The Post

NZ seventh most prosperous but . . .

- John Anthony

New Zealand is the seventh most prosperous nation in the world, but there’s one area where it’s falling behind, a global prosperity index shows.

New Zealand’s ranking in the Legatum Prosperity Index is the lowest it has been in 13 years, however, that was a result of the index undergoing methodolog­ical change and featuring new indicators this year, a spokesman said.

In 2018 New Zealand was ranked second only to Norway, but under the new methodolog­y and indicators, New Zealand’s 2018 ranking has been retrospect­ively adjusted to seventh, meaning its prosperity ranking is unchanged in 2019.

Countries that sit ahead of New Zealand in 2019 include number one ranked Denmark followed by Switzerlan­d, Sweden, Finland and the Netherland­s.

The index is an initiative by Legatum, a global private investment company, founded by New Zealand-born Christophe­r Chandler,

with links to pro-Brexit politician­s and campaigner­s.

In analysing the performanc­e of the 167 countries more than 100 ‘‘experts’’ looked at ‘‘12 pillars’’, comprising 65 different elements, measured by 294 indicators, using publicly available data.

Those pillars are safety and security, personal freedom, governance, social capital, investment environmen­t, enterprise conditions, market access and infrastruc­ture, economic quality, living conditions, health, education and the natural environmen­t. New Zealand performed best in investment environmen­t, where it ranked third. Investment environmen­t measures the extent to which investment­s are protected through the existence of property rights, investor protection­s and contract enforcemen­t, and also the extent to which domestic and internatio­nal capital is available for investment.

New Zealand’s lowest ranking was for living conditions (26th). Living conditions measures what’s necessary for individual­s to attain a basic level of wellbeing including a level of material resources, adequate nutrition and access to basic services and shelter.

Overall New Zealand ranked ahead of Germany, (eighth) the United Kingdom (11th), Canada, (14th) Australia (17th), the United States (18th) and China (57th), which climbed eight places since 2009, driven by improvemen­ts in its enterprise conditions and in the living conditions of its residents.

Changes to the Legatum Prosperity Index included introducin­g more policy-focused elements and increasing the number of pillars from nine to 12.

Legatum Institute chief executive

Philippa Stroud said prosperity continued to rise in the world, both over the last year and since 2007 with 89 per cent of countries experienci­ng higher levels of prosperity than they did a decade ago.

Of the 167 countries measured, 148 had become more prosperous over the last decade and every region has seen improvemen­t over the past 10 years.

However, the gap between the highest and lowest prosperity scores was the largest since 2007, she said.

The rise in global prosperity over the past decade had been driven by more open economies. But improvemen­ts in global prosperity were being held back by weaker personal freedom, and declining governance, she said.

Economies were more open because of the improvemen­t in the investment environmen­t and digital connectivi­ty (internet usage has also more than doubled in the past decade), as well as a reduction in administra­tive burdens, she said.

Following an extended period of deteriorat­ion the ‘‘safety and security’’ pillar had improved across the world.

‘‘Safety and security, in all its guises, is the foundation of any successful nation building,’’ Stroud said.

Safety and Security enabled other pillars of prosperity to follow, she said.

The least prosperous nation was South Sudan, behind Yemen and Central African Republic.

The bottom 30 countries in the index faced significan­t challenges across all pillars, especially in improving safety and security, she said.

 ??  ?? New Zealand is ranked as the third best country for investment environmen­t.
New Zealand is ranked as the third best country for investment environmen­t.

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