LEGISLATURE

Number of committees
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To ensure comparability, observed values are transformed into SGI scores on a scale from 1 to 10. The lowest value translates into score 1, the best value into score 10. Remaining values are transformed according to the original data distribution.
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Value
Score
1Czech Rep.0
10.00
 
1Finland0
10.00
 
1Greece0
10.00
 
1Hungary0
10.00
 
1Iceland0
10.00
 
1Italy0
10.00
 
1Japan0
10.00
 
1New Zealand0
10.00
 
1Norway0
10.00
 
1Portugal0
10.00
 
1South Korea0
10.00
 
1Sweden0
10.00
 
1Switzerland0
10.00
 
1Turkey0
10.00
 
15Australia1
9.00
 
15Belgium1
9.00
 
15Slovakia1
9.00
 
18Chile2
8.00
 
18France2
8.00
 
18Germany2
8.00
 
18Luxembourg2
8.00
 
18Netherlands2
8.00
 
23Canada3
7.00
 
23Denmark3
7.00
 
23Ireland3
7.00
 
23Poland3
7.00
 
23USA3
7.00
 
28Spain4
6.00
 
29Austria5
5.00
 
30UK8
2.00
 
31Mexico9
1.00
 
10
Key concepts
 
The legislature’s role in governance consists in interpreting popular interests and evaluating, not simply implementing, executive proposals. An effective legislature will not only challenge the normative justification of governmental polices, but deepen the terrain in which they are grounded by drawing upon research and expert knowledge.

The structure of a legislative body can significantly influence the efficiency of its work, however. Committees that are too large or too small will find it difficult to work, while having too many or too few committees will make it more difficult to efficiently monitor ministry activity.

Critical too is the availability of expert analysis and research, either directly on individual legislators’ staff or serving the legislature as a whole. Parliaments with comparatively limited expert research resources may have more difficulty in critiquing executive proposals.
Performance comparison
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Use drop-down menus for selections. In all cases, higher scores reflect better performance.
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