Compiled by the Cato Institute and the Fraser Institute in collaboration with partner organisations, the Human Freedom Index 2025 evaluates personal and economic freedom across 165 countries and territories. Released in mid-December 2025, the report places Switzerland, Denmark and New Zealand at the top of the global rankings. India stands at 110th — well below the median and far removed from the cohort of liberal democracies with which it is often rhetorically compared.

This represents a marginal but telling decline from the 2024 index, where India was ranked 109th. Read in isolation, a one-place drop might appear inconsequential. Read against the longer historical record, it is anything but. In 2014, India was placed around 87th on the same index. Over roughly a decade, the country has slid more than twenty places, moving steadily downwards rather than fluctuating around a stable band.

The architecture of the index is consistent across years, which makes comparisons meaningful. Human freedom is assessed through two broad pillars: personal freedom and economic freedom. Personal freedom encompasses civil liberties such as freedom of expression, media freedom, religious freedom, freedom of association and assembly, freedom of movement, and the extent to which the rule of law protects individuals from violence, arbitrary arrest and state abuse. Economic freedom covers property rights, regulatory burden, government size, taxation and expenditure, and openness to trade, investment and competitive markets.

India’s current position reflects persistent weaknesses across both pillars. On personal freedom, successive editions of the index have recorded declining or stagnant scores on civil liberties, space for dissent and rule-of-law indicators. These are not episodic dips but part of a sustained pattern visible across multiple years. On economic freedom, while there have been isolated improvements in ease-of-doing-business narratives, the index continues to flag regulatory complexity, uneven enforcement of contracts and property rights, and the heavy footprint of the state as structural constraints.

The contrast with India’s own past performance is instructive. A decade ago, India occupied a position closer to the global middle, ahead of many peers at comparable income levels. Since then, other countries have improved or held their ground while India has slipped, suggesting relative decline rather than universal stagnation. The 2025 ranking simply marks the latest point on that downward curve.

Stripped of rhetoric and confined strictly to what the index records, the message is stark. The Human Freedom Index 2025 tells us that India is ranked 110th out of 165 countries; that this represents a further decline from 2024; and that the country’s standing is significantly worse than it was in the mid-2010s. The numbers do not diagnose causes or prescribe remedies. They do, however, establish a trend — and that trend, year after year, points in one direction.

Courtesy: The AIDEM