Federal monarchy
A federal monarchy is a form of government in which a federation of states, each ruled by its own hereditary monarch or emir, is headed by a supreme monarch selected from among those rulers, balancing centralized authority with regional sovereignty.[1][2] The United Arab Emirates and Malaysia represent the principal contemporary instances of this system, where the federal head of state is elected by the constituent rulers rather than strictly inherited, fostering consensus among traditional elites while adapting to modern federal governance.[1][3] In the United Arab Emirates, established in 1971 as a union of seven absolute monarchies, the president—who concurrently rules one of the emirates, typically Abu Dhabi—is chosen by the Federal Supreme Council comprising the rulers of all emirates, ensuring the federation's executive leadership remains rooted in hereditary lines.[4][5] This structure has facilitated rapid economic diversification and political stability, leveraging oil wealth under monarchical coordination without democratic elections for supreme office.[3] Malaysia, formed in 1963 from sultanates and other territories, operates as a constitutional federal monarchy where the Yang di-Pertuan Agong (King) is elected for a five-year term by secret ballot among the nine hereditary sultans of the Malay states, following a rotational order to maintain equity.[6][7] The Conference of Rulers not only selects the federal monarch but also safeguards Islamic affairs and state customs, embodying a hybrid of elective and hereditary elements that has preserved Malay royal traditions amid parliamentary democracy and ethnic federalism.[6][7] This arrangement underscores federal monarchy's capacity to integrate diverse monarchical legacies into a cohesive national framework, though it has occasionally faced tensions over succession and royal prerogatives.[6]
Conceptual Foundations
Definition and Etymology
A federal monarchy constitutes a form of government wherein a single monarch serves as the head of state for a federation of semi-autonomous constituent states or entities, with sovereignty distributed between a central authority and the member units through formalized pacts that preserve local autonomy, often including subnational monarchical rulers or traditional authorities.[8] This structure embodies a causal mechanism for reconciling unified leadership under one sovereign with decentralized governance, enabling the federation to maintain cohesion while accommodating regional diversity in legal, cultural, and administrative domains.[9] The etymological roots underscore this balance of unity and pact-based association. "Federal" originates from the Latin foedus, denoting a "covenant," "treaty," or "league," which entered English via French fédéral in the 17th century to describe systems of allied governance predicated on mutual agreements rather than centralized imposition.[10] In contrast, "monarchy" derives from the late Latin monarchia and Ancient Greek monarchía (μονάρχια), a compound of mónos ("alone" or "single") and árchein ("to rule" or "to be first"), signifying absolute or singular rule by one individual, a concept formalized in political discourse by the mid-14th century.[11] Thus, federal monarchy semantically fuses covenantal federation—emphasizing voluntary, treaty-bound decentralization—with monarchical singularity, distinguishing it from unitary monarchies where power concentrates without such devolved compacts, as evidenced by historical shifts from consolidated rule to power-sharing arrangements in allied realms.[12] This hybrid form prioritizes empirical stability through distributed authority, avoiding the centralization risks of pure monarchies or the fragmentation of loose confederations.[13]Distinction from Other Monarchical and Federal Forms
In a federal monarchy, sovereignty is pooled through an explicit constitutional framework that divides powers between a central federal authority—headed by a single monarch—and autonomous subnational entities, creating a composite state with unified foreign policy, defense, and other shared competencies. This contrasts sharply with personal unions, where multiple kingdoms or states share the same individual as monarch but operate as distinct sovereign entities without any federal integration of institutions or laws; each retains independent governance, diplomacy, and legal systems, with the monarch exercising separate crowns rather than a federated headship. For instance, the personal union between the crowns of Spain and Portugal under Philip II (r. 1580–1640) preserved Portugal's separate cortes, currency, and colonial administration, lacking any pact subordinating components to a federal whole. Federal monarchies further diverge from federated republics, such as the United States or Germany, by vesting the apex executive authority in a hereditary, non-partisan monarch who embodies continuity and transcends electoral cycles, rather than an elected president often aligned with partisan interests. In republics, the head of state derives legitimacy from periodic elections and may wield substantive powers or influence policy directly, whereas the federal monarch's role emphasizes symbolic unity and restraint under constitutional limits, insulating the federation from transient political divisions. This hereditary element ensures institutional stability across generations, a feature absent in republican federalism where leadership turnover can disrupt federal cohesion.