Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Economic freedom means longer life, lower infant mortality, and less poverty: Report
Economic freedom means longer life, lower infant mortality, and less poverty: Report
Jan 3, 2026 4:34 AM

Economic freedom is strongly tied to human flourishing, longevity, and even rates of survival, according to a new study. The Fraser Institute released its 2020 “Economic Freedom of the World” report on Thursday and, once again, the Canadian think tank found a strong correlation between free-market economics, prosperity, and overall levels of public health and well-being.

Academic researchers have rated 162 nations based on five criteria:

Area 1: Size of Government—As spending and taxation by government, and the size of government-controlled enterprises increase, government decision-making is substituted for individual choice and economic freedom is reduced;Area 2: Legal System and Property Rights—Protection of persons and their rightfully acquired property is a central element of both economic freedom and civil society. Indeed, it is the most important function of government;Area 3: Sound Money—Inflation erodes the value of rightfully earned wages and savings. Sound money is thus essential to protect property rights. When inflation is not only high but also volatile, it es difficult for individuals to plan for the future and thus use economic freedom effectively;Area 4: Freedom to Trade Internationally—Freedom to exchange—in its broadest sense, buying, selling, making contracts, and so on—is essential to economic freedom, which is reduced when freedom to exchange does not include businesses and individuals in other nations; andArea 5: Regulation—Governments not only use a number of tools to limit the right to exchange internationally, they may also develop onerous regulations that limit the right to exchange, gain credit, hire or work for whom you wish, or freely operate your business.

There is always a two-year lag in reporting. Thus, the 2020 report measures economic freedom in 2018, the last year for which data are available.

The 10 most economically free nations in 2018 were:

Hong KongSingaporeNew ZealandSwitzerlandAustraliaUnited States of AmericaMauritiusGeorgiaCanadaIreland

The 10 least economically free nations in 2018 were (in descending order):

Central African RepublicDemocratic Republic of CongoZimbabweRepublic of CongoAlgeriaIranAngolaLibyaSudanVenezuela

Once again, Hong Kong rated the most free economy in the world. However, the report clearly perceives storm clouds gathering on the horizon.

“While Hong Kong remains the most economically free jurisdiction in the world, interference from China, including the violent crackdown on pro-democracy protests, severely undermines Hong Kong’s rule of law, which helps ensure equal freedom for all,” says Fred McMahon of the Fraser Institute. McMahon authored an open letter signed by representatives of think tanks in 35 nations and territories, which supports the people of Hong Kong.

The United States and Canada moved down the lists of the most economically free nations in the world this year, but their overall economic freedom actually improved in 2018. Other nations simply improved to a higher level.

Once again, the least free country in Europe is Ukraine (131), the only European nation to fall into the bottom quartile of all nations (to rank among the “least free” nations), ranking below China (124), Vietnam (125), and Pakistan (129).

The annual report cannot rank some of the world’s most repressive nations, including North Korea and Cuba, because of the lack of reliable statistics.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the report finds that a dynamic economy produces the abundance that best sustains human dignity. Poverty rates, average per capita e, life expectancy, infant mortality, and gender equality track neatly with economic freedom. People in the least free nations were 1,854% more likely to live in extreme poverty ($1.90 a day U.S.) than those in the most free nations. The poorest 10% of e earners in the most free nations earned $10,735 a year more than those in the least free. What is true in miniature is true in aggregate. The overall population in the most free nations earned more than seven times as much money as those in the least free – but they also made nearly twice as much ($44,198 U.S.) as those in second-tier nations ($23,596).

As the data show, economic freedom, which gives people access to their daily bread, es a matter of life and death. Life expectancy is nearly 15 years longer in the most free nations (80.3 pared to 65.6 years). At the beginning of life, children are 789% more likely to die in infancy in the least free nations than newborns in the most free.

The report also refutes the frequent allegation that libertarians or other small-government advocates would produce lawless, anarchic societies dominated by regional warlords. As its authors write:

A number of developing nations have a small fiscal size of government but rate low in other areas and, as a result, have a low overall rating. The lesson from this is clear: a small fiscal size of government is insufficient to ensure economic freedom. The institutions of economic freedom, such as the rule of law and property rights, as well as sound money, trade openness, and sensible regulation are also required.

“[W]eakness in the rule of law and property rights is particularly pronounced in Sub-Saharan Africa, among Islamic nations, and for several nations that were formerly part of the Soviet bloc,” the report states. “Many nations in Latin America and Southeast Asia also score poorly for rule of law and property rights.”

People of faith concerned with poverty should support giving the impoverished world access to capital. That would fulfill the plea of Pope Francis, who recently told transatlantic leaders that “[t]he human person must take its rightful place at the heart of our educational, healthcare, social and economic policies.” The data show that the human person fares best in a free-market economy.

