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Governance, the traditions and institutions by which authority in a country is exercised, is widely recognized as a critical driver of development outcomes. Theoretical and empirical research shows that countries with inclusive and accountable institutions tend to achieve higher levels of economic development, better public service delivery, and more robust job creation.

The Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI) are one of the leading global initiatives for measuring governance. The WGI draw on 35 cross-country data sources—including household surveys, firm surveys, and expert assessments—and are annual composite indicators based on perceptions of governance quality across more than 200 economies from 1996 to 2024.

Across these 35 data sources, more than 400 underlying indicators are used to capture the six dimensions of governance included in the WGI:

Each question or variable from the underlying data sources is mapped to up to two of the six governance dimensions. It is then rescaled to range from 0 to 1, with higher values indicating better governance outcomes. When multiple questions or variables from the same source map to the same dimension, they are averaged so that each data source contributes only one signal per dimension.

The rescaled data from the individual sources are combined using a weighted average—estimated through a statistical technique known as an Unobserved Components Model (UCM)—to construct each of the six WGI dimension estimates. The UCM weights reflect the pattern of correlations among the sources: sources that are more strongly correlated with each other receive more weight, while those that are less correlated receive less. This weighting improves the precision of the aggregate indicators.

The WGI produces two outputs for each country, year, and governance dimension. First, the model yields a governance estimate, which is normally distributed with a mean near zero and typically ranges between –2.5 and 2.5, accompanied by its model-based standard error. Second, this estimate is mapped onto an absolute 0–100 scale, with corresponding 90-percent confidence intervals, to facilitate comparisons across countries and over time.

The next few tabs explain the WGI data sources, the aggregation method, and how to interpret the results in more detail. For a full description of the methodology, please refer to the latest WGI methodology paper. A complete reproducibility package for the WGI calculations is available here.

The six composite WGI measures are helpful as an initial lens for broad cross-country comparisons and for evaluating general trends over time. However, they are often too coarse to guide the design of specific governance reforms in particular country contexts. Such reforms, and evaluation of their progress, need to be informed by much more detailed and country-specific diagnostic data that can identify the relevant constraints on governance in particular country circumstances.

The WGI is complementary to a large number of other efforts to construct more detailed measures of governance, often just for a single country. Users are encouraged to consult the disaggregated individual indicators underlying the estimated WGI scores to gain additional insights into the particular areas of strengths and weaknesses identified by the underlying source data.