Kovind Launches Responsible Nations Index, Redefining Global Power Metrics

Former President Ram Nath Kovind has endorsed the launch of the Responsible Nations Index, a new framework to evaluate nations based on their responsibility towards citizens, the environment, and the international community. He argued that traditional metrics like economic size and military strength fail to capture a nation's true character and how it treats its people and planet. The index, developed by the World Intellectual Foundation with academic support, aims to reposition global conversations on power and development. It emphasizes that sovereignty entails duties and that prosperity without responsibility is unsustainable.

Key Points: Kovind Launches Index to Redefine Global Power Beyond Economy

  • New index shifts from economic/military power to responsibility
  • Ethics and moral conduct central to governance
  • Framework assesses citizen care and environment
  • Aims to encourage ethical governance and global stability
3 min read

From economic strength to responsible governance: Former President Kovind backs push for new global measure of power

Former President Ram Nath Kovind launches the Responsible Nations Index, advocating for ethics, citizen welfare, and environmental care as new measures of national power.

"A country can be economically prosperous and yet remain irresponsible. - Ram Nath Kovind"

New Delhi, January 19

Nations must be judged beyond economic strength and military power, backing a framework that seeks to redefine global power through responsibility towards citizens, the environment, and the international community, former Indian President Ram Nath Kovind said during the launch of the Responsible Nations Index on Monday.

Endorsing this approach, he warned that material success alone cannot define national progress. "A country can be economically prosperous and yet remain irresponsible," Kovind said, calling for ethics, dignity, and moral conduct to be placed at the centre of governance.

India today sought to reposition the global conversation on development and power with the launch of the Responsible Nations Index (RNI), signalling a shift from traditional economic and military metrics towards a responsibility-based framework for evaluating nations.

Unveiled in New Delhi, under the aegis of the World Intellectual Foundation (WIF), the Index assesses how responsibly countries govern their economies, care for citizens, protect the environment, and engage with their neighbourhood and the wider international community.

He noted that global rankings have long relied on indicators such as economic size, military strength, and technological advancement, but questioned their ability to capture the true character of nations.

"They tell us very little about how a country treats its own citizens, how it engages with other nations, and how sincerely it protects our shared planetary home," he observed.

Kovind underlined that irresponsible exercise of economic and strategic power often destabilises regions and places disproportionate burdens on neighbouring countries, whether through environmental degradation, financial pressures, or conflict.

"For us, power does not mean dominance; it is a duty. Sovereignty comes not only with rights but also with responsibilities," he said, invoking Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam--the belief that the world is one family.

Linking democracy with inclusive growth, Kovind stressed that political systems cannot endure without economic justice.

"Democracy is not just the right to vote, it is also the right to live with dignity," he said, arguing that governance must ensure social security, opportunity, and fairness.

On sustainability, he delivered a clear message for policymakers and markets alike. "We are not owners of the Earth's resources, but their trustees." Development that destroys natural capital, he cautioned, cannot be considered real progress.

The Responsible Nations Index is the outcome of a three-year academic and policy exercise conceptualised by WIF and anchored in India's ethos of dharma and global well-being. Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Mumbai contributed significantly to its intellectual foundations and methodological rigour.

The launch followed a high-level panel discussion titled "From Human Well-being to Global Stewardship: Rethinking Responsibility, Prosperity and Peace in the 21st Century", chaired by N. K. Singh, Chairman of the 15th Finance Commission of India.

Concluding the event, Sudhanshu Mittal, Founder and Secretary of WIF, said the RNI represents a decisive move away from power-centric evaluations.

"Prosperity without responsibility is unsustainable," he said, adding that the Index aims to encourage ethical governance, stable neighbourhood relations, and long-term global economic resilience.

The ceremonial release of the Responsible Nations Index Report marked the start of what organisers described as a sustained international dialogue on responsible nationhood in an interconnected world.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam is the perfect philosophy to anchor this index. The world is indeed one family. Hope powerful nations take note. Military might means nothing if you're destroying the planet for future generations.
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Aman W
A noble idea, but the proof will be in the implementation. Will this index hold all countries, including the most powerful, to the same standard? Or will it become another tool for political point-scoring? The methodology from JNU and IIM gives me some hope.
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Sarah B
As someone living in India, I fully agree that democracy is the right to live with dignity. Economic justice is the foundation. This framework could be a game-changer if it genuinely measures social security and opportunity for all citizens.
K
Karthik V
"We are not owners, but trustees." This line hit home. In our rush for development, we often forget this basic dharma. Hope our own policymakers listen to this and balance growth with environmental responsibility. A great initiative!
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Michael C
Interesting to see India proposing a new global metric. The focus on stable neighbourhood relations is crucial. Irresponsible power projection does create burdens for smaller neighbours. Curious to see the first rankings.

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