By NMG Africa Projec
2012 was an incredible year for Africa. It saw
the entry of some new leaders, most notably a transition of leadership
to Africa's second female president (by no means a drama-free one). It
was also sad for those that lost sitting presidents, John Atta Mills of
Ghana, Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia and Bingu Wa Mutharika of Malawi.
The Africa Leadership Index is a tool of governance-tracking of African leaders developed by Nation Media Group's Africa Project.
It is an aggregate on all major indexes that cover Africa, plus our own (see note on methodology) led by
LYNETTE MUKAMI.
LYNETTE MUKAMI.
Now that all the main reports for 2012 have come
out, we bring you our ranking of African leaders by governance last
year, beginning with the best and running down to the worst.
Note On Methodology
Leaders' grades were derived from how they placed
in five respected international indices of governance, plus the Nation
Media Group (NMG) Political Index. Their scores in these indices were
weighted, then combined to produce a score on 100. The best governors
placed closest to 100, and the worst closest to 0.
The scorecard heavily rewards consistency. If an Africa leader scores very highly in one or two areas, but poorly in the rest, he/she will end up with a dismal overall grade. A consistent score across the board, on the other hand, will place him/her highly in the overall standings. The indices were weighted as follows:
The scorecard heavily rewards consistency. If an Africa leader scores very highly in one or two areas, but poorly in the rest, he/she will end up with a dismal overall grade. A consistent score across the board, on the other hand, will place him/her highly in the overall standings. The indices were weighted as follows:
Mo Ibrahim Index – 10%
Democracy Index – 10%
Press Freedom Index – 10%
Corruption Index – 15%
Human Development Index – 20%
NMG Political Index – 35%
Democracy Index – 10%
Press Freedom Index – 10%
Corruption Index – 15%
Human Development Index – 20%
NMG Political Index – 35%
Leaders were assigned letter grades based on their 0-100 score, derived from the six indices. The best of the group received "A", good performers got "B", passable leaders got "C." Leaders who performed below standard received "D" and "F."
Also, two special categories were added to these basic grades: the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and the Morgue. Leaders in this range represent the bottom of the barrel.
Mo Ibrahim Index
The Ibrahim Index is the most comprehensive
collection of qualitative and quantitative data that assesses governance
in Africa. It measures the delivery of public goods and services to
citizens and uses indicators across four main categories: Safety and
Rule of Law; Participation and Human Rights; Sustainable Economic
Opportunity; and Human Development.
Countries are scored between 0 and 100, where 100 is the best. The 'rank' refers to their position in relation to other African countries; the best governed country takes 1st place, the worst 52nd.
(http://www.moibrahimfoundation.org/en)
Democracy Index
The Democracy Index (2011) is compiled by the
Economist Intelligence Unit and seeks to examine the state of democracy
in countries. It focuses on five general categories: electoral process
and pluralism, civil liberties, functioning of government, political
participation and political culture.
Full democracies—scores of 8-10
Flawed democracies—scores of 6 to 7.9
Hybrid regimes—scores of 4 to 5.9
Authoritarian regimes—scores below 4
Press Freedom Index
Corruption Index
The scale is from 10 (highly clean) to 0 (highly corrupt). The rank refers to their position in relation to other countries worldwide, the most ‘clean’ takes 1st place, the least takes 174th.
(http://www.transparency.org/)
Human Development Index
The rank refers to their position in relation to other countries worldwide, the most developed will rank 1st place, the least developed will rank 186th.
(http://hdr.undp.org/)
NMG Political Index
Somalia and South Sudan got an 'Incomplete' grade as they were missing values for several indices that made it difficult to grade.
Flawed democracies—scores of 6 to 7.9
Hybrid regimes—scores of 4 to 5.9
Authoritarian regimes—scores below 4
The rank refers to their position in relation to
other countries worldwide, the most democratic take 1st place, and the
least take 167th.
(http://www.eiu.com/public/)
(http://www.eiu.com/public/)
Press Freedom Index
The Freedom of the Press Index is produced
annually by Freedom House advocacy group. The countries are given a
total score from 0 (best) to 100 (worst) on the basis of a set of 23
methodology questions divided into three subcategories. Assigning
numerical points allows for comparative analysis among the countries
surveyed and facilitates an examination of trends over time. The degree
to which each country permits the free flow of news and information
determines the classification of its media as "Free," "Partly Free," or
"Not Free." Countries scoring 0 to 30 are regarded as having "Free"
media; 31 to 60, "Partly Free" media; and 61 to 100, "Not Free" media.
(http://freedomhouse.org)
(http://freedomhouse.org)
Corruption Index
Transparency International’s "Corruption
Perceptions Index" ranks countries according to the perception of
corruption in the public sector. It draws on different assessments and
business opinion surveys carried out by independent and reputable
institutions, and compiles the index to include questions relating to
bribery of public officials, kickbacks in public procurement,
embezzlement of public funds, and questions that probe the strength and
effectiveness of public sector anti-corruption efforts.
The scale is from 10 (highly clean) to 0 (highly corrupt). The rank refers to their position in relation to other countries worldwide, the most ‘clean’ takes 1st place, the least takes 174th.
(http://www.transparency.org/)
Human Development Index
The United Nation’s primary method of measuring
development, the Human Development Index is a comparative measure of
health, education and income that was introduced in the first Human
Development Report in 1990 as an alternative to purely economic
assessments of national progress, such as GDP growth. It soon became
the most widely accepted and cited measure of its kind, and has been
adapted for national use by many countries. It is used to distinguish
whether the country is a developed, developing, or under-developed
country, and also to measure the impact of economic policies on quality
of life. Health is measured by life expectancy at birth; education or
“knowledge” by a combination of the adult literacy rate and school
enrolment rates (for primary through university years); and income or
standard of living by purchasing-power-adjusted per capita Gross
National Income (GNI); GNI includes remittances and foreign assistance
income, for example, providing a more accurate economic picture of many
developing countries.
High Human Development = 0.7 and above
Medium Human Development = 0.450 to 0.699
Low Human Development = 0 to 0.449
Medium Human Development = 0.450 to 0.699
Low Human Development = 0 to 0.449
The rank refers to their position in relation to other countries worldwide, the most developed will rank 1st place, the least developed will rank 186th.
(http://hdr.undp.org/)
NMG Political Index
The NMG Political Index is an evaluation of a
leader’s performance, based on tracking by Nation Media Group
journalists. It takes into account how a leader took power; whether they
have extended or broken term limits; it measures investment in
infrastructure; food security; democratic space; creative public policy
and effective of execution; globalisation initiatives; and the extent to
which a leader invest in national building. Because it is so ambitious,
it has the highest weighting.
10-9 = outstanding
8-7 = good
6-5-4 = average
3-2 = poor
1-0 = truly appalling
8-7 = good
6-5-4 = average
3-2 = poor
1-0 = truly appalling
Somalia and South Sudan got an 'Incomplete' grade as they were missing values for several indices that made it difficult to grade.
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