[Travel] HelloSafe Prosperity Index: which are the richest countries in the world in 2024?
For the first time in 2024, HelloSafe is pleased to unveil its World Prosperity Index, which has ranked 186 countries according to a set of criteria including economic, social and environmental development indicators, with the aim of going beyond rankings based solely on gross wealth indicators such as GDP or GNP. The result is an original and exclusive classification that highlights the challenges of unequal development on our planet.
Good to know
The HelloSafe Prosperity Index is based on 6 key indicators: Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita, Gross National Income (GNI) per capita, gross national savings rate, Human Development Index (HDI), Gini coefficient and poverty rate. See the methodology at the end of the page for the weighting of these indicators and all the relevant explanations.
Focus on the 20 richest countries in the world: Luxembourg, Norway and Ireland make up the top 3
The results of the HelloSafe Prosperity Index show that the top 20 most prosperous countries are largely dominated by European countries, with Luxembourg in the lead (86.2), followed by Norway (85.1) and Ireland (84.7). This ranking reflects the economic strength of these nations, combined with high scores for human development and income equality. Qatar and Singapore stand out as the only non-European countries in the top five, attesting to their dynamic economies and advanced infrastructures. The United States and Canada rank 18th and 19th, while France closes the top 20 with a score of 60.4, illustrating a high level of prosperity, albeit lower than that of Northern European countries and certain dynamic Asian economies.
Source: HelloSafe Prosperity Index, based on World Bank and UNDP data
Focus on the 20 poorest countries in the world: the countries of sub-Saharan Africa are the most represented
The 20 lowest-ranked countries in the HelloSafe Prosperity Index reflect extremely difficult socio-economic conditions, with very low scores ranging from 10.88 for Mozambique to 17.37 for Swaziland. This ranking is mainly occupied by nations in sub-Saharan Africa, where economic challenges, poverty and limited infrastructure are recurrent. The Central African Republic, Madagascar, and the Democratic Republic of Congo are among the least prosperous countries due to their low GDP and HDI, as well as high income inequality and poverty rates. Yemen and Afghanistan also appear in this group, marked by protracted conflicts and instability that are hampering their development. This situation highlights the significant investment and development needs to improve prosperity in these regions.
Source: HelloSafe Prosperity Index, based on World Bank and UNDP data
The full ranking of the world's richest countries: the UK in 24th position
The results of theHelloSafe Prosperity Index highlight a marked distribution of global prosperity levels, dominated by European nations and certain advanced economies on other continents. Luxembourg, Norway and Ireland top the list, with high scores (above 80 points) reflecting their robust economies and social well-being. The Scandinavian countries and several Western European states are over-represented at the top of the ranking, underlining the importance of strong social policies and economic stability. Outside Europe, Qatar and Singapore also feature in the top 10, illustrating the prosperity of small economies focused on specific sectors such as energy and financial services. Canada, with a score of 63.68 points, is in 19th place, just behind the United States (64.03 points).
Classification | Countries | Prosperity index |
---|---|---|
1 | Luxembourg | 86.20 points |
2 | Norway | 85.09 points |
3 | Ireland | 84.72 points |
4 | Switzerland | 81.17 points |
5 | Qatar | 80.52 points |
6 | Singapore | 77.45 points |
7 | Iceland | 77.04 points |
8 | Denmark | 72.96 points |
9 | Netherlands | 71.06 points |
10 | Belgium | 68.26 points |
11 | Sweden | 68.16 points |
12 | Australia | 66.96 points |
13 | Germany | 66.80 points |
14 | Austria | 66.43 points |
15 | Finland | 66.14 points |
16 | United Arab Emirates | 65.95 points |
17 | San Marino | 65.27 points |
18 | United States | 64.03 points |
19 | Canada | 63.68 points |
20 | France | 60.36 points |
21 | Kuwait | 60.15 points |
22 | Brunei | 59.94 points |
23 | Slovenia | 59.45 points |
24 | United Kingdom | 59.32 points |
