Key Concepts
Governance quality is measured through composite indices that allow cross-country comparison and track progress over time. For UPSC GS2, candidates must understand the methodology, publishers, indicators, and India's performance across these frameworks. These indices also inform policy making and attract foreign investment.
1. World Bank Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI)
Published annually by the World Bank (first published 1999), the WGI aggregates data from 35 different data sources to measure governance quality across 214 economies.
The six aggregate WGI dimensions:
| # | Indicator | What It Measures |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Voice and Accountability | Political rights, civil liberties, free press |
| 2 | Political Stability and Absence of Violence/Terrorism | Likelihood of government destabilisation |
| 3 | Government Effectiveness | Quality of public services, civil service, policy credibility |
| 4 | Regulatory Quality | Ability to formulate sound policies enabling private sector |
| 5 | Rule of Law | Property rights, courts, contract enforcement, crime |
| 6 | Control of Corruption | Use of public power for private gain |
WGI scores range from approximately -2.5 (weak) to +2.5 (strong). The WGI is a perception-based index — it reflects expert assessments and surveys, not objective administrative data.
2. Transparency International — Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI)
Published annually by Transparency International (Berlin) since 1995, the CPI measures perceived levels of public sector corruption in 180 countries. Scores range from 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean).
India's CPI performance:
| Year | India's Rank | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 86 | 40 |
| 2022 | 85 | 40 |
| 2023 | 93 | 39 |
| 2024 | 96 | 38 |
India ranked 96th out of 180 countries in CPI 2024, with a score of 38 — a decline from 93rd (score 39) in 2023. The global average score remains 43; India's score is below the global average, indicating significant perceived corruption in the public sector.
Top performers: Denmark, Finland, New Zealand (score 90+). South Asia context: India performs below neighbours like Bhutan (68) but above Pakistan (27) and Bangladesh (23).
3. Ease of Doing Business (Discontinued) and B-READY
Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) — World Bank
The EoDB index was published annually from 2003 to 2020. India made dramatic improvements, rising from 142nd rank (2014) to 63rd rank (2020). However, in September 2021, the World Bank permanently discontinued the EoDB, following an independent review that found data irregularities — scores for China, UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Azerbaijan had been artificially manipulated in 2018–2020.
Business Ready (B-READY) — World Bank
The World Bank launched B-READY as the successor index in 2024. Key differences from EoDB:
- Evaluates regulatory framework, public services, and operational efficiency across the business lifecycle
- Includes labour rights and environmental sustainability (absent in EoDB)
- First B-READY report (2024) covered 50 economies (India included in later phases)
- More comprehensive and transparent methodology than EoDB
4. Global Innovation Index (GII)
Published annually by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) in collaboration with INSEAD and Cornell University. Covers 133 economies across 80 indicators in two sub-indices: Innovation Inputs and Innovation Outputs.
India's GII trajectory:
| Year | India's Rank |
|---|---|
| 2015 | 81 |
| 2019 | 52 |
| 2022 | 40 |
| 2023 | 40 |
| 2024 | 39 |
India ranked 39th in GII 2024 — a rise of 42 positions since 2015. India is now the top innovator among lower-middle-income countries and leads South Asia. Strengths: ICT services, knowledge workers, domestic market scale. Weaknesses: research and development expenditure, infrastructure.
5. Good Governance Index (GGI) — India's Domestic Index
Published by DARPG (Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances) under the Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions. The GGI is India's own composite tool to assess governance quality across states and UTs.
- First edition: 2019 (released on Good Governance Day, 25 December 2019)
- Second edition: 2021 (released 25 December 2021 by Home Minister Amit Shah)
- The 2023 edition was not released — DARPG announced it would instead release the next edition in 2025
- Covers 10 sectors and 58 indicators (2021 framework)
10 sectors in GGI: Agriculture and Allied Sectors, Commerce and Industries, Human Resource Development, Public Health, Public Infrastructure and Utilities, Economic Governance, Social Welfare and Development, Judiciary and Public Security, Environment, Citizen-Centric Governance
State groupings: Large states, small states, and UTs ranked separately. Top performer (2021): Gujarat (large states category)
6. UN E-Government Survey
Published every two years by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA). Measures countries' use of ICT for delivering public services.
- E-Government Development Index (EGDI): Composite of Online Service Index (OSI), Telecom Infrastructure Index, Human Capital Index
- 2024 (13th edition) covered all 193 UN Member States
- India has a very high OSI value of 0.8184 in 2024 — reflecting strong online service delivery
- The proportion of the global population with poor e-government access fell from 45% (2022) to 22.4% (2024) globally
7. UNDP Human Development Index (HDI)
Published annually in the Human Development Report by UNDP. Measures three dimensions: health (life expectancy), education (mean/expected years of schooling), and standard of living (GNI per capita).
India's HDI rank: 134th out of 193 countries (HDR 2023/24). India is in the Medium Human Development category. HDI value: 0.644. India ranks below neighbours Sri Lanka (78) and China (75).
2nd Administrative Reforms Commission (ARC) Recommendations
The Second ARC (2005–2009), chaired by Veerappa Moily, produced 15 reports. Key governance recommendations:
- Citizen's Charter mandatory for all public service agencies with time-bound service delivery
- Right to Information Act implementation strengthened
- E-governance as backbone of service delivery
- District administration reforms for effective last-mile delivery
- Ethics in governance — code of conduct for civil servants
PYQ Relevance
- 2023 GS2: "Discuss the utility and limitations of governance indices like CPI in assessing administrative quality."
- 2021 GS2: "What are the key indicators used to measure good governance?" WGI six dimensions are the standard framework.
- 2019 GS2: "Ease of Doing Business rankings — methodology and India's performance." Now updated with B-READY context.
- 2018 GS2: "Analyse the role of DARPG in improving governance." GGI and 2nd ARC linkage needed.
Exam Strategy
Must-know rankings (2024):
- CPI: India 96th (score 38)
- GII: India 39th
- EoDB: Discontinued 2021; replaced by B-READY (2024)
Analytical framework for Mains: Indices are useful for benchmarking but have limitations — perception-based (WGI, CPI), methodology opacity, and susceptibility to gaming (EoDB manipulation). India should develop robust domestic metrics (like GGI) while engaging constructively with global indices for policy learning.
Key distinction: WGI is academic/policy research; CPI is advocacy tool (Transparency International is an NGO); GII is IP-focused; GGI is government's own assessment. Each has a different purpose and audience.
Link to Ujiyari.com for the latest GGI 2025 release and India's HDI performance in the 2025 Human Development Report.
BharatNotes