[14] De facto federations under a monarch, such as loose alliances or historical dynastic agglomerations without codified power-sharing pacts, do not qualify as federal monarchies, which demand verifiable constitutional mechanisms delineating federal versus subnational jurisdictions to prevent dominance by the center or dissolution into separatism. Legal-constitutional criteria, including written divisions of authority and mutual consent among components, supersede informal or customary arrangements; for example, pre-modern composite monarchies like the Habsburg domains often devolved into personal or real unions rather than true federations due to the absence of enduring federal compacts enforceable against monarchical whim.[15][16]Historical Evolution
Pre-Modern Instances
The Achaemenid Empire (c. 550–330 BCE), founded by Cyrus the Great, incorporated elements of decentralized governance through its satrapy system, where provincial governors (satraps) exercised significant administrative autonomy over local affairs, taxation, and militias, while pledging loyalty to the central Great King. This structure enabled the empire to manage diverse ethnic groups and vast territories stretching from the Indus Valley to the Mediterranean, fostering stability via localized rule that minimized rebellions by preserving cultural practices and reducing the burdens of direct central oversight. The system's causal roots lay in the need for effective defense against peripheral threats and facilitation of trade along infrastructure like the Royal Road, which connected satrapies for economic integration without eroding monarchical supremacy.[17] In early medieval Europe (c. 500–800 CE), Germanic tribal groups frequently formed confederations under overlord kings to coordinate mutual defense against invaders and secure trade networks across post-Roman frontiers. Tribes such as the Franks under Clovis I (r. 481–511 CE) unified disparate clans through conquest and alliance, granting sub-kings or duces semi-autonomous control over regions while the paramount ruler enforced overarching fealty via military campaigns and assemblies. These arrangements arose from pragmatic necessities: fragmented tribes lacked the scale for independent survival amid Hunnic and later Avars incursions, yet retained local customs to avert internal dissent, yielding kingdoms that endured longer than unallied groups by balancing central command with tribal incentives.[18] The Holy Roman Empire (962–1806 CE), originating with Otto I's coronation, represented a more institutionalized proto-federal monarchy, encompassing over 300 semi-sovereign entities including hereditary principalities, ecclesiastical states, and imperial cities, all nominally under an emperor elected by a college of princes. The Golden Bull of 1356 formalized this electoral process among seven electors, distributing power to curb dynastic overreach and sustain consensus through the Imperial Diet, where local rulers negotiated taxes and wars. This decentralization, rooted in Carolingian precedents of feudal delegation for territorial defense and Rhine trade protection, promoted empirical longevity—spanning 844 years—by diffusing authority and accommodating regional variances, thereby limiting large-scale revolts compared to more unitary realms like the contemporary Kingdom of France, which faced recurrent feudal uprisings despite shorter-term centralizing efforts.[19]Modern Formations in the 19th and 20th Centuries
The North German Confederation, established on July 1, 1867, following Prussia's victory in the Austro-Prussian War, represented an early modern federal structure under a monarchical head, with King Wilhelm I of Prussia serving as Bundespräsident and exercising executive authority over the alliance of 22 states.[20] This arrangement centralized military and foreign policy under Prussian leadership while granting constituent states autonomy in internal affairs, reflecting Bismarck's strategy to unify northern Germany through a compromise between absolutist monarchy and federal decentralization amid rising nationalism.[21] The Confederation's constitution emphasized the Prussian king's role as the federal executive, foreshadowing the federal elements of the German Empire proclaimed in 1871, where the emperor retained similar oversight but within a broader imperial framework.[20] In parallel, the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 (Ausgleich) created a dual monarchy that incorporated federal-like aspirations by balancing Habsburg imperial unity with Hungarian autonomy, establishing a common monarch—Emperor Franz Joseph I—while delegating internal governance to separate Austrian and Hungarian parliaments and administrations.[22] This structure maintained joint responsibility for foreign affairs, defense, and finance but allowed significant devolution, driven by Hungary's nationalist demands after the 1848 revolutions and Austria's defeats, including at Königgrätz in 1866.