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Archive -Seychelles

2017 Ibrahim Index of African Governance |23 November 2017

 

 

Seychelles ranked second

 

Seychelles is ranked second in Africa in overall governance behind Mauritius in the 2017 Ibrahim Index of African Governance.

With a score of 73.4% on a broad range of governance-related criteria, Seychelles has performed better than most of its continental peers and trails neighbour Mauritius who has scored 81.4% to take first place out of the 54 countries ranked.

According to the Mo Ibrahim report, over the last five years, Seychelles has shown signs of “increasing improvement” in overall governance.

In 2015, Seychelles was ranked sixth and its ranking improved to fourth last year to finish behind Mauritius, Botswana and Cabo Verde.

Seychelles has registered an overall governance improvement over the decade at an annual average trend of +0.60, with the pace of improvement quickening in the last five years at an annual average trend of +0.85. Seychelles’ overall governance progress over the decade is driven by three of the four categories: Participation & Human Rights (annual average trend of +1.00), Sustainable Economic Opportunity (annual average trend of +0.84) and Human Development (annual average trend of +0.68).

Seychelles has scored higher than the African average of 50.8% and higher than the regional average for East Africa of 45.2%.

The country has achieved its highest category score in Human Development (84.9%), and its lowest category score in Sustainable Economic Opportunity (65.0%).

It has achieved its highest sub-category score in National Security (100%), and its lowest sub-category score in Public Management (52.2%).

Mo Ibrahim, chair of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation, said: “As the index shows us, overall governance in Africa is improving. This is good news. However, the slowing and in some cases even reversing trends in a large number of countries, and in some key dimensions of governance, means that we must be vigilant. Without vigilance and sustained efforts, the progress of recent years could be in danger of vanishing.”

The 2017 Ibrahim Index of African Governance (IIAG), launched earlier this week by the Mo Ibrahim Foundation, has revealed that the continent’s overall governance trajectory remains positive on average, but in recent years has moved at a slower pace. As many countries struggle to build on recent progress or to reverse negative trends, and as concerns emerge in some key sectors, the foundation has called for vigilance on the continent’s future.

The 11th Ibrahim Index of African Governance (IIAG) looks at both country and indicator trends over the last five years (2012-2016), within the context of the last decade (2007-2016).

“By evaluating more recent progress on governance alongside long-term performance, the 2017 IIAG provides the most nuanced assessment to date of the evolution and direction that countries, regions and specific dimensions of governance are taking,” adds the report.

Over the last ten years, 40 African countries have improved in overall governance. In the last five years, 18 of these – a third of the continent’s countries and home to 58% of African citizens – including Côte d’Ivoire, Morocco, Namibia, Nigeria and Senegal, have even managed to accelerate their progress. In 2016, the continent achieved its highest overall governance score to date ‒ 50.8 out of 100.

However, over the same period, Africa’s annual average rate of improvement in overall governance has slowed. Of the 40 countries improving in overall governance during the last decade, more than half (22) have either done so at a slower pace in the last five years (i.e. Rwanda and Ethiopia) or show decline (i.e. Mauritius, Cameroon and Angola). Furthermore, eight of the 12 countries registering decline in overall governance over the past decade are showing no signs of turning things around, with scores decreasing at an even faster rate over the second half of the decade. This group includes Botswana, Ghana, Libya and Mozambique.

The best performing category of the IIAG, human development, reaches its highest average score to date in 2016 (56.1 out of 100.0), with all three underlying governance dimensions – welfare, education and health – improving over the last ten years. However, all register slowing progress over the second half of the decade. Worryingly, in a continent where 41% of the population is under 15 years old, progress in education has nearly ground to halt. Africans are particularly dissatisfied with how governments are addressing changing educational needs, as reflected by the accelerated pace of decline in the education provision indicator over the last five years.

Despite being the slowest improving category over the past decade and within the past five years, sustainable economic opportunity has recorded progress since 2014. While the African average improvement has slowed over the last five years, 16 countries, representing 51% of the continent’s population and 54% of its GDP, have managed to accelerate their rate of improvement in this period. For 22 countries, however, progress is slackening (i.e. Mauritius and Rwanda) or even reversing to decline, as in Angola. The sub-category Infrastructure is a major driver of the continent’s overall performance in sustainable economic opportunity, picking up momentum over the last five years, even if electricity infrastructure continues to register average decline. The deterioration in Africa’s rural sector over the last five years, which could threaten recent progress in this key area for the continent’s sustainable growth and wealth-creating potential, is a particular cause for concern.

Participation & human rights is the only category picking up speed in the last five years, with the greatest number of countries (17) improving at an accelerated rate across all four categories of the IIAG. However, this masks some concerning trends in certain countries and dimensions. Eighteen (18) countries show either a slower pace (i.e. Congo, Gabon, Nigeria, Rwanda, Togo and Uganda) or even display warning signs, declining in the second half of the decade (i.e. Egypt). The average positive trend is in fact mainly driven by the accelerated progress in participation, led by a majority of countries improving in free & fair elections. Worryingly, however, political participation shows a slight average decline over the last five years, which could threaten the progress made over the decade, while average deterioration in civil society participation appears to worsen over the last five years.

On a more positive note, the pace of deterioration in safety & rule of law seen over the decade has slowed in the last five years. This is mainly driven by slowing decline in personal safety – although indicators such as crime and political violence remain on concerning negative trajectories – and by progress appearing over the last five years in rule of law. However, accountability, already the lowest scoring sub-category in the IIAG, is lately registering even slower progress.

Another concerning trend shows national security deteriorating at an even faster pace over the second half of the decade, more than doubling its annual average decline. At category level, deterioration worsens over the second half of the decade for 15 countries, including Burundi, Cameroon, Libya, and Mozambique, while some countries, such as Angola and Mauritius, register a recent downturn despite improvement over 10 years.

 

 

 

 

 

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