Ireland has third freest economy
The two Asian port cities have taken the first and second spots for 12 straight years in the Index of Economic Freedom.
Both were rated as having improved further last year, thanks to reduced government spending in Hong Kong and a cut in tax rates in Singapore.
Edwin J Feulner, president of Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank based in Washington, said: “Hong Kong has the best score it’s ever had, and the gap between Hong Kong and Singapore remains fairly substantial.”
The index’s rankings for the 157 nations in the survey are based on factors including openness to trade and foreign investment, the size of government and its involvement in the economy, regulation of wages and prices, and protection of property rights.
Mr Feulner said the gap between No 2 Singapore and No 3 Ireland was quite narrow, and Luxembourg, Iceland, Britain, Estonia and Denmark are close behind in the top 10.
He said: “The governments in Ireland and Luxembourg are doing some very sensible things.”
He pointed out that the two countries are generally seeking to replicate Hong Kong and Singapore’s success in using low taxes, light regulation and strong legal systems to attract corporate investment.
But Hong Kong’s grip on the top spot looks secure unless it makes major policy shifts, he said.
“For Luxembourg, Ireland, or Estonia to really break through and become No 1 is going to be difficult because they’re working within these constraints coming out of Brussels,” he said, pointing to EU restrictions on agricultural trade.
China and India, two of the world’s fastest-growing economies, are ranked 111th and 121st respectively out of 157 countries.
High taxes, barriers to foreign investment and a strong government presence in the economy kept both countries from being given high ratings of economic freedom, the foundation said.
Hong Kong and China are ranked separately because the former British colony has retained a separate economic and legal system since its return to Chinese rule in 1997.
Myanmar (Burma), Iran and North Korea were ranked the least-free economies.
Overall, the survey found that 99 countries improved from last year, while 51 declined and five were unchanged. The only regions to see a net decline in the rankings was North Africa and the Middle East.
Mr Feulner said the overall pattern indicates economic liberalisation is generally advancing worldwide.
“This isn’t just an academic exercise. More economic freedom means more economic growth, which means higher income for the average person.”
:
1.) Hong Kong [score 1.28]
2.) Singapore [1.56]
3.) Ireland [1.58]
4.) Luxembourg [1.60]
5.) Britain [1.74].





