Democracy Vista
Official national flag of Ethiopia. Democracy Vista assessment territory.
Official Territory

Ethiopia

Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia

Pop: 111,652,998
Zone: Africa
DEMOVISTA PROPRIETARY // 2026

Liberty
Analysis

A weighted composite metric synthesizing global data on democracy, human rights, economic freedom, and societal development.

4.3INDEX / 10.0
Hybrid Regime

Supporting
Indices

5.5
SCORE / 10

Democracy Quality

Comprehensive analysis of democratic institutional quality

Hybrid Regime
5.5
SCORE / 10

Economic Freedom

Degree to which policies and institutions support economic liberty

Hybrid Regime
5.8
SCORE / 10

Human Freedom

A comprehensive measure of personal, civil, and economic freedom

Hybrid Regime
5.3
SCORE / 10

Economic Policy

Analysis of rule of law, government size, and regulatory efficiency

Hybrid Regime
3.1
SCORE / 10

Liberal Democracy

Accountability to citizens through elections and individual rights protection

Authoritarian Regime

Structural
Categories

#125
🗣️

Freedom of Speech

3.6

Severe restrictions on public expression and suppressed media.

Status
#125/ 184
#125
📜

Rule of Law

4.6

Functional legal systems with occasional inconsistency.

Status
#125/ 184
#125
👩

Women's Freedom

3.9

Severe restrictions on women's autonomy and legal standing.

Status
#125/ 184
#119
👥

Minorities Freedom

4.0

Systemic discrimination and severe marginalization of minorities.

Status
#119/ 184
#130
🛡️

Crime & Safety

5.1

Moderate crime levels with adequate police response capability.

Status
#130/ 184
#128
🗽

Individual Liberties

3.6

Severe constraints on personal autonomy and identity expression.

Status
#128/ 184
#120
🗳️

Democratic Health

2.9

Severe democratic deficits or authoritarian structures.

Status
#120/ 184
#118
🏛️

Institutional Integrity

4.5

Pervasive corruption and lack of government integrity.

Status
#118/ 184
#131
⚖️

Civil Justice

5.1

Functioning courts with vulnerability to external influence.

Status
#131/ 184
#118
📈

Economic Vigor

5.9

Developing market with average structural freedom.

Status
#118/ 184
#133
🏦

Macroeconomic Stability

5.5

Moderate inflation risk or currency management issues.

Status
#133/ 184
#89
🌐

Market Openness

6.4

Moderate hurdles in international trade and finance.

Status
#89/ 184
#126
📋

Regulatory Environment

4.9

Bureaucratic friction impedes rapid business operations.

Status
#126/ 184
#130
🌟

Quality of Life

5.2

Moderate welfare capacity; localized safety risks exist.

Status
#130/ 184
#128
🌈

Social Tolerance

3.5

Systemic marginalization and lack of minority protections.

Status
#128/ 184
#120
📰

Expression and Information

3.5

High systemic censorship and severe restrictions on expression.

Status
#120/ 184
#118
🤝

Civil Society

3.8

Strict suppression of non-governmental associations.

Status
#118/ 184

Metadata &
Technical Details

Basic Information

Capital

Addis Ababa

Region

Africa

Subregion

Eastern Africa

Landlocked

Yes

Culture & Language

Languages

Amharic

Currencies

Ethiopian birr (Br)

Technical Details

Country Codes

ETETH

Neighboring Countries

DJI, ERI, KEN, SOM, SSD, SDN

Geographic
Hub

Initializing Projections...
Geospatial Context
Coordinates8.00°N, 38.00°E
ProjectionEquirectangular

National
Insights

Background
The area that is modern-day Ethiopia is rich in cultural and religious diversity with more than 80 ethnic groups. The oldest hominid yet found comes from Ethiopia, and Ethiopia was the second country to officially adopt Christianity in the 4th century A.D. A series of monarchies ruled the area that is now Ethiopia from 980 B.C. to 1855, when the Amhara kingdoms of northern Ethiopia united in an empire under Tewodros II. Many Ethiopians still speak reverently about the Battle of Adwa in 1896, when they defeated Italian forces and won their freedom from colonial rule.

Emperor Haile SELASSIE became an internationally renowned figure in 1935, when he unsuccessfully appealed to the League of Nations to prevent Italy from occupying Ethiopia from 1936 to 1941. SELASSIE survived an attempted coup in 1960, annexed modern-day Eritrea in 1962, and played a leading role in establishing the Organization of African Unity in 1963. However, in 1974, a military junta called the Derg deposed him and established a socialist state. Torn by bloody coups, uprisings, drought, and massive displacement, the Derg regime was toppled in 1991 by a coalition of opposing forces, the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). The EPRDF became an ethno-federalist political coalition that ruled Ethiopia from 1991 until its dissolution in 2019. Ethiopia adopted its constitution in 1994 and held its first multiparty elections in 1995.

A two-and-a-half-year border war with Eritrea in the late 1990s ended with a peace treaty in 2000. Ethiopia subsequently rejected the 2007 Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission demarcation. This resulted in more than a decade of a tense “no peace, no war” stalemate between the two countries. In 2012, longtime Prime Minister MELES Zenawi died in office and was replaced by his Deputy Prime Minister HAILEMARIAM Desalegn, marking the first peaceful transition of power in decades. Following a wave of popular dissent and anti-government protest that began in 2015, HAILEMARIAM resigned in 2018, and ABIY Ahmed Ali took office the same year as Ethiopia's first ethnic Oromo prime minister. In 2018, ABIY promoted a rapprochement between Ethiopia and Eritrea that was marked with a peace agreement and a reopening of their shared border. In 2019, Ethiopia's nearly 30-year ethnic-based ruling coalition, the EPRDF, merged into a single unity party called the Prosperity Party; however, the lead coalition party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), declined to join. In 2020, a military conflict erupted between forces aligned with the TPLF and the Ethiopian military. The conflict -- which was marked by atrocities committed by all parties -- ended in 2022 with a cessation of hostilities agreement between the TPLF and the Ethiopian Government. However, Ethiopia continues to experience ethnic-based violence as other groups -- including the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) and Amhara militia Fano -- seek concessions from the Ethiopian Government.