2017 United States overall
score 75.1, world rank 17
RULE OF LAW Property Rights 81.3, Government Integrity 78.1 Judicial
Effectiveness 75.1
GOVERNMENT SIZE Government
Spending 55.9,
Tax Burden 65.3 Fiscal Health 53.3
REGULATORY EFFICIENCY Business Freedom
84.4,
Labor Freedom 91.0 Monetary Freedom
80.1
OPEN MARKETS Trade Freedom 87.1, Investment Freedom 80.0 Financial
Freedom 70.0
QUICK FACTS- Population: 321.2 million, GDP (PPP): $17.9 trillion 2.4% growth, 2.0% 5-year compound annual growth, $55,805 per capita, Unemployment: 5.3%, Inflation (CPI):0.1%, FDI Inflow: $379.9 billion
Large
budget deficits and a high level of public debt, both now reflected in the
Index methodology, have contributed to the continuing decline in America’s
economic freedom.
Having
registered its lowest economic freedom score ever, the United States is no
longer among the world’s 15 freest economies.
The
anemic economic recovery since the great recession has been characterized by a
lack of labor market dynamism and depressed levels of investment. The
substantial expansion of government’s size and scope, increased regulatory and
tax burdens, and the loss of confidence that has accompanied a growing
perception of cronyism, elite privilege, and corruption have severely
undermined America’s global competitiveness.
The
United States, with the world’s largest and most diversified economy, is still
suffering through a protracted period of slow growth that has held down job
creation and labor market participation.
The
population remains sharply divided over appropriate remedies. Donald Trump,
elected President in November 2016, has promised a sharp break with the
regulatory, tax, and trade policies of his predecessor, including dismantling
such major legislation as the Affordable Care Act and the Dodd–Frank financial
regulatory bill.
Because
of its size and inherent strength, the U.S. economy has shown considerable
resilience. Services account for about 80 percent of GDP, but manufacturing
output and productivity are at historic highs.
Although
property rights are guaranteed and the judiciary functions independently and
predictably, protection of property rights has been uneven. For example, rising
civil asset forfeitures by law enforcement agencies and a vast expansion of
occupational licensing have directly encroached on U.S. citizens’ property
rights.
The
Pew Research Center reported in late 2015 that just 19 percent of Americans
trust the government always or most of the time.
The
top individual income tax rate is 39.6 percent, and the top corporate tax rate
remains among the world’s highest at 35 percent. The overall tax burden equals
26.0 percent of total domestic income.
Government
spending at all levels has amounted to 38.3 percent of total output (GDP) over
the past three years, and federal budget deficits have averaged 4.1 percent of
GDP. Public debt is equivalent to 105.8 percent of GDP.
The
number of federal regulations has increased substantially, raising total annual
compliance costs to more than $100 billion in just seven years. Labor
regulations are not rigid, but other government policies restrict dynamic job
growth.
Federal
welfare programs, combined with federal subsidies for agriculture, health care,
green energy, corporate welfare, and other special interests, contribute to
large deficits.
Trade
is moderately important to the United States economy; the value of exports and
imports taken together equals 28 percent of GDP. The average applied tariff
rate is 1.4 percent. Over one-third of all land is owned by government.
The
overall financial sector remains competitive, but the banking sector remains
vulnerable to uncertainty and bureaucratic interference related to the
2,300-page Dodd–Frank legislation.
http://www.heritage.org/index/ranking
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