Four questions about your money
Every cross-border money decision comes down to the same four questions. A country can pass one and fail another, so the honest answer is rarely a single grade. Three of the four are scored directly in the table below.
Can it get in?
How open the country is to foreign capital arriving: account access, currency purchase, and investment rules.
Can it work?
Whether property rights and the business climate let capital actually grow once it is there.
Can it get out?
The exit test: capital-account openness and controls that can trap money when you most want to move it.
Will it hold?
Whether inflation and a sliding currency quietly erode purchasing power while the money sits still.
The Capital & Enterprise score weights repatriation most heavily, at 40 percent, because the ability to take capital back out is the factor that fails first under stress. Foreign investment and business environment carry 30 percent each. The fourth question, holding value against inflation and currency, is read separately in each Country Report and in the Legacy & Sovereignty pillar of the Index.
Good to live is not the same as good for your money
The clearest way to see the gap is a country that scores well for living and badly for capital, set against one that scores well for both. The three component scores show exactly where the difference sits.
Argentina · Index 69.9
On paper Argentina welcomes investment. The exit is the problem. Controls eased sharply from April 2025, but as of 2026 companies still cannot freely buy foreign currency for non-operational use, and export earnings must be brought home and converted to pesos. Capital repatriation scores 16 of 100. Money goes in far more easily than it comes out, and inflation erodes whatever sits still.
Singapore · Index 80.6
An open capital account, a stable currency, deep and trusted banks, and no restriction on moving money in or out. Repatriation scores 100. Capital arrives, works, and leaves on your schedule. You pay for it in cost of living and a competitive residency bar, but the money question is answered cleanly.
Most rankings will not tell you the difference. Sort the table below by Repatriation to see where the exit closes, or by the gap between Index and Capital to find every country better to live in than to bank in.
The world, ranked for your money
| # | Country | Region | Capital & Enterprise | Invest | Business | Repat | Index | Gap |
|---|
Capital & Enterprise scores each country 0 to 100 as 0.40 × Repatriation + 0.30 × Foreign investment + 0.30 × Business environment. Foreign investment is the Heritage Foundation investment-freedom score; Business environment blends Heritage business freedom and property rights; Repatriation is the Chinn-Ito KAOPEN capital-account-openness index, the same public sources used across the Sovereo Index. Where a micro-state is absent from the capital-openness index, repatriation is inferred from the composite and its components are shown as a dash. The Index column is the country's overall Sovereo score; Gap is Index minus Capital, so a large positive number flags a place better to live in than to bank in. Scores are directional wayfinding built from public data, not personalized financial advice, and programmes change, so anything close to a decision belongs in a Country Report.
Put the number against your own situation
The lens ranks the world. Your best country is the top of your list, not the top of this one. Go deeper where it counts.
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