World Bank releases governance indicators for Latin America and other regions
The World Bank released its annual
“governance indicators” yesterday – a set of six variables which is designed to
measure governance globally. The project
has many critics, broadly falling into two camps – those that oppose the idea
on principle and argue that the World Bank should not be in the business of
rating countries on governance or any other metric, and those that find fault
with the indicators methodology, which could accurately be described as a
“kitchen sink” approach to measuring corruption, political stability and other
categories of governance with surveys and other imprecise metrics.
Nonetheless, if one doesn’t take the
indicators at face value as an absolute measurement of the complicated concept
of governance and accepts, as should be done with most indicators of political
variables, that they are most useful for understanding broad trends and
comparisons between regions, then there is some interest in evaluating what
they have to say about Latin America and other regions.
The six indicators measure voice and
accountability, political stability, government effectiveness, regulatory
quality, rule of law and control of corruption.
There are some interesting trends
(which indeed reveal some World Bank biases) in the numbers. Venezuela,
for example, ranks lowest on all metrics with the exception of political
stability, in which Colombia
is ranked just lower, and government effectiveness where two Central American
states fall behind. There is something
a bit fishy about this: while Venezuela’s
record on voice and accountability is surely one of the lowest in the region,
it is unclear why it’s political stability rating is so low. Chavez, if anything, seems to have nearly
absolute and unchallenged control of the state, a hallmark of stability (if not
the democratic type). Additionally, on
the metric of government effectiveness, Venezuela
is ranked well below Honduras,
Guatemala, Bolivia and Paraguay. While I haven’t been to Caracas
since last summer and therefore have little sense of the effectiveness of
government at present, on most metrics such as tax collection and public
spending, I would imagine that Venezuela
still ranks above most of Central America and notoriously ill-governed
countries like Paraguay.
Chile, in contrast, is top of
the tables for the region in all metrics except political stability, where Costa Rica
ranks just above. In fact, Chile, along with Uruguay
and Costa Rica
score consistently around OECD averages.
It also shows where countries with
otherwise “good governance” fall behind.
Brazil
scores relatively well on most metrics, but is ranked lower on regulatory
quality and control of corruption. Mexico
falls behind on voice and accountability and notably, political stability.
The rankings are sure to rankle some
governments (the FT reports that Argentina is upset with the fact that all but
one of its indicators is on a downward trend) and upset some development
specialists, it makes for an interesting reflection both on what the World Bank
means by governance (a definition that is substantially different from that of
political scientists) and to see where countries broadly fall.