01
Pre-Revolutionary Stability
1.49
Pre-revolutionary Egypt under Mubarak exhibited the classic profile of an aging autocracy: surface stability masking deep structural rot. The regime maintained physical order and economic continuity (B=2), and institutional predictability remained relatively high under stable dictatorship (M=1.5). However, identity fragmentation was advancing (I_s=2.5) as youth, urban middle class, and others disconnected from the state, though core elite coalitions held. Perceived insecurity was still contained (I_p=1.5) by repression and lack of mobilization. The critical vulnerabilities lay in adaptation (A_d=3) and courage (C_d=3.5): Mubarak's regime was institutionally rigid, unable to absorb youth unemployment and inequality pressures, and showed zero transformative leadership—focused instead on dynastic succession. The system was depleting legitimacy reserves without renewal, setting conditions for explosive release when Tunisia's uprising provided the spark.