a summary of the rankings click here. For a detailed note on the calculation of scores in the Ibrahim Index, please see Special Paper 2 in Explanation and Papers.

By clicking the column headers, you can sort the data according to country name, individual category score, overall score and ranking.

Print this table

               

Country

      

               
Angola 42 44.3 67.8 38.1 36.8 40.7 38.3
Benin 13 61.2 78.4 52.8 69.6 46.9 58.4
Botswana 3 73.0 75.0 88.3 75.5 58.1 67.9
Burkina Faso 21 56.7 78.4 58.5 58.0 39.1 49.2
Burundi 40 46.8 60.4 48.8 41.9 40.3 42.2
Cameroon 24 55.6 77.7 42.5 50.4 48.1 59.2
Cape Verde 4 72.9 84.0 80.4 74.6 52.8 72.8
Central African Republic 41 46.7 68.8 45.0 54.5 38.7 26.6
Chad 46 38.8 68.3 42.1 43.3 24.2 15.9
Comoros 26 53.8 78.3 48.9 55.9 38.1 47.5
Congo 30 52.1 71.3 47.8 47.6 40.4 53.2
Democratic Republic of Congo 47 38.6 69.4 25.4 24.3 31.6 42.3
Cote d'Ivoire 36 48.8 77.1 37.8 32.8 44.1 52.2
Djibouti 29 52.5 78.3 39.8 52.2 39.1 52.9
Equatorial Guinea 32 51.6 85.4 44.3 38.5 47.3 42.3
Eritrea 38 48.3 74.8 60.1 25.2 33.1 48.2
Ethiopia 27 53.2 75.4 48.7 57.4 33.0 51.6
Gabon 6 67.4 94.4 57.1 59.9 62.4 63.0
Gambia 22 55.8 78.3 53.4 52.1 44.4 51.0
Ghana 8 66.8 85.9 70.1 67.7 46.5 63.8
Guinea 33 51.5 72.8 51.1 44.9 37.3 51.5
Guinea-Bissau 44 42.7 71.2 33.8 38.7 28.2 41.5
Kenya 15 59.3 62.9 57.9 64.1 47.9 63.8
Lesotho 11 64.1 91.7 66.7 63.4 43.4 55.5
Liberia 43 42.7 65.1 32.2 40.4 41.4 34.4
Madagascar 17 57.7 86.1 57.8 58.1 40.1 46.4
Malawi 12 63.7 86.1 65.0 66.0 45.0 56.3
Mali 20 56.9 84.0 52.7 71.1 33.8 43.1
Mauritania 16 58.8 77.3 62.3 63.8 34.5 55.9
Mauritius 1 86.2 91.7 85.2 88.7 75.5 90.0
Mozambique 23 55.8 86.1 43.8 71.0 35.8 42.4
Namibia 7 67.0 77.7 74.5 69.4 55.0 58.3
Niger 28 53.1 78.4 52.6 70.7 28.3 35.6
Nigeria 37 48.3 62.8 44.3 44.2 40.7 49.5
Rwanda 18 57.5 76.2 47.6 69.7 47.3 46.9
Sao Tome and Principe 10 65.3 84.0 55.6 80.4 44.6 61.8
Senegal 9 66.0 85.9 64.8 75.5 46.2 57.5
Seychelles 2 83.1 83.3 74.2 79.3 80.5 98.3
Sierra Leone 39 48.3 72.0 35.1 68.4 39.4 26.4
Somalia 48 28.1 63.5 19.4 23.5 5.1 28.9
South Africa 5 71.1 61.1 75.2 81.1 67.4 70.5
Sudan 45 40.0 31.1 31.4 38.3 41.3 57.8
Swaziland 34 50.9 63.9 51.3 31.2 50.4 57.5
Tanzania 14 60.7 83.3 58.4 61.0 48.6 52.1
Togo 35 49.8 77.4 46.7 41.4 42.7 40.5
Uganda 25 55.4 70.5 55.7 50.7 50.0 50.3
Zambia 19 57.5 77.8 61.3 54.9 47.8 45.8
Zimbabwe 31 52.0 75.0 45.8 45.0 44.4 49.7

 





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