Australia: Fiscal freedom

* indicates monthly or quarterly data series
 Australia

Fiscal freedom index (0-100)

 Latest value 40
 Year 2024
 Measure points
 Data availability 1995 - 2024
 Average 58
 Min - Max 25 - 66
 Source The Heritage Foundation
The latest value from 2024 is 40 points, an increase from 25 points in 2023. In comparison, the world average is 52 points, based on data from 174 countries. Historically, the average for Australia from 1995 to 2024 is 58 points. The minimum value, 25 points, was reached in 2023 while the maximum of 66 points was recorded in 2013. See the global rankings for that indicator or use the country comparator to compare trends over time.
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* indicates monthly or quarterly data series


Recent data
Australia - Fiscal freedom - Recent values chart

Historical series
Australia - Fiscal freedom - historical chart - 1995-2024




The Fiscal Freedom index for Australia from The Heritage Foundation reflects the tax burden imposed by the government, including the direct taxes on individuals and corporations and the overall amount of tax revenue as a a share of GDP.
Definition: The Fiscal freedom index measures the tax burden imposed by government. It is composed of three quantitative factors: the top marginal tax rate on individual income, the top marginal tax rate on corporate income, and the total tax burden as a percentage of GDP.

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 Related indicators Latest Reference Measure
 Property rights 91 2024 points
 Freedom from corruption 85 2024 points
 Fiscal freedom 40 2024 points
 Business freedom 92 2024 points
 Labor freedom 65 2024 points
 Monetary freedom 75.60 2024 points
 Trade freedom 90 2024 points
 Investment freedom 80 2024 points
 Financial freedom 90 2024 points
 Economic freedom, overall index 76 2024 index points
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