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        <title><![CDATA[The Compelling Case for Greater Economic Freedom]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">The Compelling Case for Greater Economic Freedom</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This morning, the Fraser Institute, a Canadian think tank, published the 22nd edition of its annual <a href="https://www.fraserinstitute.org/studies/economic-freedom-of-the-world-2018-annual-report" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Economic Freedom of the World</a> (EFW) report. For a long time, we’ve known that, on average, freer economies are&nbsp;<a href="https://capx.co/good-news-the-world-is-getting-freer-faster/" rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank">richer, grow faster and have longer life expectancies.</a></p><p>But the 2018 edition of the EFW gives us more insight than ever 
before into the intrinsic link between economic freedom and other 
measures of human wellbeing — such as infant mortality, equality, 
happiness and extreme poverty rates.</p><p>To rank the level of freedom for 162 economies, the EFW analyses 42 
indices across five major areas (size of government, legal system and 
property rights, sound money, freedom to trade internationally, and 
regulation), using figures from 2016 — the most recent data available.</p><p>Yet again, Hong Kong takes the top spot in the EFW rankings — a 
position it has held since 1980. Singapore remains second, as it has 
since 2005. The remaining top 10 most free nations are: New Zealand, 
Switzerland, Ireland, the United States, Georgia, Mauritius, the United 
Kingdom, Australia, and Canada, the latter two being tied for 10th spot.
 The three least free countries are Argentina, Libya, and Venezuela.</p><p>The positions of the economies in the EFW matter because there is a 
significant correlation between economic freedom and human wellbeing. To
 analyse this, the Fraser Institute splits the 161 measured countries 
into quartiles (i.e. each quartile represents a quarter of the 
economies) based on their level of economic freedom.</p><p>The average income in the freest quartile of nations is a staggering 
7.1 times higher than the average income in the least free quartile 
($40,376 and $5,649 respectively). The bottom 10 per cent of income 
earners in the freest countries make, on average, 7.9 times more than 
the poorest 10 per cent in the least free quartile. Comparatively, 
extreme poverty (as&nbsp;<a href="https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SI.POV.DDAY" rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank">defined</a>&nbsp;by
 the World Bank as an income of than $1.90 per day) is almost 
non-existent in the freest countries. By comparison, almost a third of 
all people in the bottom quartile of economies live in extreme poverty. 
It is clear, then, that for the absolute poorest in any given society, 
it is unimaginably better to live in a freer economy.</p><p>But economic freedom isn’t just about money. Take life expectancy for
 example. In the freest countries, people live on average 15 years 
longer than those in the most restrictive systems. For many people, that
 amounts to a difference between knowing one’s grandchildren—or dying 
before their birth.</p><p>Infant mortality is another measure that highlights the immeasurable 
human cost of isolationist economic policies. Measured in the number of 
deaths per 1000 births, the devastating death rate in the least 
economically free nations is 6.8 times higher than the rate in the 
freest —42.2 and 6.2, respectively.</p><p>Problems of misogyny also creep in. When looking to the United Nations (UN)&nbsp;<a href="http://hdr.undp.org/en/content/gender-inequality-index-gii" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Gender Inequality Index</a>,
 where zero represents complete gender equality and one represents 
complete inequality, the least free countries have an average score of 
just 0.46–compared to 0.18 for the freest quartile.</p><p>Free people are also happier people. The UN World Happiness Index 
asked respondents to rank their lives on a scale of zero to 10, with 10 
representing the best possible life and zero representing the worst 
imaginable. The most economically liberal countries once more win out: 
the EFW shows that the freest quartile has an average score two points 
higher than the least free – 6.5 compared to 4.48.</p><p>There is more good news. Despite our<a href="https://time.com/5087384/harvard-professor-steven-pinker-on-why-we-refuse-to-see-the-bright-side/" rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank">&nbsp;tendency toward pessimism&nbsp;</a>about the current state of the world, the EFW shows that economic freedom has&nbsp;<a href="https://humanprogress.org/dwline?p=393&amp;r0=82&amp;yf=1970&amp;yl=2015&amp;high=1" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">increased</a>&nbsp;substantially over the last 25 years and that the largest gains have been made in developing nations.</p><p>In 1990, the average economic freedom score for a “high-income 
industrial” country was 7.18 out of 10, compared to just 5.28 for the 
average “developing” country—a gap of 1.90.&nbsp;By 2016, that gap had 
narrowed by 46 per cent: developing economies were a mere 1.06 points 
behind the industrial nations. The rapid increase in the EFW score by 
many developing economies was primarily driven by gains in the area of 
trade liberalisation and sound money (meaning the&nbsp;stabilisation&nbsp;of 
purchasing power by combating inflation.)</p><p>The result of these advances is that, when weighted for population, 
the average person now lives in a far freer economy. Consider this: if 
the world of 1980 were a country today, its economic freedom score would
 place it at 160 out of 163 nations — ranking two places below war-torn 
Syria. But if a 2016 world was a nation in 1980, it would be the 
12th&nbsp;freest, with a score of 6.62 — slightly above 1980 Australia.</p><p>The latest EFW once again shows the deep and continued link between 
economic freedom and important indicators of human wellbeing, including;
 wealth, poverty alleviation, life expectancy, inequality, infant 
mortality and happiness.</p><p>It is clear that despite the many challenges that remain, the poorest
 in society continue to benefit the most from secure property rights, 
loosened regulatory barriers, and greater trade liberalisation. Long may
 policymakers remember this so that the march toward greater economic 
freedom continues.</p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[GAGmen]]></dc:creator>
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