BSS
  10 Feb 2022, 09:49

Democracy slides in 2021 amid pandemic pressures: study

PARIS, Feb 10, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Democratic standards across the world fell
again in 2021 amid the pandemic and growing support for authoritarianism to
leave just over 45 percent of the world's population living in a democracy,
the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) said on Thursday.

   As in 2020, less than half of the world's population is living in a
democracy but the trend has deteriorated further, the London-based analysis
group said.

   Its annual democracy Index "sheds light on continued challenges to
democracy worldwide, under pressure from the coronavirus pandemic and
increasing support for authoritarian alternatives," the group said.

   Its annual index, which provides a measurement of the state of global
democracy, registered its biggest fall since 2010 and set "another dismal
record" for the worst global score since the index was first produced in
2006.

   In Europe, Spain was downgraded to a "flawed democracy", reflecting a
deterioration in its score for judicial independence.

   The EIU said the UK also dropped in the ranking following controversies
over party financing and a series of scandals, but remains a "full
democracy".

   Less than half -- 45.7 percent -- of the world's population now live in a
democracy of some sort, a significant decline from 2020 where the figure was
49.4 percent.

   Even fewer -- 6.4 percent -- reside in a "full democracy" after Chile and
Spain were downgraded to "flawed democracies". Spain's downgrade reflects a
deterioration in its score for judicial independence, it said.

   More than a third of the world's population live under authoritarian rule,
a large proportion of which are in China.

   "China has not become more democratic as it has become richer. On the
contrary, it has become less free," the EIU said.

   The top three places in the index are occupied by Norway, New Zealand and
Finland while the final three countries are North Korea, Myanmar and
Afghanistan.

   Along with Tunisia, Myanmar and Afghanistan recorded the biggest declines
in the index following the military coup and Taliban takeover in those
countries.