One way to resist pessimism is to break down the situation into manageable components. Even though only 31% of think tanks expect the sector to grow in their country, some regions are notably more optimistic. In Asia, 43% expect growth, as do 56% in Africa. Of course, separating those regions only makes the rest of the world seem drearier, leaving Europe, Oceania, and the Americas on just 20%. Regional analysis also doesn\u2019t help for all issues \u2013 worldwide, 42% of think tanks say it\u2019s \u2018Hard\u2019 or \u2018Very Hard\u2019 to operate in their country, with only 11% calling it easy, and this is a more global sentiment. African think tanks were most likely to report ease of operations, but only at 29%, which is a more positive result, albeit not by much. Similarly, 54% of think tanks expect funding conditions to deteriorate in the next year, a common concern across all regions.<\/span><\/p>\nBut there\u2019s another way to question this pessimistic narrative, and that\u2019s to ask a slightly different question. Instead of asking think tanks about their sectoral expectations, we can ask them their individual expectations, and aggregate them. If all perceptions were accurate, you would expect that any one think tank\u2019s perception of the sector would match the average of self-perceptions \u2013 they should describe the same data. That isn\u2019t what\u2019s happening.\u00a0<\/span>Just 31% of think tanks expect the sector to grow,\u00a0but<\/em>\u00a061% of think tanks expect themselves to grow<\/em>.<\/span> The difference is enormous, and consistent across all regions and income levels. Even regions that reported high sectoral expectations showed a discrepancy\u201465% in Asia and a massive 83% in Africa expected to grow.<\/span><\/p>\nThe same effect occurs when think tanks are asked not generally how hard it is to operate a think tank in their country, but how hard <\/span>they<\/span><\/i> find it\u201442% drops to 24%, with most describing a moderate difficulty. The swing is most dramatic in Latin America, with 4% describing their country as \u2018Easy\u2019 or \u2018Very Easy\u2019 to operate in, but 28% reporting their own operations as such. Likewise, despite 54% predicting worse funding conditions next year, only 35% report their own funding declining. Think tanks are suffering from a kind of comparative optimism\u2014everyone thinks they are outperforming the average. This phenomenon occurs with some frequency across many areas of life and business \u2013 for instance, most drivers believe themselves to be better than the average driver.<\/span><\/p>\nIt\u2019s worth mentioning that not all think tanks displayed comparative optimism over funding. Organisations in low- and lower-middle-income countries had expectations for next year that matched the previous year\u2019s results (39% reporting decreases, 40% expecting unfavourable conditions). But in high- and upper-middle-income countries, respondents tended to think the sector was facing a much gloomier condition, with 60% expecting the following year\u2019s funding environment to be unfavourable. In comparison, only 33% reported funding decreases in the past year. Nor can this be explained by think tanks anticipating a specific reason for a decline in funding; they were not expecting any political deterioration, and 85% were mostly unaffected by the termination of the US Agency for International Development.<\/span><\/p>\n