[23] However, the system's failure to extend comparable autonomy to other ethnic groups, such as Slavs and Czechs, exacerbated centrifugal tensions, culminating in the monarchy's dissolution after World War I in 1918, highlighting the perils of incomplete federalization in multi-ethnic empires.[22] Twentieth-century federal monarchies emerged primarily in post-colonial contexts as pragmatic unions preserving subnational rulers against external threats and internal fragmentation. The Federation of Malaysia formed on September 16, 1963, merging the Federation of Malaya—itself a 1948-1957 British construct retaining nine Malay sultans—with Singapore, Sabah, and Sarawak, thereby institutionalizing an elective monarchy where the sultans rotate selecting the Yang di-Pertuan Agong as federal head.[24] This arrangement countered communist insurgencies and Indonesian Konfrontasi (1963-1966) by prioritizing territorial integrity and traditional Islamic rulers over full centralization, with the sultans retaining authority over state religious and customary matters.[25] Similarly, the United Arab Emirates coalesced on December 2, 1971, when six Trucial States—Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm al-Quwain, and Fujairah—united under a provisional constitution following Britain's 1968 announcement of withdrawal from the Persian Gulf, with Ras al-Khaimah joining in 1972.[26] The federation's Supreme Council, composed of the seven emirs, elects the president and defines policy, accommodating emirate-level sovereignty in resources and local governance while centralizing defense and foreign relations to deter Iranian and Saudi ambitions.[27] These formations underscored federal monarchy's utility in decolonization, enabling local elites to negotiate unity without subordinating hereditary rule to republican or absolutist alternatives.[28]Structural and Operational Features
Division of Powers Between Monarch and Federation
In federal monarchies, constitutions formally vest executive authority in the monarch as head of state, but stipulate that it is exercisable subject to federal law and on the advice of the prime minister or equivalent federal executive, thereby subordinating monarchical action to accountable institutions.[29] This allocation causally preserves the monarch's symbolic role in fostering national unity while channeling substantive decision-making through elected bodies, preventing unilateral executive dominance.[30] The monarch's routine functions remain ceremonial, encompassing assent to federal legislation, appointment of federal officials upon ministerial recommendation, prorogation or dissolution of the federal parliament, and command of federal armed forces in name only.[31] These duties ensure procedural continuity without policy initiation, with the federal executive retaining initiative in governance. In contrast, elective federal monarchies may confer limited executive discretion on the monarch, such as in supreme command during emergencies or veto over select federal measures, balanced by collegial federal councils comprising subnational representatives.[32] Reserve powers afford the monarch independent discretion in constitutional crises, including selecting a prime minister absent a parliamentary majority, withholding assent to bills violating core constitutional principles, or granting pardons after judicial processes.[33] Such powers, rooted in unwritten conventions and explicit clauses, serve as stabilizing mechanisms against federal executive overreach or deadlock, invoked rarely to uphold equilibrium—evidenced by their deployment in fewer than 1% of documented parliamentary impasses since 1950 across analogous systems.[34] Judicial review by federal supreme courts further constrains these, nullifying actions exceeding constitutional bounds, unlike in non-federal absolute monarchies where no equivalent institutional checks exist.[30] Federal competences versus subnational entities are delineated via enumerated lists or treaties, assigning the center exclusive jurisdiction over defense, foreign affairs, currency, and interstate commerce to enable coordinated action, while devolving cultural, religious, and local administrative matters to states for tailored governance.[29] This vertical division, enforceable through federal arbitration bodies, mitigates fragmentation risks inherent in federation, with the monarch's impartial oversight reinforcing treaty fidelity without direct intervention.[35] Empirical data from federal constitutions indicate that such allocations correlate with sustained institutional stability, as central monopoly on existential threats like war preserves cohesion absent monarchical absolutism.[36]Role of Subnational Monarchs or Entities