25 | New Zealand | 58.59 points |
26 | Bahrain | 58.59 points |
27 | Greenland | 58.56 points |
28 | Israel | 58.01 points |
29 | Hong Kong | 57.97 points |
30 | Czech Republic | 57.89 points |
31 | Malta | 57.50 points |
32 | South Korea | 57.40 points |
33 | Saudi Arabia | 57.07 points |
34 | Italy | 56.80 points |
35 | Japan | 56.53 points |
36 | Cyprus | 55.24 points |
37 | Spain | 54.90 points |
38 | Slovakia | 53.61 points |
39 | Poland | 53.15 points |
40 | Estonia | 52.59 points |
41 | Hungary | 51.20 points |
42 | Portugal | 51.16 points |
43 | Croatia | 50.80 points |
44 | Lithuania | 50.58 points |
45 | Greece | 49.14 points |
46 | Oman | 48.24 points |
47 | Latvia | 48.04 points |
48 | Romania | 47.56 points |
49 | Kazakhstan | 47.36 points |
50 | Russia | 46.69 points |
51 | Belarus | 46.34 points |
52 | Bahamas | 45.91 points |
53 | Montenegro | 43.59 points |
54 | Chile | 43.19 points |
55 | China | 42.69 points |
56 | Uruguay | 42.48 points |
57 | Turkey | 42.40 points |
58 | Malaysia | 41.86 points |
59 | Bulgaria | 41.71 points |
60 | Kosovo | 41.62 points |
61 | Ukraine | 41.56 points |
62 | Serbia | 41.13 points |
63 | Mauritius | 41.05 points |
64 | Seychelles | 40.77 points |
65 | Trinidad and Tobago | 40.63 points |
66 | Algeria | 40.36 points |
67 | Panama | 40.36 points |
68 | Thailand | 40.34 points |
69 | Georgia | 40.19 points |
70 | Maldives | 39.65 points |
71 | Azerbaijan | 39.25 points |
72 | Saint Kitts and Nevis | 39.22 points |
73 | Bosnia-Herzegovina | 38.76 points |
74 | Armenia | 38.54 points |
75 | Albania | 38.52 points |
76 | Macedonia | 38.46 points |
77 | Antigua and Barbuda | 38.23 points |
78 | Argentina | 38.18 points |
79 | Dominican Republic | 37.39 points |
80 | Moldova | 36.99 points |
81 | Costa Rica | 36.39 points |
82 | Barbados | 36.14 points |
83 | Iran | 35.76 points |
84 | Sri Lanka | 35.58 points |
85 | Suriname | 35.37 points |
86 | Uzbekistan | 35.33 points |
87 | Mongolia | 35.20 points |
88 | Iraq | 34.58 points |
89 | Guyana | 34.57 points |
90 | Tonga | 34.43 points |
91 | Grenada | 33.89 points |
92 | Libya | 33.84 points |
93 | Indonesia | 33.63 points |
94 | Vietnam | 33.56 points |
95 | Fiji | 33.42 points |
96 | Egypt | 33.24 points |
97 | Mexico | 33.22 points |
98 | Bhutan | 32.90 points |
99 | Jordan | 32.56 points |
100 | Peru | 32.53 points |
101 | Tunisia | 32.25 points |
102 | Gabon | 32.20 points |
103 | Turkmenistan | 31.03 points |
104 | Tajikistan | 30.93 points |
105 | Cambodia | 30.71 points |
106 | Jamaica | 30.37 points |
107 | Bangladesh | 30.35 points |
108 | Ecuador | 30.06 points |
109 | Morocco | 30.02 points |
110 | Saint Lucia | 29.65 points |
111 | India | 29.63 points |
112 | Vanuatu | 29.58 points |
113 | Brazil | 29.57 points |
114 | Kyrgyzstan | 29.36 points |
115 | Philippines | 29.15 points |
116 | Nepal | 29.02 points |
117 | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 28.98 points |
118 | Samoa | 28.82 points |
119 | Paraguay | 28.79 points |
120 | Lebanon | 27.74 points |
121 | El Salvador | 27.48 points |
122 | Botswana | 27.35 points |
123 | Timor Leste | 27.13 points |
124 | Tuvalu | 26.05 points |
125 | Colombia | 25.87 points |
126 | Laos | 25.54 points |
127 | Mauritania | 25.45 points |
128 | Bolivia | 25.32 points |
129 | Venezuela | 25.28 points |
130 | Pakistan | 25.23 points |
131 | Dominique | 24.77 points |
132 | Nicaragua | 24.59 points |
133 | Cape Verde | 24.46 points |
134 | Burma | 24.44 points |
135 | Solomon Islands | 24.33 points |
136 | Belize | 24.32 points |
137 | Ghana | 23.48 points |
138 | Kiribati | 23.30 points |
139 | Nigeria | 22.93 points |
140 | Ivory Coast | 22.59 points |
141 | Tanzania | 22.51 points |
142 | Benin | 22.18 points |
143 | Ethiopia | 21.60 points |
144 | Kenya | 21.41 points |
145 | Djibouti | 21.11 points |
146 | Papua New Guinea | 20.84 points |
147 | Uganda | 20.20 points |
148 | Senegal | 20.07 points |
149 | Sao Tome and Principe | 19.98 points |
150 | Cameroon | 19.97 points |
151 | Guatemala | 19.84 points |
152 | Togo | 19.57 points |
153 | Republic of Congo | 19.55 points |
154 | Angola | 19.47 points |
155 | Syria | 19.28 points |
156 | Guinea | 19.19 points |
157 | Guinea-Bissau | 19.12 points |
158 | Namibia | 19.00 points |
159 | Sudan | 18.62 points |
160 | Niger | 18.28 points |
161 | Liberia | 17.82 points |
162 | South Africa | 17.67 points |
163 | Gambia | 17.65 points |
164 | Comoros | 17.60 points |
165 | Zimbabwe | 17.48 points |
