The EIU's 2016 Democracy Index

A path to peace through inclusion

The peace accord agreed late last year between the government and the FARC paramilitary group gives Colombia a historic opportunity to improve the living standards of all its people. More than half a century of conflict cost an estimated 220,000 lives and led over 5m people to flee their homes, with severe consequences for the country’s prosperity, especially in the rural areas where violence was concentrated.

A path to peace through inclusion

As the implementation of the peace accord begins, Colombia’s economy is facing the toughest conditions in many years. After a long period of strong growth, external factors including the apparent end of a long bull market in commodities and a sharp rise in the US dollar have helped slow the rate of GDP growth from an average of over 4% a year during 2001–15 (and record high of an annualised 8% in the first quarter of 2007) to 2% in 2016.

Drivers of prosperity in Africa

Q&A with Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, former finance and foreign minister of Nigeria and World Bank managing director; now a senior adviser at Lazard

An affordable transition to a competitive, low carbon economy is possible

At a time when climate policies are often presented as a drag on economic growth, a recent report from the UK’s Committee on Climate Change shows that moving to a competitive low carbon economy can be done affordably.

Time to turn the circular economy into practice

There is a clear business case for improving the resource efficiency of the economy. Yet, this remains an area of policy that is often overlooked, misunderstood or lacking in substance. It is time for EU institutions and the UK government to give much more impetus to this agenda.

Making Asia anxious again

The view from Tokyo of the US presidential election

Latin America: Room for growth

For the most part, Latin America has overcome its reputation as a region dogged by debt crises, hyperinflation and political instability, a reputation
that has long discouraged foreign investment. Although political and economic volatility is still present in the region, these factors are now more
the exception than the rule. And while some macroeconomic weaknesses persist, the region is today more stable than in previous decades amid

Nigeria Summit 2016: Dawn of a new day?

Nigeria has gone through a massive transformation. In 2014, the country became Africa's largest economy in terms of GDP, and the election of President Buhari last year showed that change was possible at the ballot box. 

Open for business?

Aengus Collins, Country Forecast Director of the Economist Intelligence Unit, assesses whether the UK's current position on exporting and immigration is having a negative impact on creating a vibrant economy.

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