A new United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) report is raising serious questions about the health and resilience of democracies across Latin America and the Caribbean, warning that while electoral systems remain largely intact, many countries are experiencing a dangerous erosion of institutions, accountability, and public trust—concerns that resonate strongly in Guyana’s rapidly changing political landscape.
The report, titled “Democracies Under Pressure: Reimagining the Futures of Democracy and Development in Latin America and the Caribbean,” describes the region as “the most democratic region in the developing world,” with more than four out of five citizens living under elected governments. However, it cautions that this achievement now coexists with “growing tension” and “gradual processes of democratic weakening.”
Among the warning signs identified by the UNDP are the questioning of elections, erosion of electoral authorities, concentration of power in personalist leaderships, weakening of checks and balances, rising polarization, declining political representation, and reduced public confidence in institutions.
The report’s findings come at a particularly significant moment for Guyana, where the country’s oil-driven economic transformation has brought unprecedented revenues and global attention, but also intensified scrutiny over governance, transparency, inclusion, and democratic accountability.
While the UNDP report does not focus exclusively on Guyana, several of the democratic stress indicators identified in the regional assessment mirror debates unfolding domestically. These include concerns about institutional independence, political polarization, access to state resources, ethnic and political division, and whether rapid economic growth is being matched by equally strong democratic safeguards.
The report argues that modern democratic decline in the region is no longer typically driven by coups or outright authoritarian collapse. Instead, it points to “gradual processes” where institutions weaken incrementally while elections continue to occur.
According to the UNDP, democracy today faces pressure not only from political actors but also from inequality, organized crime, migration pressures, disinformation, and declining trust in public institutions. The report dedicates entire sections to “the crisis of political representation,” “signs of democratic erosion,” and the role of the State in either strengthening or undermining democratic resilience.
For Guyana, these findings are especially consequential given the country’s widening economic disparities despite record oil revenues. Critics have repeatedly argued that economic expansion has not translated into sufficiently inclusive development, while sections of civil society continue to question whether state institutions are becoming overly centralized around the executive.
The UNDP report repeatedly emphasizes that democracy cannot survive on elections alone. It states that democratic systems must also preserve political equality, institutional independence, citizen participation, and effective accountability mechanisms.
Importantly, the report warns that public frustration with inequality and exclusion can create fertile ground for democratic backsliding. It notes that Latin America and the Caribbean remain among the most unequal regions globally and that persistent disparities weaken social cohesion and public confidence in governance systems.
The report’s broader regional analysis also intersects with Guyana’s ongoing political tensions following years of highly contentious elections and persistent accusations between government and opposition over democratic conduct, constitutional governance, and the use of state power.
UNDP Regional Director Michelle Muschett said the future of democracy and development “will depend on our collective ability to transform pressure into progress without sacrificing human agency or freedoms.”
The report further warns that the weakening of democratic culture often begins long before formal democratic collapse becomes visible. It highlights declining trust in political parties, legislatures, and judicial systems across the region, while cautioning that democracies can gradually become hollowed out even as electoral systems remain operational.
In Guyana’s case, observers have increasingly questioned whether democratic institutions are keeping pace with the immense political and economic pressures created by the oil economy. Concerns surrounding procurement transparency, distribution of national wealth, local government empowerment, parliamentary oversight, and public sector independence continue to dominate political discourse.
The UNDP also underscores the central role of the State in maintaining democratic legitimacy, arguing that governments must be capable not only of delivering economic growth, but also ensuring fairness, representation, and equal access to opportunity.
Perhaps most significantly, the report frames democracy and human development as inseparable. It argues that when citizens feel excluded from economic progress or disconnected from decision-making processes, democratic systems become increasingly vulnerable to polarization and institutional distrust.