In federal monarchies, subnational monarchs or ruling entities function as sovereign heads of constituent states or emirates, embedding local legitimacy within the national framework and facilitating mediation among diverse ethnic, religious, or tribal interests. These figures retain authority over region-specific domains, such as customary law and resource management, which bolsters federal cohesion by aligning central governance with subnational traditions.[37] In Malaysia, the nine hereditary sultans serve as constitutional heads of their respective states, exercising veto powers over federal legislation pertaining to Islam, Malay customs, and state boundaries through the Conference of Rulers.[38][39] Each sultan heads Islam in their state, enabling enforcement of Sharia courts and fatwas independent of federal oversight, which preserves Malay-Muslim primacy amid ethnic pluralism.[40] The federal Yang di-Pertuan Agong is elected by these sultans in a rotational system every five years, ensuring no single lineage dominates nationally while affirming the collective sovereignty of subnational rulers.[41] This mechanism has causally reinforced stability by distributing symbolic authority, as evidenced by the absence of major interstate conflicts or successful secessionist bids since federation in 1963.[42] Similarly, in the United Arab Emirates, the seven emirs govern their emirates with substantial autonomy, including control over oil and mineral rights, where revenues remain emirate-specific rather than federally pooled.[43][44] Abu Dhabi's ruler, as the federation's largest oil producer holding approximately 96% of proven reserves, traditionally assumes the presidency, yet smaller emirates like Dubai retain fiscal independence in diversification efforts.[45] This decentralized retention of resource sovereignty mediates tribal and economic disparities, contributing to the UAE's political continuity since 1971 without internal fragmentation.[3] These subnational roles empirically support ethnic and religious pluralism by granting veto-like influence to local sovereigns, reducing incentives for secessionism compared to unitary monarchies or republics facing analogous diversity. Studies of federal decentralization indicate it diminishes ethnic conflict intensity by 20-30% in multi-group societies, as local autonomy aligns governance with identity-based claims, a pattern observable in Malaysia and the UAE's low incidence of separatist violence relative to neighbors like Indonesia or Yemen.[46] This causal linkage stems from enhanced legitimacy, where subnational monarchs act as conflict arbitrators, averting escalations that plague centralized systems lacking such layered authority.[37]Current Examples
Malaysia: Elective Rotation Among Hereditary Rulers
The Malaysian system of federal monarchy, enshrined in the Constitution of 1957, designates the Yang di-Pertuan Agong as the head of state, elected every five years by the Conference of Rulers from among the nine hereditary sultans of the Malay states: Johor, Kedah, Kelantan, Negeri Sembilan, Pahang, Perak, Perlis, Selangor, and Terengganu.[29] This elective rotation balances hereditary succession within state monarchies with a rotational federal crown, ensuring no single ruler dominates nationally while preserving traditional Malay royal authority.[47] The process follows a predetermined order among eligible rulers, with the Conference—comprising the sultans and four state governors—deliberating in secret to select the Agong and the Timbalan Yang di-Pertuan Agong (deputy king).[48] The Yang di-Pertuan Agong holds ceremonial yet pivotal discretionary powers, including appointing the prime minister based on parliamentary confidence, dissolving Parliament, and granting pardons, alongside immunity from civil and criminal suits during tenure.[49] The Conference of Rulers exercises collective authority to consent to constitutional amendments affecting Malay special rights, citizenship, the status of Islam as the state religion, and the delineation of state boundaries, effectively vetoing legislation on these ten protected matters under Article 159(5).[39] This vetting mechanism has enforced policy continuity by blocking partisan overreach, as seen in rejections of bills perceived to erode royal or Islamic prerogatives, thereby insulating core institutional elements from electoral volatility.[50] A critical demonstration of monarchical stabilizing influence occurred during the 13 May 1969 race riots, which erupted post-election amid ethnic tensions between Malays and Chinese, resulting in hundreds of deaths and widespread violence. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong, Sultan Abdul Halim of Kedah, declared a national emergency on 15 May 1969, suspending Parliament, imposing curfews, and empowering security forces to restore order, which quelled the unrest and averted deeper fragmentation.[51] This intervention underscored the Agong's reserve powers under Article 150 to act independently in crises threatening federal integrity, contributing to subsequent institutional reforms like the New Economic Policy aimed at equitable growth.[52] Empirically, the system's operational efficacy correlates with sustained governance stability and economic advancement. Malaysia's GDP per capita rose from $282 in 1960 to $11,649 in 2023 (current US dollars), reflecting robust industrialization and resource management under the federal framework where royal oversight tempered political turbulence.[53] Amid frequent government changes—five prime ministers since 2018—the monarchy's fixed rotation and Conference vetoes have maintained policy anchors on fiscal prudence and ethnic concord, fostering investor confidence and averting the executive dominance seen in unitary systems.[54] This causal link to continuity is evidenced by the institution's role in endorsing stable coalitions, as affirmed by outgoing King Al-Sultan Abdullah in 2024, who emphasized royal contributions to national resilience against partisan instability.[55]United Arab Emirates: Confederation of Emirates
