Empirical observation · not a ranking

How does government type actually correlate with governance outcomes?

The Civica Index does not bake bonuses or penalties into government types. Instead, we publish what the data says: average CI, distribution spread, and long-run trajectory per category — so you can see whether any government type systematically produces better outcomes, or whether individual countries matter more than their system.

Structural form

Broad structural families stay visible by default. Expand a family to reveal its subtypes in both the chart and the table below.

How to read this page

Structural form answers what the system is: parliamentary republic, constitutional monarchy, directorial republic, and related forms.

Regime type answers how executive-legislative accountability works in the Bjornskov-Rode / CGV tradition: parliamentary, semi-presidential, or presidential democracy, plus civilian, military, or royal dictatorship.

These lenses can disagree for valid academic reasons. Switzerland, for example, can appear as a presidential democracy in the accountability sense while remaining a federal directorial republic structurally.

Highest avg. CI
95.9
Directorial republic (n=1)
Widest spread
79 pt
Presidential republic (1 → 80)
Most improved (10y)
Insufficient history
Most declined (10y)
Insufficient history
The full distribution · every country placed by CI

Each dot is a country.

Y-AXIS: STRUCTURAL FAMILY & SUBTYPE · X-AXIS: CIVICA INDEX 0–100 · WHITE BAR: AVG
Click any family name or chevron to reveal subtype rows without changing the axis scale.
020406080100Directorial republicSwitzerland: 95.9Constitutional monarchyDenmark: 98.6Norway: 97.7Sweden: 96.7New Zealand: 95.4Netherlands: 94.4Canada: 92.5Australia: 92.2United Kingdom: 89.7Belgium: 88.6Japan: 88.0Spain: 81.5Thailand: 44.5Parliamentary democracyFinland: 97.0Ireland: 93.9Germany: 93.1Austria: 90.9Singapore: 85.5Czechia: 80.8Italy: 75.3Greece: 72.3Poland: 69.2South Africa: 57.6India: 49.6Bangladesh: 35.2Pakistan: 26.8Ethiopia: 20.2Semi-presidentialFrance: 87.0Ukraine: 42.6Russia: 22.9Presidential republicUnited States: 79.7South Korea: 79.5Chile: 78.1Argentina: 63.5Brazil: 57.7Colombia: 54.3Indonesia: 52.1Mexico: 50.6Philippines: 47.2Turkey: 40.5Kenya: 39.7Nigeria: 31.2Egypt: 31.0Venezuela: 6.4Syria: 1.9South Sudan: 1.0Absolute monarchySaudi Arabia: 33.7One-party stateVietnam: 32.4China: 30.9
By the numbers · families first, subtypes on demand

Average, spread, and trajectory.

Government family or subtype
Countries
Spread (min–max) · avg
Avg CI
Trajectory
Directorial republic
Switzerland
1countries
96avg 95.996
95.9
Constitutional monarchy
Denmark · Norway · Sweden · New Zealand · Netherlands · Canada · 6 more
12countries
45avg 88.399
88.3
Parliamentary democracy
Finland · Ireland · Germany · Austria · Singapore · Czechia · 8 more
14countries
20avg 67.797
67.7
Semi-presidential
France · Ukraine · Russia
3countries
23avg 50.887
50.8
Presidential republic
United States · South Korea · Chile · Argentina · Brazil · Colombia · 10 more
16countries
1avg 44.780
44.7
Absolute monarchy
Saudi Arabia
1countries
34avg 33.734
33.7
One-party state
Vietnam · China
2countries
31avg 31.632
31.6
What the data says

Directorial republic tends to cluster at the top. Presidential republic shows the widest spread.

The strongest family visible today averages 95.9 and bottoms out at 96. Presidential republic spans 79 points, from 1 to 80. Expanding rows helps show whether that signal comes from one subtype or from the whole family.

What the data does not say

Directorial republicare better.” The data only shows where systems cluster today.

The Civica Index does not argue that any single government type is best. Correlation is shown; causation is left to researchers and historians who can control for confounders that the Index cannot.

Read this chart with caution. Methodology §6 →