Country Decision Dashboard

Choose a country and get a clear partner strategy with concrete next moves.

Executive Summary

Recommended Strategy

Technology First

Based on top-partner score consistency.

Current Strengths

Tech Readiness (98.1/100) | Data Coverage (95.2/100)

Main Risk Pressures

Macro Risk (42.9/100) | Climate Pressure (25.3/100)

Country Signal Board

Market Size

89.3/100

Strong

Proxy for demand depth and economic scale.

Resource Strength

17.3/100

Weak

Natural-capital and strategic input potential.

Tech Readiness

98.1/100

Strong

Digital and infrastructure readiness for execution.

Governance

78.8/100

Strong

Institutional quality and policy reliability.

Climate Pressure

25.3/100

Low Risk

Higher score means larger climate vulnerability burden.

Macro Risk

42.9/100

Medium Risk

Inflation, debt, and labor-market stability pressure.

Data Coverage

95.2/100

Strong

Reliability of the underlying data footprint.

Priority Playbook

1) Growth and Export Expansion

Which partnerships can increase market reach for United Kingdom with acceptable risk?

Trade-linked gains tend to materialize fastest and support fiscal headroom for later reforms.

Top Partners

1. DR Congo (COD)

51.4

DR Congo expands market access and demand-side pull.

2. Niger (NER)

51.2

Niger expands market access and demand-side pull.

3. Central African Republic (CAF)

50.4

Central African Republic improves technology transfer potential.

4. Chad (TCD)

49.3

Chad improves technology transfer potential.

5. Uganda (UGA)

48.6

Uganda expands market access and demand-side pull.

First Moves

  • Start bilateral talks on tariff/logistics bottlenecks with top two partners.
  • Prioritize sectors where market demand and tech compatibility are both high.

2) Technology and Capability Upgrading

Who can most effectively accelerate productivity, skills, and innovation for United Kingdom?

Technology partnerships compound over time and strengthen long-run competitiveness.

Top Partners

1. DR Congo (COD)

52.2

DR Congo expands market access and demand-side pull.

2. Niger (NER)

51.9

Niger expands market access and demand-side pull.

3. Central African Republic (CAF)

51.6

Central African Republic improves technology transfer potential.

4. Chad (TCD)

50.3

Chad improves technology transfer potential.

5. Uganda (UGA)

49.3

Uganda expands market access and demand-side pull.

First Moves

  • Propose targeted R&D and skills-exchange programs tied to measurable outcomes.
  • Focus first on areas where domestic capability gaps are currently largest.

3) Energy and Climate Resilience

Which partners best reduce medium-term exposure to climate and energy shocks?

Risk reduction protects trade, food, and infrastructure continuity under stress scenarios.

Top Partners

1. DR Congo (COD)

50.5

DR Congo expands market access and demand-side pull.

2. Niger (NER)

50.2

Niger expands market access and demand-side pull.

3. Central African Republic (CAF)

49.6

Central African Republic improves technology transfer potential.

4. United Arab Emirates (ARE)

49.1

United Arab Emirates aligns with infrastructure and logistics readiness.

5. Chad (TCD)

48.3

Chad improves technology transfer potential.

First Moves

  • Negotiate joint resilience projects in energy, food-water systems, and infrastructure.
  • Set shared risk indicators and annual stress-test checkpoints with partner countries.

Cross-Strategy Partner Consensus

Partners that appear repeatedly across strategy modes are usually safer starting points.

1. DR Congo (COD)

Appears in 5 of 5 strategy tracks.

Avg score 50.4

2. Niger (NER)

Appears in 5 of 5 strategy tracks.

Avg score 50.2

3. Central African Republic (CAF)

Appears in 5 of 5 strategy tracks.

Avg score 49.6

Strategy Mode Comparison

Balanced

1. COD48.9

2. NER48.5

3. CAF48.0

Trade First

1. COD51.4

2. NER51.2

3. CAF50.4

Resource First

1. COD49.3

2. NER49.1

3. CAF48.6

Technology First

1. COD52.2

2. NER51.9

3. CAF51.6

Resilience First

1. COD50.5

2. NER50.2

3. CAF49.6