Property Rights Index (0-100)

Europe Ranking

Source: IMF
Current Rank
Country
Value
Latest Reading
Previous Rank
Previous Value
1Norway10020221282
1Finland1002022192
3Denmark992022487
4Austria982022487
5Luxembourg972022886
5Sweden972022487
5Iceland972022487
8United Kingdom962022388
8Netherlands962022289
8Germany9620221579
11Switzerland9520221085
12France9420221282
13Ireland932022886
13Belgium9320221184
15Estonia9220221282
16Portugal9020222374
16Slovenia9020221877
18Lithuania8920221579
18Czech Republic8920221976
18Latvia8920222275
21Malta8820222668
21Spain8820221976
23Cyprus8620221579
24Slovakia8320222472
25Italy8220221976
26Croatia8120222668
26Romania8120222569
28Bulgaria7720222966
29Hungary7620222966
29Greece7620223856
31Poland7220223163
32Georgia6420222867
33Montenegro6120223558
34Serbia5920223558
35Macedonia5720223163
36Moldova5620223361
36Albania5620224046
38Armenia5020223757
39Bosnia and Herzegovina4920224144
40Angola4020224230
40Ukraine4020223949
42Belarus3520223459

Definition of Property Rights Index (0-100)

The property rights index measures the degree to which a country's laws protect private property rights and the degree to which its government enforces those laws. It also assesses the likelihood that private property will be expropriated and analyzes the independence of the judiciary, the existence of corruption within the judiciary, and the ability of individuals and businesses to enforce contracts. Higher index values denote more certain legal protection of property.

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