---
name: evaluating-country-risk-factors
language: en
description: Assesses country-level investment risk with political stability, rule of law, corruption indices, and expropriation history analysis. Use when evaluating country risk, assessing political exposure, or scoring sovereign investment environments.
tags:
  - analysis
  - cross-border-capital
  - risk
  - investment
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - International Finance
    - Cross-Border Transactions
    - Emerging Markets
  document_types:
    - Evaluation Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
    - Assessment
---
# Evaluating Country Risk Factors

Assesses country-level investment risk across political stability, rule of law, corruption, macroeconomic resilience, and expropriation history to produce a structured risk profile for cross-border capital allocation decisions.

## When To Use

- Screening a new market for direct investment, project finance, or fund allocation
- Scoring sovereign or quasi-sovereign counterparty risk for lending or bond exposure
- Comparing multiple jurisdictions for site selection or supply-chain diversification
- Updating an existing country risk rating after a political transition, sanctions change, or macroeconomic shock
- Supporting investment committee memos, credit committee papers, or LP reporting on geographic exposure

## Inputs To Gather

- **Target country (or countries)** and asset class / transaction type under consideration
- **Investment horizon** (short-term trade finance vs. long-term infrastructure equity)
- **Sector context** — extractive industries, financial services, technology, and agriculture each carry different regulatory and expropriation profiles
- **Existing exposure data** — current portfolio concentration in the country or region
- **Reference indices** — request or retrieve latest available scores from:
  - Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI)
  - World Bank Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI) — Voice & Accountability, Political Stability, Government Effectiveness, Regulatory Quality, Rule of Law, Control of Corruption
  - World Bank Ease of Doing Business / Business Ready rankings
  - Sovereign credit ratings (Moody's, S&P, Fitch) [VERIFY current ratings]
  - OECD Country Risk Classifications [VERIFY current classification]
  - Freedom House Freedom in the World scores
- **Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs)** and investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) history relevant to the investor's home jurisdiction [VERIFY treaty status]

## Workflow

1. **Define scope** — Confirm the country, asset class, sector, and investment horizon. Determine whether this is a standalone assessment or a comparative ranking across multiple jurisdictions.

2. **Compile political-stability profile**
   - Government type, recent transitions, upcoming elections, and regime durability
   - History of coups, civil unrest, or armed conflict in the last 20 years
   - Ethnic, religious, or regional fault lines that affect policy continuity
   - Sanctions status (US OFAC, EU, UN) [VERIFY current sanctions lists]

3. **Assess rule-of-law and legal infrastructure**
   - Judicial independence and enforceability of foreign judgments and arbitral awards (New York Convention signatory status) [VERIFY]
   - Property rights protections and land registration reliability
   - Contract enforcement timelines and costs (World Bank data)
   - Regulatory predictability — frequency of retroactive tax or regulatory changes

4. **Score corruption and governance risk**
   - CPI score and trend direction (improving, stable, deteriorating)
   - WGI Control of Corruption and Government Effectiveness percentile ranks
   - Prevalence of state-owned enterprise involvement in target sector
   - Anti-bribery enforcement environment (FCPA, UK Bribery Act exposure for the investor)

5. **Evaluate expropriation and nationalization history**
   - Documented instances of direct expropriation, creeping expropriation, or forced renegotiation in the last 30 years
   - ISDS cases filed against the state (ICSID and UNCITRAL records) [VERIFY case counts]
   - Compensation track record — whether awards were honored and timelines for payment
   - Current political rhetoric regarding foreign ownership in the target sector

6. **Analyze macroeconomic and transfer risk**
   - Currency convertibility and capital controls
   - Foreign-exchange reserve adequacy (import cover ratio)
   - Sovereign debt-to-GDP and debt-service ratios
   - Inflation trajectory and central bank independence
   - History of moratoria, forced restructurings, or deposit freezes

7. **Synthesize composite risk score**
   - Map each dimension (political stability, rule of law, corruption, expropriation, macro/transfer) to a 1–5 or 1–10 scale with defined anchors
   - Weight dimensions based on asset class: equity investments weight expropriation risk higher; debt investments weight transfer and macro risk higher
   - Produce an overall country risk tier (e.g., Low / Moderate / Elevated / High / Very High)
   - Identify the single largest risk driver and the most likely downside scenario

8. **Formulate mitigation recommendations**
   - Political risk insurance (MIGA, OPIC/DFC, private-market PRI) — coverage scope and cost considerations
   - Structural protections: local JV partners, government concession agreements, stabilization clauses
   - Legal protections: BIT coverage, arbitration forum selection, governing law choice
   - Portfolio-level hedging: currency hedges, exposure caps, diversification corridors

## Output

Produce a **Country Risk Evaluation Report** containing:

- **Executive summary** — country, risk tier, key risk driver, and headline recommendation (1 paragraph)
- **Dimension scorecards** — tabular scores for each of the five risk dimensions with brief narrative justification
- **Composite risk rating** with weighting methodology disclosed
- **Trend assessment** — whether overall risk is improving, stable, or deteriorating relative to the prior 12–24 months
- **Key risk scenarios** — two to three plausible downside scenarios with estimated probability and impact
- **Mitigation options** — prioritized list of structural, legal, and insurance-based protections
- **Data sources and as-of dates** — every index score or rating cited must include its publication date
- **[VERIFY] flags** — all jurisdiction-dependent or time-sensitive data points marked for confirmation

## Quality Checks

- Every index score cites the specific edition year or publication date — no undated references
- Expropriation history covers at least the last 20 years and names specific incidents, not just generalizations
- Composite scoring methodology is transparent: weights are stated and anchors are defined so a reader can reproduce the rating
- Sanctions screening reflects current lists, not historical status [VERIFY against latest OFAC/EU/UN updates]
- Mitigation recommendations are actionable (name specific instruments or structures), not generic advice like "consider insurance"
- If comparing multiple countries, the same data vintage and scoring methodology is applied consistently across all jurisdictions
- The report distinguishes between short-term event risk (elections, coups) and structural risk (institutional quality, legal infrastructure)
