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Is the US Economy Becoming Less Free?

In our evaluation of whether the Obama administration has been terrible for the economy, the first claim we will investigate is that US’s Index of Economic Freedom is ranked #11, its lowest ever, and its 7th decline in 8 years, dropping it into the second tier of world economies.

I was unfamiliar with the Index of Economic Freedom but, after a little research, discovered that it is a multicomponent rating of major economies by the slightly right-leaning Wall Street Journal and very right-leaning Hertage Foundation. As with any composite metric, the devil is often in the details of the individual subcomponents, but let’s assume that this is a worthwhile scoring system (at least from the perspective of those who believe in smaller government / less public economic intervention) and dig in.

Indeed, according to both the Wikipedia article and the Heritage Foundation site, the US was ranked #11 worldwide this year, so we can rate this claim as TRUE.

However, the US was ranked #12 in 2015 and 2014 so we can rate the claim that #11 is its worst ranking ever as FALSE.

Given its ranking improvement from 2015 to 2016 and its flat ranking from 2014 to 2015 (as well as 2012 to 2013), we can also rate the claim that the US’s ranking has declined seven times in the most recent 8 years as FALSE. (Possibly the author meant to refer to the US’s decline in score rather than ranking.)

Indeed, the US’s decline from a brief high of 81.2% to its current 75.4% does mark a shift from the first tier (“Free”) to the second tier (“Mostly Free”) so we can rate this claim as TRUE (although the 80% boundary between the two tiers seems to be somewhat arbitrary).

The author is batting .500 in his claims so far but, rather than discrediting him, let’s look at the actual data to see what it tells us. From 1995 to 2008 the US’s ranking in the Index of Economic Freedom bounced between #4 and #8. From 2012 – 2016 it has bounced between #10 and #12 so there has indeed been a decline in rankings over the course of the Obama administration. What could explain such a decline?

  1. a change in ranking methodology
  2. a rise in the scores of other countries
  3. a decline in the US’s score

I think we can dismiss #1 as Hong Kong and Singapore have been #1 and #2 respectively ever since the Index of Economic Freedom was first assessed in 1995. If there had been a substantial change in methodology, I suspect that we would have seen a shake-up at the top.

As you can see from the above graph, the average score of other countries has increased modestly over time while the US’s is at around the same score it had in 1995. The US’s score increased during the Bush administration and has decreased during the Obama administration. Assuming the score responds rapidly to changes in policy and assuming that it isn’t just a partisan propaganda machine for its right-leaning benefactors (I don’t know how safe either of those assumptions are.), let’s dive into its subcomponents to see why the score has fallen in recent years.

CONCLUSION (at least from these metrics): the US government is a little bigger and a little more regulatory than it was under Bush and about the same as it was under Clinton but has not changed much in 21 years. If you believe in smaller government, you won’t be thrilled with the US’s performance in the Index of Economic Freedom – but it would be hard to point to it as evidence of Obama’s total economic failure.

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