India plans its own democracy index, after global rankings downgrade

Published March 22, 2024
Farmers hold flags as they take part in a three-hour “chakka jam” or road blockade, as part of protests against farm laws on a highway on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, February 6, 2021. — Reuters
Farmers hold flags as they take part in a three-hour “chakka jam” or road blockade, as part of protests against farm laws on a highway on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, February 6, 2021. — Reuters

Narendra Modi’s government has approached a major Indian think tank to develop a homegrown democracy ratings index that could help it counter recent downgrades in rankings issued by international groups that New Delhi fears could affect the country’s credit rating, Al Jazeera reported on Thursday.

The Observer Research Foundation (ORF), which works closely with the Indian government on multiple initiatives, is preparing the ratings framework, according to two people closely involved in the discussions on the project.

According to the report, the index is expected to hew more closely to New Delhi’s narrative than Western-based rankings that Modi’s team has criticised.

“A review meeting was held by NITI Aayog in January, and it was decided that ORF will be releasing Democracy Rankings in a few weeks,” a top government official said, requesting anonymity.

The new rankings system could be released soon, the official said. How soon, though, is unclear — including whether the index might be unveiled before India’s upcoming national elections, announced last Saturday. India will vote in seven phases starting April 19, with votes counted on June 4. Modi is a strong favourite to return to power for a third term.

The index is expected to be closer to New Delhi’s narrative than Western-based rankings

A source familiar with the development told Al Jazeera that “the Democracy Index being prepared by ORF went through a peer review process and expert analysis on the methodology a few weeks ago … it is likely to be released soon”.

ORF, which co-hosts the Raisina Dialogue — India’s equivalent of the Munich Security Conference and the Shangri-La Dialogue, other major geopolitics, and geo-economics conclaves — with the country’s Ministry of External Affairs, did not respond to queries from Al Jazeera.

The Raisina Dialogue was held this year between Feb 21 and Feb 23. The NITI Aayog, the government’s own public policy think tank that has been shepherding internal discussions within the Modi government on global rankings, said it was not preparing the index — but did not confirm nor deny whether it was involved in helping an external think tank prepare one. “NITI is not developing any Democracy Index,” a spokesperson for the body told Al Jazeera.

“The government of India monitors select global indices [by various global entities] to drive reforms and growth in the country.” Yet emails and the minutes of meetings held between government agencies over the past three years, accessed and reviewed by Al Jazeera, point to a growing urgency within the Modi administration on challenging setbacks to India’s democracy credentials, including through a report prepared by India.

This exercise began right after international indices such as US-based non-profit Freedom House downgraded India’s status from a free democracy to a “partially free democracy” in 2021. The V-Dem Institute, based in Sweden, classified India as an “electoral autocracy”.

Published in Dawn, March 22nd, 2024

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