The systemic, often invisible skews built into the methodologies of influential global indices (e.g., Democracy Index, Corruption Perceptions Index, Ease of Doing Business). These biases can include: conceptual bias (defining "democracy" only as multi-party liberal democracy), source bias (relying on surveys of Western-educated elites), methodological bias (weighting factors that favor neoliberal policies), and political bias (producing results that align with the geopolitical interests of the organizations' home countries). Index biases turn quantitative measurement into a powerful tool for ideological normalization.
Example: The Corruption Perceptions Index is often criticized for Index Biases. It tends to rate poorer countries as more corrupt, often because it measures the perception of Western business elites, not the reality of, say, legalized corruption (lobbying, regulatory capture) in wealthy nations. This bias shapes investment flows and political discourse, punishing the Global South for forms of corruption the index is blind to in the West.
by Dumu The Void February 5, 2026
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