Surveys
Switzerland Tops Jurisdiction List For Risk Readiness

Geopolitics and moves by some governments to squeeze HNW individuals over tax, trade disputes and other issues have put a premium on safe, stable and economically welcoming jurisdictions. Two of the world's most significant wealth jurisdictions – Switzerland and Singapore – are in the top five.
A ranking of how well or not countries blend structural stability
and long-term economic growth shows that Switzerland stands in
first place, with Germany, Singapore, Ireland and Finland at the
top, in descending order. At the bottom, riskiest end of the
spectrum is Russia.
In sixth to 10 places respectively, are Denmark, the Netherlands,
Austria, the United Arab Emirates and Australia, according to a
report from Global Citizen
Solutions which covers some 85 jurisdictions.
Jurisdictions are assessed across two equally-weighted pillars:
Risk & Structural Stability, and Readiness & Market Opportunity.
All scores are standardised on a 0–100 scale.
The US comes in 11th place, with Canada at 24th in the
firm’s risk and readiness score measure.
The report, called the Global Atlas of Risk and
Readiness, “highlights countries that combine institutional
strength, innovation ecosystems, energy resilience, and economic
depth, characteristics that increasingly influence investment
confidence and capital allocation decisions,” the residency
and citizenship planning advisory firm, said in a report.
There are several studies, for example from Henley &
Partners, a firm advising people on relocating, on how
different countries stack up in terms of risk, desirability, ease
of visa-free entry, and more (see
an example). At a time when capital is mobile and geopolitics
stressful, demands among HNW individuals for more options on
where to live and work remain high. Notably, Switzerland and
Singapore are two of the world's most important wealth
jurisdictions and centres for cross-border activity.
The war in the Gulf, moves by some governments to squeeze HNW
individuals over tax, trade disputes and other issues have put a
premium on safe, politically stable and economically-friendly
jurisdictions.
The 10 riskiest nations, in descending order, are Russia,
Turkiye, Nigeria, Israel, Argentina, Mexico, Colombia, Sri Lanka,
Egypt and Cambodia.
Across the dataset, Europe emerges as the strongest-performing
region, with an average GARR score of 87.89, followed by North
America (85.78), the Middle East (84.27), and Asia-Pacific
(83.87). Latin America (80.00) and Africa (75.68) trail
behind.
Switzerland has an overall score of 93.73, followed by Germany
(93.40) and Singapore (92.60).
“In a global environment shaped by geopolitical fragmentation,
supply-chain realignment, energy transition pressures, and rapid
technological change, traditional growth indicators are no longer
sufficient. Investors are increasingly evaluating countries
through a dual lens: structural risk and systemic readiness,” the
GCS report said.
The top countries share qualities such as strong rule of law and
regulatory reliability; advanced digital and AI readiness; high
human capital depth; energy system resilience; and liquid
and sophisticated financial markets.