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) emerged on December 2, 1971, through the union of six emirates—Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm al-Quwain, and Fujairah—formerly the Trucial States under British protection, with Ras al-Khaimah acceding in early 1972.[28] [56] This confederation of absolute monarchies established a federal structure where the Federal Supreme Council, composed of the hereditary rulers of the seven emirates, holds supreme authority, including the election of the president—conventionally the ruler of Abu Dhabi—and vice president, as well as ratification of federal laws.[57] [4] The monarchical framework enables decisive leadership, allowing rulers to prioritize long-term national cohesion over short-term political contests. Powers are delineated between federal and emirate levels per the 1971 constitution, with the federation managing defense, foreign affairs, customs, immigration, and aspects of economic policy, while emirates retain jurisdiction over local resources, Sharia-based personal status laws, and internal policing.[58] [35] Predominantly oil-rich Abu Dhabi channels substantial revenues into federal coffers for equitable distribution across emirates, funding infrastructure and social services without the fragmentation seen in revenue-centralized systems. This resource-sharing mechanism, underpinned by ruler consensus, has supported rapid infrastructure buildup, including ports, airports, and urban centers, transforming a desert economy into a global hub. By 2024, non-oil sectors accounted for 74.6% of the UAE's real GDP, up from oil dominance in the 1970s, driven by investments in tourism, finance, logistics, and technology under the emirates' autonomous yet coordinated governance.[59] The hereditary rulers' ability to enact bold diversification—such as Dubai's free zones and Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth funds—stems from unchecked executive authority, yielding compounded growth rates exceeding 4% annually in recent decades.[60] Post-1971, the UAE has exhibited exceptional stability amid regional volatility, with no coups or civil wars, largely due to wealth-redistribution pacts that align emirate interests and provide citizen subsidies, housing, and employment, mitigating grievances common in oil-dependent autocracies.[61] [62] In contrast to post-colonial republics like Yemen or Sudan, where centralized resource control fueled ethnic and factional conflicts, the UAE's federated monarchies enforce pact adherence through personal ruler accountability, sustaining low unrest and enabling sustained development trajectories.[61]Belgium: Federal State with Unified Monarchy
Belgium achieved independence from the United Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1830 following the Belgian Revolution, establishing a constitutional monarchy with Leopold I ascending as the first King of the Belgians on July 21, 1831, after swearing allegiance to the constitution.[63] Initially structured as a unitary state, Belgium faced escalating tensions between its Dutch-speaking Flemish majority in the north and French-speaking Walloon minority in the south, rooted in linguistic, economic, and cultural disparities that intensified post-World War II, prompting gradual devolution through state reforms in 1970, 1980, 1988, and culminating in the 1993 constitutional overhaul that formalized its federal structure.[64][65] Under this federal system, power divides between the national government and three regions (Flanders, Wallonia, Brussels-Capital) plus three linguistic communities, with subnational entities handling competencies like healthcare, transport, and environmental policy, while the monarchy remains a centralized symbol of unity transcending regional divides.[64] The king retains key prerogatives as head of state, including the authority to appoint informateurs to assess coalition possibilities after elections and formateurs tasked with assembling governments, ensuring a neutral arbiter in multipartisan negotiations often stalled by Flemish-Walloon cleavages.[66][67] This monarchical mediation proved critical during the 2010–2011 government formation crisis, triggered by June 2010 elections and exacerbated by disagreements over electoral district reforms and fiscal transfers between Flemish nationalists and Walloon socialists, lasting 541 days—the longest in a democratic nation—and threatening national partition.[68] King Albert II intervened by successively appointing mediators, including Socialist leader Johan Vande Lanotte in October 2010 to explore compromise frameworks, which facilitated eventual talks leading to Elio Di Rupo's coalition government in December 2011, averting collapse without the king favoring either linguistic bloc.[69][70] The unified monarchy's impartial role has underpinned empirical continuity amid devolution, as Belgium maintained macroeconomic stability with average annual GDP growth of approximately 1.5% from 2010 to 2020 and per capita GDP exceeding $50,000 USD in 2023, while advancing EU integration as a founding member hosting the European Commission's headquarters and advancing single-market policies despite regional autonomies.[71][72] This cohesion contrasts with potential fractures in purely republican federations, with the king's symbolic oversight fostering cross-community restraint, as seen in the absence of secessionist referenda post-1993 despite persistent Flemish demands for further devolution.[64]Comparative Advantages and Empirical Outcomes
