Almost half the world’s 167 countries claim to be democratic, but
according to the Economist Intelligence Unit’s latest global Democracy
Index that is a mirage because popular discontent with democratic
governments is growing worldwide.
“Europe is home to the most
‘full democracies,’ but it is here that popular discontent with
democracy is most evident,” the Economist reported.
“Only 12.5 percent of the world’s population live in a full democracy…
More than one-third of the world’s population (some 2.6 billion people)
still live under authoritarian rule.”
The United States is at the
bottom of the barrel of “full democracies,” ranking 19 out of the 24
countries, just below the Pacific Island country of Mauritius and South
America’s Uraguay. Northern Europe is still tops, led by Norway. Canada
is seventh.
The
survey’s scores are based on “five categories: electoral process and
pluralism; civil liberties; the functioning of government; political
participation; and political culture.” The biggest overall trend is that
across the globe people who governments claim to be democracies are
increasingly frustrated, the Economist found.
“Despite the fact
that the world economy is growing and six years have passed since the
2008 economic and financial crash, discontent with democracy is on the
rise,” said Joan Hoey, editor of the 2014 report. “Popular
dissatisfaction with democracy is being expressed in the growth of
populist and protest parties, which, in some places, have come to pose
an increasing challenge to the established political order. The tendency
to dismiss the upsurge of populism in Europe as a protest vote or an
anti-austerity backlash is a way of evading some uncomfortable truths
about the state of democracy in Europe.”
The Economist didn’t mince words about American democracy, either.
“The
U.S. remains at the bottom end of the full democracy category,” it
said. “U.S. democracy has been adversely affected by a deepening
polarization of the political scene, political brinkmanship and
paralysis. Popular discontent with the workings of democracy is
deep-seated here too.”
Globally, the worst countries are North
Korea, Central African Republic and Chad. The least-democratic regions
are the Middle East and North Africa, “with 15 (up from 13 in 2013) out
of 20 countries being catagorized as authoritarian,” the Economist said,
which lists countries as “full,” “flawed,” or “hybrid” democracies or
“authoritarian” regimes.
“Only in Tunisia, which has been upgraded
from a ‘hybrid regime’ in 2013 to a ‘flawed democracy’ in 2014, has
there been any been any recent progress in democratization. Apart from
this positive exception, the Arab Spring has given way to a wave of
reaction and a descent into violent chaos.”
Clearly, the popular
rebellions that prompted the Arab Spring gave way to new repression and
worsening circumstances, as evidenced by Egypt's ranking at 138, between
Kazakstan (137) and Oman (139).
Only Asia and eastern Europe “recorded a slight improvement” in their scores.
There
is a sobering takeaway from the Economist’s report. As popular
discontent with the governing classes is growing around the world, the
ruling classes, including in many of the world’s supposedly democratic
regimes, aren’t giving the public what they want.
Perhaps next year the Economist will rename its survey, "The Democracy In Name Only Index."
from here
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