GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Austria-Hungary

Austria-Hungary

Dual monarchy and imperial government of Central Europe, 1867-1918

Austria-HungaryFounded 1867 · Ceased 1918Imperial Government, Dual Monarchy, Multinational State, Constitutional Monarchy, Great-Power Diplomacy, Military Governance, Nationalities Policy
51
MIXED

of 100 · stable trend · Some good traits but inconsistent

Standing

51/100

Raw Score

43/85

Confidence

74%

Evidence

Broad

About

Austria-Hungary was a major multinational imperial government created by the 1867 Compromise and dissolved in 1918 after World War I.

The record shows real administrative capacity, constitutional development in the Austrian half, infrastructure and education modernization, and some democratizing reform. These strengths are sharply limited by unequal nationality governance, contested imperial rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina, catastrophic 1914 crisis judgment, wartime civilian harm and rights failures, and collapse under pressure.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview44%(11/25)
Contribution to Others33%(10/30)
Personal Discipline70%(7/10)
Reliability100%(8/5)
Stability Under Pressure47%(7/15)

Real constitutional and administrative capacity is outweighed by severe failures in imperial consent, crisis restraint, wartime rights, and resilience.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Declared moral framework3/5

Constitutional monarchy with legal-public order language, but dynastic preservation often outweighed equal consent.

Alignment between principles and decisions4/5

Administrative modernization and rights in the Austrian half partly aligned with public-order commitments.

Accountability orientation4/5

Parliaments, ministries, and law courts existed, though accountability was uneven.

Contribution to Others

Public benefit delivery3/5

Rail, education, administration, and economic integration delivered public utility.

Harm prevention2/5

Bosnia policy, military escalation, and wartime conditions show weak harm restraint.

Personal Discipline

Principled restraint2/5

Great-power status and military logic repeatedly overrode restraint.

Public obligation3/5

State public-service functions and some social-policy development support a moderate score.

Reliability

Governance and compliance2/5

Formalized governance remained structurally unequal.

Correction after failure1/5

Late reform efforts failed to correct core legitimacy problems before collapse.

Stability Under Pressure

Behavior under crisis2/5

The July Crisis and wartime rule show severe resilience failure.

Long term stability2/5

The state lasted five decades but dissolved under war and nationality pressure.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1867

Austro-Hungarian Compromise creates the Dual Monarchy

The Compromise reorganized the Habsburg Monarchy into two co-equal state halves under a shared monarch and common institutions for foreign, military, and related finance affairs.

Stabilized relations with Hungary but left many other nationalities without equal structural power.

high
1867

December Constitution expands rights in the Austrian half

The Austrian half adopted a constitutional framework with basic rights, representative institutions, and legal protections.

Strengthened rule-bound governance in one half of the monarchy, while empire-wide rights and political access remained uneven.

medium
1908

Annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina triggers crisis

Austria-Hungary formally annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina, provoking regional and international conflict.

Expanded imperial control but damaged legitimacy and intensified South Slav conflict.

high
1914

Ultimatum to Serbia and escalation into World War I

After Archduke Franz Ferdinand assassination, Austria-Hungary issued a severe ultimatum to Serbia and then declared war.

The decision path showed catastrophic crisis judgment and helped trigger a wider war.

severe
1918

Wartime deprivation, military defeat, and dissolution

World War I brought shortages, casualties, emergency rule, nationality conflict, defeat, and the dissolution of the monarchy.

Revealed weak resilience under existential pressure and left a legacy of suffering and state fragmentation.

severe

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Nationality conflict after 1867

1867

The compromise stabilized Austrian-Hungarian relations but excluded many other communities from equal structural power.

Response: Maintained the dual structure with limited later reforms.

mixed_negative

Bosnian annexation crisis

1908

Annexation expanded control but provoked international and local legitimacy conflict.

Response: Relied on great-power diplomacy and imperial administration.

negative

July Crisis

1914

The government responded to assassination with an ultimatum and war decision that helped trigger continental conflict.

Response: Escalated under military and alliance logic.

severe_negative

World War I state stress

1918

Shortages, casualties, censorship, nationality pressures, and defeat overwhelmed the state.

Response: Emergency measures and late reform proposals failed.

severe_negative

Progression

crisis years

Nationality inequality, Bosnia policy, war decision-making, and emergency rule exposed the limits of the settlement.

declining

current stage

The institution is dissolved; its legacy remains high-influence, mixed, and contested.

historical_legacy

early years

Elite compromise created a functioning dual state after Habsburg crisis.

mixed_stabilizing

growth years

Administrative, legal, educational, infrastructure, and economic modernization expanded state capacity.

constructive_but_uneven

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Durable administrative capacity
  • Constitutional rights in the Austrian half
  • Infrastructure, education, and economic modernization
  • Some democratizing reforms before 1914

Concerns

  • Dualist structure privileged Austrian and Hungarian elites
  • Imperial Bosnia policy lacked consent-based legitimacy
  • Military crisis behavior overrode restraint
  • Emergency wartime governance weakened rights and trust

Evidence Quality

5

Strong

4

Medium

0

Weak

Overall: broad

Historical institutional profile based on observable public record; it does not judge private belief or intention.