
The Heritage Foundation published the 2025 Index of Economic Freedom, according to which, Georgia’s score improved by 0.6 points, reaching 69, placing the country 35th globally and among the top 20 economies in Europe.
According to the report, country’s economic freedom score was higher than both global and regional averages, with Georgia’s economy being considered “moderately free”.
“Despite a challenging external and political environment, Georgia’s economy performs relatively well in key policy areas. Over the years, reforms have been implemented to enhance regulatory efficiency, and an open market policy has been maintained alongside low tax rates.
In terms of economic freedom, Georgia surpasses all EU candidate countries as well as 16 EU and NATO member states, including France, Italy, Spain, Poland, Croatia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Malta, Romania, Bulgaria, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Hungary, Greece, Turkey, Albania.
The global survey also positively assessed the rule of law in the country. As the report reads, the rule of law was relatively well upheld in Georgia: “The country’s property rights score is above the global average, its judicial effectiveness score exceeds the global benchmark, and its Government integrity score is also higher than the global average”.
In terms of judicial effectiveness, Georgia outperforms all EU candidate countries and several EU and NATO member states. The judicial efficiency evaluation was based on 3 key criteria:
-Judicial independence
-Quality of judicial proceedings
-Perception of public service quality and civil service independence
As for the Government integrity, Georgia also surpasses all EU candidate countries and 13 EU and NATO member states, including Poland, Cyprus, Malta, Slovakia, Greece, Croatia, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Montenegro, Turkey, North Macedonia, Albania.
Government integrity was assessed using the following criteria:
-Perceptions of corruption
-Risk of bribery
-Control of corruption, including state capture by elites and private interests
The research methodology emphasises that the indicator aims to analyse countries’ freedom from adverse factors such as bribery, extortion, nepotism, cronyism, patronage, embezzlement, and misappropriation.
The Heritage Foundation’s index is based on research from multiple analytical centers, including:
-Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index
-TRACE International, The TRACE Matrix
-World Bank, Worldwide Governance Indicators, which itself is based on research from dozens of analytical institutions.