The index published in Economic Freedom of the World measures the degree to which the policies and institutions of countries are supportive of economic freedom. The cornerstones of economic freedom are personal choice, voluntary exchange, freedom to enter markets and compete, and security of the person and privately owned property. Forty-two data points are used to construct a summary index and to measure the degree of economic freedom in five broad areas.
Gender Disparity Index
The index published in Economic Freedom of the World now includes an adjustment for gender disparity to take into account the fact that in many nations women are not legally accorded the same level of economic freedom as men. The Gender Disparity Index and its use to make the adjustment is described in Chapter 3: Adjusting for Gender Disparity in Economic Freedom and Why It Matters, pp. 189–211 in the report of 2017.
Related research
Since our first publication in 1996, numerous studies have used the data published in Economic Freedom of the World to examine the impact of economic freedom on investment, economic growth, income levels, and poverty rates. Virtually without exception, these studies have found that countries with institutions and policies more consistent with economic freedom have higher investment rates, more rapid economic growth, higher income levels, and a more rapid reduction in poverty rates.
The data are available annually from 2000 to 2017 and for years ending in zero or five back to 1970. The data are available for 123 countries for every year from 2000 to 2016 and for approximately 100 countries back to 1980. This data set makes it possible for scholars to analyze the impact of both cross-country differences in economic freedom and changes in that freedom across a three-decade time frame.
Top-rated countries
Hong Kong and Singapore, as usual, occupy the top two positions. The next highest scoring nations are New Zealand, Switzerland, United States, Ireland, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and Mauritius.
Other major countries
The rankings of some other major countries are Japan (17th), Germany (20th), Italy (46th), France (50th), Mexico (76th), India (79th), Russia (85th), China (113th), and Brazil (120th).
Lowest-rated countries
The 10 lowest-rated countries are: Iraq, Republic of Congo, Egypt, Syria, Democratic Republic of Congo, Angola, Algeria, Sudan, Libya, and, lastly, Venezuela.
Nations that are economically free out-perform non-free nations in indicators of well-being
A number of other outcomes are more positive in economically free nations than in those that lack economic freedom. For example:
Chapter 1: Economic Freedom of the World in 2016
The authors of the report, James Gwartney, Robert Lawson, Joshua Hall, and Ryan Murphy, provide an overview of the report and discuss why economic freedom is important.
Chapter 2: Country Data Tables
A table showing detailed historical information is provided for each of the 162 countries and territories in the index.
Chapter 3: Economic Freedom of the World in the 1950s and 1960s
By Robert Lawson and Ryan Murphy
In this chapter, two of the authors of Economic Freedom of the World explain how they are able to extend the EFW index by estimating historic economic freedom for 111 countries in 1950, 113 countries in 1955, 116 countries in 1960, and 118 in 1965 using a newly available dataset. They briefly discuss some of the findings. (Data are available at
Chapter 4: Economic Freedom, Public Policy, and Entrepreneurship
By Daniel L. Bennett and Boris Nikolaev
The authors examine whether countries with more interventionist government policies experience more or less entrepreneurship and innovation compared to more economically free nations. Many entrepreneurship policies involve government interventions in the market that distort resource allocations, provide perverse incentives for socially unproductive behavior, and undermine economic freedom. The authors add to a growing body of empirical evidence that suggests countries with more economic freedom are more entrepreneurial.