Europe dominates global wealth rankings, but what it actually means to be a “rich country” depends heavily on how prosperity is measured and who benefits from it.
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“Being the richest country in the world is not just about producing a lot,” the analysis from a financial services comparison platform HelloSafe states.
“It is measured by how that wealth concretely translates into the daily life of the ordinary citizen. In 2026, the answer is Norway.”
The group argues that GDP per capita alone can distort comparisons, since it assumes national output is evenly shared across the population.
Ireland illustrates the issue. GDP per capita stands at around $150,000 in purchasing power terms, but much of this is driven by multinationals such as Apple, Google and Pfizer.
The gap between output and household income is estimated at around $70,000 per person.
Addressing these limitations, HelloSafe’s “Prosperity Index” ranks more than 50 countries using a combined score out of 100.
It draws on data from the IMF, World Bank, UNDP, Eurostat and OECD, bringing together income, inequality and wider social indicators into a single measure of prosperity.
On this basis, Europe dominates the top of the ranking, with the five richest countries all located in the region.
Small countries push through
Norway leads the table, supported by the world’s highest GNI (Gross National Income, the total income earned by a country’s people and businesses, including income earned abroad)and a highly balanced social model.
Ireland is second, with high real incomes despite an inflated GDP figure. Luxembourg is third, slipping from the top position for the first time since the index began.
These countries combine strong economic performance with some of the best social indicators globally, according to the report.
Other high performers include Iceland, which ranks fifth, supported by strong human development indicators and low levels of relative poverty.
Singapore, by contrast, scores highly on income but is held back by higher inequality.
Outside of Europe, the United States ranks 17th, reflecting economic strength alongside high inequality and relative poverty.
France sits in 20th place, just behind the Czech Republic, which benefits from one of the most equal income distributions in Europe and a low relative poverty rate.
At the lower end of the European table, countries such as Italy, Spain and Estonia score more modestly, reflecting lower income levels and, in Spain’s case, higher relative poverty.
Beyond Europe, the Seychelles ranks first in Africa, driven by the continent’s highest GDP per capita, strong human development scores and relatively contained inequality. Mauritius and Algeria follow.
In Latin America, Uruguay tops the ranking for the first time, with the region’s highest GNI, lowest poverty and most equal income distribution. Chile and Panama come next.
In Asia, Singapore leads, followed by Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
The results suggest that while Europe continues to dominate measures of global prosperity, the picture changes significantly once inequality and social outcomes are taken into account. What it means to be “rich,” the data suggests, is no longer defined by output alone — but by how widely that wealth is shared.