You canread the full report here. You can see itsupdated global map here.

Compare this year’s ratings to 2019,2018,and2017.

Trainer. CC BY-SA 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Whose Status Do You Want to Raise?
In a ment about neo-reaction (forget about that for now, this isn’t about neo-reaction), economist Arnold Kling says “a major role of political ideology is to attempt to adjust the relative status of various groups.” One e of this is that, … every adherent to an ideology seeks to elevate the status of those who share that ideology and to downgrade the status of those with different ideologies. That is why it matters that journalists and academics are overwhelmingly on...
Philadelphia’s Socially Acceptable Way to Disdain the Poor
Philadelphia may like to think of itself as the “city of brotherly love,” but its latest tax increase is not so friendly to the poor. Last week the city council passed a regressive soda tax proposal that will levy 1.5 cents per liquid ounce on distributors. According to Quartz, the tax will apply to regular and diet sodas, as well as other drinks with added sugar, such as Gatorade, lemonades, and iced teas. This tax on sugary drinks is what...
A Gideon v. Wainwright Reminder
Over the past decade media coverage of the problems surrounding indigent defense has been increasing. For example, The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is currently suing the state of Utah for failing to uphold that 6th Amendment which now provides opportunities for government provided criminal defense. The ACLU is claiming that Utah fell short of its obligation to provide attorneys to criminal defendants who cannot afford to hire one. While the merits of the case have yet to be properly...
A Crash Course in Capitalism and Socialism
Unclear on how capitalism and/or socialism got started? John Green provides a 12-minute crash course that answers how we got from the British East India Company to iPhones and from Karl Marx to Swedish-style socialism. Warning: Green’s style and digressions can be a bit grating, but overall the material is worth watching. (I’d also mend increasing YouTube’s speed setting to 1.5 or 2 for faster viewing.) ...
5 facts about fathers and Father’s Day
This Sunday is the day Americans set aside to honor their fathers. Here are 5 facts you should know about dads and Father’s Day. 1. After listening to a Mother’s Day sermon in 1909, Sonora Dodd of Spokane, Wash. wanted a special day to honer her father, a widowed Civil War veteran who was left to raise his six children on a farm. The first Father’s Day celebration, June 17, 1910, was proclaimed by Spokane’s mayor because it was the...
Why Do You Need a License to Braid Hair?
There are numerous forms of crony capitalism, but one of the most subtle and damaging to the economically vulnerable are occupational licensing laws. For millions of Americans, occupational licensing continues to serve as a barrier to work and self-sufficiency. Take, for example,Melony Armstrong. When Armstrong began her hair braiding business, she was required tohave a cosmetology license, which required 1,500 hours of training and $10,000 in tuition. What makes this state occupational licensing requirement so unreasonable? None of the training...
Lessons on Work as Service from a Hotel Housekeeper
When es to basic definitions of work, I’ve found fort in Lester DeKoster’s prescient view of work as“service to others and thus to God” — otherwise construed as “creative service” in For the Life of the World: Letters to the Exiles. Our primary focus should be service to our fellow man in obedience to God, whether we’re doing manual labor in the field or factory, designing new technology in an office or laboratory, or delivering a range of “intangible” services...
Election Season in the Spiritually Vacant State
“When the value-bearing institutions of religion and culture are excluded, the value-laden concerns of human life flows back into the square under the politics of politics,” wrote Richard John Neuhaus, “It is much like trying to sweep a puddle of water on an even basement floor; the water immediately flows back into the space you had cleaned.”Although he made ment thirty-twoyears ago, the late Fr. Neuhaus could be describing the current election season. While there is much that could be...
Metropolitan Tarasios on the Orthodox Council in Crete and Catholic-Orthodox relations
On June 16, His Eminence Metropolitan Tarasios of Buenos Aires spoke at Acton University at DeVos Place in Grand Rapids, Michigan. His remarks touched on a wide range of subjects including the ing Orthodox Christian council in Crete, which begins on June 19, Catholic-Orthodox relations, and other topics. The American-born bishop serves in the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. According to his official biography, Met. Tarasios was born Peter (Panayiotis) C. Anton in Gary, Indiana, in 1956 to Peter and Angela...
Millennials Lacking Hope for Entrepreneurship
Today at the FEE (Foundation for Economic Education), Zachary Slayback has an excellent overview of the decline in entrepreneurship among those under 30 since the late 1980s. He writes, Between local, state, and federal regulations placed on everything from who isallowedto braid hairtowho can tell you what color to paint a wall and where to place a doorand a schooling culture and system that encourages young people to waste away the first 22-30 years of their lives away from the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved