Women’s Power Index: Charting Progress From the Past Twenty-Five Years
from Women Around the World and Women and Foreign Policy Program
from Women Around the World and Women and Foreign Policy Program

Women’s Power Index: Charting Progress From the Past Twenty-Five Years

New WPI trendline charts show women’s political parity stalling across three indicators, after two decades of growth.

August 7, 2025 3:32 pm (EST)

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The Women and Foreign Policy program’s most recent update of the “Women’s Power Index” ranks 193 United Nations (UN) member states’ records on gender parity in political participation. This digital interactive tracks five indicators: the proportion of women who serve as heads of state or government, in cabinets, in national legislatures, as candidates for national legislatures, and in local government bodies; calculates an overall gender parity score, and visualizes key features of the gender gap in political representation.

The Women’s Power Index includes a new digital visualization of countries’ track records from 2000 to 2025 across three indicators for which the most robust data exists: heads of state or government, cabinets, and national legislatures. These indicators show signs of stagnation after years of progress. 

More on:

Heads of State and Government

Women's Political Leadership

Elections and Voting

Congresses and Parliaments

Women and Economic Growth

  • Countries with women as head of state or government: Currently twenty-six UN member states have a female head of state or government, compared to a peak of thirty countries in 2023 (as of January 1).

  • Cabinet: Nine UN member states have 50 percent or more women in the national cabinet; this compares to a high point of fifteen countries with half or more women in cabinets in 2024. 

  • National Legislature: Six UN member states have at least 50 percent women in the national legislature; this trend of top performers has remained stagnant for three years. Globally, the increase in women in national legislatures has stalled at .03 percent, according to the Inter-Parliamentary Union.

Parity score trends. For all countries, the overall global gender parity score is 29 on our aggregate scale of indicators, where a 100-point score represents gender parity. Only thirty countries out of 193 are halfway to parity (i.e., score 50) or more, the same number as in 2024. The top three countries, Iceland with a score of 86, Mexico at 76, and Andorra at 75, have kept their spot in the lead. Iceland has both a female president and prime minister, and Mexico elected Claudia Sheinbaum its first woman as president in 2024. 

In addition to Iceland, women are currently serving as both head of state and government in Barbados, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Trinidad and Tobago. President Vjosa Osmani of Kosovo, which is not recognized by the UN, has served since April 2021. 

Women stepping into new roles. In recent months, several countries have seen female heads of state or government assume power: Liechtenstein’s first woman prime minister, Brigitte Haas; Suriname’s first woman president, Jennifer Geerlings-Simons; Kamla Persad-Bissessar, who was appointed prime minister in Trinidad and Tobago after previously serving as the first woman from 2010-2015; and Yulia Svyrydenko, who was appointed as the second woman prime minister in Ukraine’s history. 

More on:

Heads of State and Government

Women's Political Leadership

Elections and Voting

Congresses and Parliaments

Women and Economic Growth

Taking a step back, progress remains meager. UN Women estimates that if growth remains at its current rate, gender parity will not be achieved for 130 years. 

The interactive presentation includes the following features:  

  • a dynamic global map displaying each country’s indicators for gender parity in representation  

  • a searchable list of current female heads of state or government  

  • a customizable table to compare data on gender parity from different nations and regions 

  • a three-part line chart of progress across three indicators 

Explore the Index here>>  

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