Scoring & Indices

Country Resilience Index CRI

The Country Resilience Index (CRI) is a composite 0–100 score of a country’s structural ability to absorb and recover from shocks, refreshed every six hours across six weighted domains and 20 active dimensions for a fixed 196-country rankable universe.

The Country Resilience Index (CRI) is a composite 0–100 score of a country’s structural ability to absorb and recover from shocks. Where the CII measures short-term instability, the CRI measures durable capacity — economic, infrastructure, energy, social-governance, health-and-food, and recovery strength — refreshed every six hours from official sources with full coverage and imputation provenance.

The six domains carry design weights — economic 0.17, infrastructure 0.15, energy 0.11, social-governance 0.19, health-food 0.13, recovery 0.25 (sum 1.00) — and are regrouped into three pillars (structural readiness, live-shock exposure, recovery capacity) that combine into the headline score through a non-compensatory formula with a min-pillar penalty. Recovery carries the largest single-domain weight, which is the mechanical reason fiscally strong smaller states cluster near the top while fragile states separate cleanly at the bottom.

CRI covers a fixed 196-country public rankable universe (a committed UN-member and SAR whitelist); low-confidence or headline-ineligible countries are routed to a separate greyed-out list rather than dropped, and every response exposes per-dimension coverage plus a four-class imputation taxonomy so an analyst can see how much of a score is real data. Scores are served through the get-resilience-score and get-resilience-ranking endpoints and the get_country_risk MCP tool.

See it live

World Monitor tracks this and hundreds of other signals in real time on one map — free, no account required.

Open Dashboard