166 | Malawi | 17.37 points |
167 | Eswatini | 17.37 points |
168 | Honduras | 17.33 points |
169 | Rwanda | 17.29 points |
170 | Burkina Faso | 17.05 points |
171 | Eritrea | 16.95 points |
172 | Mali | 16.93 points |
173 | Sierra Leone | 16.86 points |
174 | Haiti | 16.22 points |
175 | Chad | 16.17 points |
176 | Zambia | 16.09 points |
177 | Afghanistan | 15.84 points |
178 | Lesotho | 15.30 points |
179 | Yemen | 15.01 points |
180 | Somalia | 14.23 points |
181 | Equatorial Guinea | 14.04 points |
182 | Burundi | 13.44 points |
183 | Democratic Republic of Congo | 13.33 points |
184 | Madagascar | 13.09 points |
185 | Central African Republic | 11.35 points |
186 | Mozambique | 10.88 points |
The complete ranking of the richest countries in Africa: Mauritius, Seychelles and Algeria in the top 3
In the HelloSafe Prosperity Index, the most prosperous African countries include Mauritius (41.05), Seychelles (40.77) and Algeria (40.36). These countries stand out as having relatively high levels of prosperity for the continent, thanks in part to greater economic stability, higher GDP per capita and more advanced human development. Libya (33.84) and Egypt (33.24) follow, despite significant socio-economic challenges, but benefiting from natural resources and historical developments that contribute to their relative prosperity. In East Africa, Botswana (27.35) and Gabon (32.20) also score well, supported by more stable management of their natural resources. This ranking highlights the contrasts between the continent's most stable economies and countries with more pronounced economic challenges, showing a clear disparity in prosperity between the countries of North Africa and certain sub-Saharan African states.
Ranking | Country | Prosperity index |
---|---|---|
1 | Mauritius | 41.05 points |
2 | Seychelles | 40.77 points |
3 | Algeria | 40.36 points |
4 | Libya | 33.84 points |
5 | Egypt | 33.24 points |
6 | Tunisia | 32.25 points |
7 | Gabon | 32.20 points |
8 | Morocco | 30.02 points |
9 | Botswana | 27.35 points |
10 | Mauritania | 25.45 points |
11 | Cape Verde | 24.46 points |
12 | Ghana | 23.48 points |
13 | Nigeria | 22.93 points |
14 | Ivory Coast | 22.59 points |
15 | Tanzania | 22.51 points |
16 | Benin | 22.18 points |
17 | Ethiopia | 21.60 points |
18 | Kenya | 21.41 points |
19 | Djibouti | 21.11 points |
20 | Uganda | 20.20 points |
21 | Senegal | 20.07 points |
22 | Sao Tome and Principe | 19.98 points |
23 | Cameroon | 19.97 points |
24 | Togo | 19.57 points |
25 | Republic of Congo | 19.55 points |
26 | Angola | 19.47 points |
27 | Guinea | 19.19 points |
28 | Guinea-Bissau | 19.12 points |
29 | Namibia | 19.00 points |
30 | Sudan | 18.62 points |
31 | Niger | 18.28 points |
32 | Liberia | 17.82 points |
33 | South Africa | 17.67 points |
34 | Gambia | 17.65 points |
35 | Comoros | 17.60 points |
36 | Zimbabwe | 17.48 points |
37 | Malawi | 17.37 points |
38 | Swaziland | 17.37 points |
39 | Rwanda | 17.29 points |
40 | Burkina Faso | 17.05 points |
41 | Eritrea | 16.95 points |
42 | Mali | 16.93 points |
43 | Sierra Leone | 16.86 points |
44 | Chad | 16.17 points |
45 | Zambia | 16.09 points |
46 | Lesotho | 15.30 points |
47 | Somalia | 14.23 points |
48 | Equatorial Guinea | 14.04 points |
49 | Burundi | 13.44 points |
50 | Democratic Republic of Congo | 13.33 points |
51 | Madagascar | 13.09 points |
52 | Central African Republic | 11.35 points |
53 | Mozambique | 10.88 points |
Methodology
Purpose of the study
The HelloSafe Prosperity Index has been designed to provide a comparative measure of the prosperity of countries, taking into account a combination of economic and social factors. Unlike rankings based solely on GDP, our index incorporates social indicators such as the Human Development Index (HDI) and the Gini coefficient, which reflect the quality of life and economic equity within a country. We have weighted the indicators according to their impact on overall prosperity. For example, GDP per capita has been weighted at 30%, as it remains a key indicator of a country's overall wealth. GNI per capita completes this perspective with a 20% weighting, to include foreign income and show the full range of resources available to citizens. Finally, social indicators such as theHDI and the Gini coefficient strengthen our index, reflecting respectively quality of life (20%) and income inequality (15%), which have a direct influence on people's well-being.
