India has unveiled the Responsible Nations Index (RNI), a first-of-its-kind global framework that ranks countries not just on economic or military power, but on ethical governance, social welfare, environmental stewardship, and international responsibility.
India has launched a global ranking index of its own to grade countries beyond their economic muscle and geostrategic dominance. Called the
Responsible Nations Index (RNI), it is a first-of-its-kind global framework designed to evaluate countries on ethical governance, social well-being, environmental stewardship, and international responsibility.
Unlike traditional
rankings that focus primarily on economic or military power, the RNI presents a broader, more inclusive approach to assessing national success.
Former India President Ram Nath Kovind was chief guest of the index launch event, hosted by the World Intellectual Foundation (WIF) at Dr Ambedkar International Centre in New Delhi earlier this week. Kovind hailed the initiative as an effort to prioritise ethical governance over conventional measures of influence and wealth.
India ranks 16th globally in inaugural RNI
In the first global RNI rankings for 2026, India secured 16th place, ahead of major powers such as the United States (66th) and China (68th). The index, which covers 154 countries, ranked Singapore first, followed by Switzerland and Denmark. Countries facing severe challenges, such as Syria (153rd) and Central African Republic (154th), were placed at the bottom of the list.
India’s ranking reflects its performance across governance, social responsibility, environmental stewardship, and contributions to global peace and cooperation, with an overall score of 0.551513.
Framework and methodology
The RNI is structured around three core pillars—dignity, well-being, and commitment—and evaluates nations across seven dimensions:
The index draws on 58 quantitative indicators grouped under 15 sub-themes, using data from trusted sources including the World Bank, UN agencies (WHO, ILO, FAO), and the World Justice Project.
The RNI examines three types of responsibility:
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Internal responsibility: How governments safeguard citizens’ rights and welfare.
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Environmental responsibility: Sustainability outcomes and resource protection.
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External responsibility: Contributions to global peace, diplomacy, and international public goods.
Academic collaboration and research
The index is the outcome of three years of research, led by the World Intellectual Foundation, with scholarly contributions from Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and methodological support from Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Mumbai. Experts helped design the evaluation framework, ensuring that ethical, social, and environmental metrics are incorporated alongside traditional economic and power-based indicators.
An expert panel discussion titled “From Human Well-being to Global Stewardship: Rethinking Responsibility, Prosperity and Peace in the 21st Century” was held as part of the launch. Chaired by N K Singh, Chairman of the 15th Finance Commission of India, the session focused on responsibility-led development and cooperative global progress.
Global response and significance
India’s former President Ram Nath Kovind described the RNI as “an important step towards understanding what makes a nation responsible in the 21st century,” adding that responsibility should be valued alongside economic strength or military might.
Sudhanshu Mittal, founder of WIF, said the index reflects “how nations use their power to protect human dignity, safeguard the environment, and contribute constructively to global peace”.
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Analysts and experts have welcomed the RNI as a novel benchmark that could reshape policy debates and international comparisons. A commentator from Economic Times noted that the index “marks a shift in how global leadership is evaluated, recognising that prosperity without responsibility is unsustainable in an interconnected world.” Some academics cautioned that the credibility of the RNI will depend on transparency in methodology, indicator weightings, and independent review.
A new way to define national success
The Responsible Nations Index seeks to move global discourse beyond GDP and hard power, promoting a value-based model of success. By evaluating nations on how they treat citizens, handle environmental challenges, and contribute internationally, the RNI encourages ethical governance, social inclusion, and sustainable policy outcomes.
The launch of the report marks the start of a broader global dialogue on responsible nationhood, shared international progress, and the future of ethical governance.
You may read the inaugural RNI report below:
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