The GGRI (Global Geopolitical Risk Index) is a 0–100 score per country, refreshed daily, that captures the operating risk of doing business or operating personnel in that country.
Each country’s score is the weighted aggregate of ten categories: security, political, civil unrest, crime, economic, regulatory, infrastructure, cyber, health, and government advisories. Categories are scored from 67 OSINT (open-source intelligence) sources including wire services, mainstream media, government advisories, specialist conflict trackers, and selected social signals.
Each event is scored on five dimensions: severity, source reliability, recency, frequency, and business impact. Country scores combine a structural baseline (slow-changing, like sanctions or governance quality) with active-event signal (fast-changing, like protests or strikes).
For the full mathematical definition, see the methodology page.
Active-event signals decay over 7 days — an incident that drove yesterday’s score will fade unless followed by new corroborating events. The structural baseline stays mostly stable (changes only when a country’s long-term profile shifts: regime change, sanctions, etc.).
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