Details of the indicators used
The index is based on six indicators weighted differently to give a score out of 100, representing a country's overall prosperity. Here is a detailed list of the indicators, their sources and the weighting applied:
Indicators | Source | Coefficient | Definition |
---|---|---|---|
GDP per capita | World Bank | 30 % | Provides a global estimate of wealth produced per capita, highlighting a country's economic capacity to generate resources. |
GNI per capita | World Bank | 20 % | Provides a comprehensive view of the income available to the population, taking into account international financial flows and the influence of foreign capital. |
Gross national savings rate | World Bank | 5 % | Reflects a country's ability to save for the future, an essential component of economic stability. |
Human Development Index (HDI) | United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) | 20 % | Takes into account life expectancy, level of education and per capita income, providing an overall picture of well-being and quality of life. |
Gini coefficient | World Bank | 15 % | Measures income inequality and shows the extent to which prosperity is distributed among citizens. |
Poverty rate | World Bank | 10 % | Indicates the proportion of the population living below the national poverty line, an essential aspect of assessing living standards. |
The data was mainly collected from the World Bank and the UNDP, which provide standardised and widely recognised information. For countries where data was missing from these sources, we sought alternative data from reliable national statistics.
Reading and analysing the results
In this section, we take an in-depth look at the results obtained using the HelloSafe Prosperity Index. The aim of this analysis is to interpret the scores attributed to each country according to the six indicators selected, and to shed light on their significance. By classifying countries according to their level of prosperity, we will be able to identify global trends and disparities. The categories defined, ranging from countries with very low levels of prosperity to those with very high levels, make it possible to contextualise these results and assess the socio-economic issues facing each country. This analytical approach helps us to better understand the strengths and weaknesses of different nations, while highlighting the importance of convergence between the economic and social dimensions to foster sustainable and inclusive development.
Below 30: countries with very low levels of prosperity
These countries have extremely precarious economic and social conditions, with low GDP per capita, high poverty rates and often marked inequalities. Basic infrastructure, such as access to health and education, is generally inadequate.
Between 30 and 40: countries with a low level of prosperity
Countries in this category show some economic development, but remain limited by low living standards and a low HDI. Income inequality and poverty are common, and their capacity to generate and distribute wealth is still inadequate.
Between 40 and 50: countries with an intermediate level of prosperity
This category includes developing countries with significant economic and social progress. Although poverty and inequality are still present, access to basic services is improving and living standards are relatively stable.
Between 50 and 60: countries with a high level of prosperity
Countries in this category enjoy high standards of living and education, solid infrastructures and a relatively equitable distribution of resources. They have levels of prosperity that enable them to maintain overall socio-economic development.
Above 60: countries with a very high level of prosperity
These countries have dynamic, diversified economies, high living standards, low poverty rates and moderate inequality. They are the most prosperous, with a high savings capacity and strong investment in the well-being of their citizens.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
All countries for which we have at least 90% of the necessary data have been included in the HelloSafe Prosperity Index. Where essential data, such as GDP per capita or HDI, was missing and could not be supplemented by alternative sources, the country was excluded from the index. For example, countries such as Cuba and North Korea are not included in the ranking due to the lack of available and complete data for several key indicators.
Limitations of the study
The study has several limitations:
- Data availability: In some countries, data on specific indicators (notably the Gini coefficient and the poverty rate) may be out of date or incomplete. Despite the use of alternative sources to fill in missing information, this may impact on the accuracy of the ranking.
- Comparability of indicators: Disparities in poverty lines and income levels between countries can complicate international comparisons, particularly for indicators such as the poverty rate.
- Fixed weights: The weights applied to the indicators are based on an analysis of their relative importance, but they remain fixed for all countries. In reality, the relevance of each indicator may vary from one country to another depending on its specific socio-economic circumstances.
List of countries not included in this study
The following countries have been excluded from the scope of this study due to insufficient data: Andorra, Cuba, Liechtenstein, Monaco, North Korea, South Sudan and Taiwan.
Conclusion and usefulness
The HelloSafe Prosperity Index offers an enriched vision of the global prosperity of countries by taking into account crucial economic and social indicators. This ranking is a valuable tool for travellers, investors and researchers wishing to understand the differences in prosperity between countries, and is distinguished by its multi-dimensional approach.
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