India Ranks 36th in Global Commitment to Development Index (CDI) 2025
The Commitment to Development Index (CDI) 2025 provides key insights for both general readers and exam aspirants on how major global economies, including India, contribute to international development.
According to the Centre for Global Development’s Commitment to Development Index (CDI) 2025, India ranks 36th overall among the countries evaluated.
This ranking is a result of a mixed performance across the eight policy components, with a single standout strength but several areas of significant concern.
| Indicator | India’s Rank (CDI 2025) | Significance/Context for CDI |
| Overall Rank | 36th | Important for general knowledge and ranking-based questions. CDI is a well-known global index. |
| Best Performance | Environment (8th) | Strength: India is among the top 10 performers globally, primarily due to very low emissions per capita. This score is often adjusted to account for per capita or economic size. The CDI’s environment component penalizes countries with high greenhouse gas emissions per head, which benefits India. |
| Worst Performance | Trade (38th) Finance (38th) | Weakness: Ranking last in both categories (out of 38 countries in the index). This signals the most room for improvement in areas related to aid generosity (Development Finance) and openness to trade (Trade). Low scores in Trade are often due to tariffs and subsidies that hinder imports from poorer countries. |
| Other Low Ranks | Investment (31st), Migration (36th), Security (31st) | These ranks (among the worst six countries) indicate policy weaknesses in areas like FDI openness, accepting migrants/refugees, and contributing to international security efforts. |
| Income-Adjusted Rank | 29th | Crucial for Analysis: This rank is higher than the overall rank. CDI calculates this by comparing a country’s development contributions to what is expected given its income level. India’s higher income-adjusted score suggests that when accounting for its low-income level, its commitment to development is better than what the raw rank suggests. |
For exam aspirants, understanding the index’s structure and top performers is vital.
The index uses a balanced scorecard approach across eight domains, which are often scaled relative to a country’s size or economic weight to ensure fair comparison:
| Rank | Country | Key Strengths/Notes |
| 1st | Sweden | Retains the top position. Strongest in Environment (1st), Finance (2nd), and Health (4th). |
| 2nd | Germany | Ranks 1st in Development Finance and high in Trade. |
| 3rd | Norway | Ranks 1st in Health and 2nd in Security. |
| 4th | Finland | |
| 5th | United Kingdom |
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