Africa: Economic Freedom Rating, 5-Yr Change

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CAR   -19.59%
Zimbabwe   -18.82%
Namibia   -9.28%
Chad   -9.26%
Gabon   -8.68%
Mauritania   -6.68%
Djibouti   -6.03%
South Africa   -5.78%
Burkina Faso   -5.52%
Mali   -5.32%
Congo(Brazza)   -5.21%
Mozambique   -3.55%
Guinea   -3.42%
Niger   -2.75%
Ghana   -2.68%
Swaziland   -1.34%
Eq. Guinea   -1.10%
Tanzania   -0.82%
Madagascar   -0.71%
Cote d'Ivoire   -0.39%
Lesotho   -0.22%
Botswana   0.04%
Senegal   0.06%
Benin   0.21%
Gambia   0.55%
Malawi   1.07%
Kenya   1.74%
Zambia   2.01%
Cameroon   2.40%
Cape Verde   4.03%
Togo   4.35%
Guinea-Bissau   4.55%
Uganda   7.20%
Ethiopia   9.05%
Nigeria   12.11%
Mauritius   12.31%
Rwanda   13.36%
Sierra Leone   15.98%
 

 

 

Africa: Economic freedom index, 5-year change

Increased economic freedom is strongly associated with high GDP growth, and therefore with rises in residential property prices. Changes in a country’s score on the Heritage Foundation’s freedom index are calculated by the Global Property Guide to produce a 5-point rating:

  • Greatly Improved
  • Improved
  • Nuetral
  • Worse
  • Much Worse


Source: Calculated using figures from The Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal

 

Statistics for Africa. Africa is a desert so far as house-price statistics are concerned. The exception is South Africa, where ABSA Group releases good house price data, and has a monthly house price index.