Stability and Governance Efficacy
Federal monarchies have demonstrated notable political continuity, with empirical data indicating lower incidences of military coups compared to regional peers and federal republics. In Malaysia, no successful coups have occurred since the federation's formation in 1963, as recorded in comprehensive coup datasets covering global instances from 1950 onward.[73] This contrasts with Southeast Asian neighbors, where countries like Thailand have endured multiple coup attempts, contributing to higher regional averages of political disruptions post-independence.[74] Similarly, the United Arab Emirates has maintained stability without coups since its unification in 1971, enabling consistent governance amid potential subnational rivalries.[61] The non-elective nature of the supreme monarch in these systems facilitates rapid crisis response and decision-making, unencumbered by electoral cycles or partisan maneuvering. In the UAE, a hereditary apex authority has ensured unified foreign policy execution, mitigating factional divisions among emirates and supporting coherent national strategies in volatile regional contexts.[75] This structural feature reduces internal factionalism, as the monarch's position transcends temporary alliances, providing a stabilizing counterweight to subnational interests. Quantitative analyses of Arab monarchies further corroborate enhanced political stability since 1950, attributed to such institutional continuity.[76] Comparatively, federal republics often grapple with coalition-induced instability, exemplified by India's experience with frequent government collapses—83 instances across central and state levels since 1989—stemming from fragile alliances and policy paralysis.[77] In federal monarchies, the hereditary head offers a first-principles mechanism to check populist excesses, insulated from short-term electoral pressures that can exacerbate divisiveness in republics. This arrangement promotes governance efficacy by prioritizing long-term national cohesion over transient majoritarian impulses, as evidenced by sustained policy implementation in stable federal monarchies versus the disruptions in equivalents like India.[78]Economic and Social Performance Metrics
Malaysia has achieved a Human Development Index (HDI) value of 0.819 in 2023, placing it in the very high human development category and reflecting advancements in health, education, and income metrics.[79] Its average annual GDP growth rate from 2000 to 2025 has been 4.48%, with projections for 5.1% in 2024, supported by stable resource distribution across federal states under the rotational monarchy system that facilitates consistent policy continuity.[80] [81] Poverty rates have declined from 52.4% in the 1970s to 5.1% by the early 2000s, with hardcore poverty reduced to 0.09% as of 2025, enabling the lifting of approximately 14 million people out of poverty through targeted federal allocations.[82] [83] [84] The United Arab Emirates maintains an HDI ranking first in the Arab world as of 2020, with a value indicative of top global performance in living standards, bolstered by emirate-level governance that allocates hydrocarbon revenues for infrastructure and diversification.[85] Pre-2020 annual GDP growth often exceeded 5%, driven by long-term investment horizons enabled by hereditary rulers unbound by fixed terms, contrasting with volatility in presidential systems.[86] Absolute poverty remains negligible, with the UAE committing AED 8.9 billion in international aid between 2011 and 2014 while sustaining domestic welfare through confederal stability.[87] Belgium's HDI stood at 0.942 in 2022, ranking 12th globally and underscoring robust social cohesion metrics amid federal devolution.[88] Its welfare system has endured through 1990s constitutional reforms that expanded regional economic autonomy without fiscal fragmentation, partly attributed to the unifying role of the monarchy in mediating linguistic divides during transitions to federalism in 1988–1989 and 1993.[89] GDP per capita growth has remained stable relative to European peers, supporting high social expenditure as a percentage of GDP.[90]| Country | HDI Value (Recent) | HDI Rank (Approx.) | Avg. Annual GDP Growth (2000–Recent) | Poverty Rate (Recent) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malaysia | 0.819 (2023) | ~62nd | 4.48% | 5.1% (early 2000s baseline; lower now) |
| UAE | Very High (2020+) | Top 20 | >5% pre-2020 | Near 0% |
| Belgium | 0.942 (2022) | 12th | Stable ~1-2% | Low (<5%) |