U.S. Drops in Global Retirement Rankings: These Countries Do It Better

The U.S. dropped to No. 17 in the 2021 Global Retirement Index (GRI), which measures retirement security across the globe.
The U.S. dropped to No. 17 in the 2021 Global Retirement Index (GRI), which measures retirement security across the globe.

The U.S. has plenty to improve upon when it comes retirement. While Iceland is rated as the top country for retirement security for the third year in a row, the U.S. dropped to No. 17 in the 2021 Global Retirement Index (GRI). The U.S. fell one spot in the annual rankings compiled by Natixis Investment Managers and CoreData Research after posting lower health scores, including a sharp decline in life expectancy.

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How Retirement Rankings Were Determined

The GRI, which studies 44 countries across five continents, examines various factors that drive retirement security and aims to help retirees determine “where and how to most efficiently preserve wealth while enjoying retirement.” Each year, researchers consider data from a number of sources and develop a composite retirement security score for each country. The scores are based on four different sub-indices that comprise of 18 metrics:

  • Finances in Retirement: Measures a retiree’s access to quality financial services to help preserve savings value and maximize income. This sub-index accounts for inflation, interest rates, tax pressure, governance and other indicators.

  • Health: Measures access to quality health services, taking into account life expectancy, health expenditures per capita and non-insured health expenditures.

  • Material Well-Being: The material means to live comfortably in retirement, including income per capita, unemployment and income equality.

  • Quality of Life: Measures the cleanliness and safety of an environment, taking into account air quality, water and sanitation, happiness and other factors.

Best Countries for Retirement

Iceland leads a group of 18 European countries that rank in the top 25 for retirement security. The tiny Nordic island nation is first overall for Material Well-Being, sixth for Quality of Life, ninth for Finances in Retirement and 12th for Health.

Meanwhile, Switzerland is ranked as the second best country for retirement, followed by Norway, Ireland and the Netherlands. New Zealand, Australia and Canada are the only non-European nations considered among the 10 best countries for retirement.

Here’s the top 25 for 2021:

  1. Iceland

  2. Switzerland

  3. Norway

  4. Ireland

  5. Netherlands

  6. New Zealand

  7. Australia

  8. Germany

  9. Denmark

  10. Canada

  11. Luxembourg

  12. Austria

  13. Sweden

  14. Czech Republic

  15. Finland

  16. Slovenia

  17. United States

  18. United Kingdom

  19. Israel

  20. Malta

  21. Belgium

  22. Japan

  23. South Korea

  24. Estonia

  25. France

Why the U.S. Has Fallen

The U.S. dropped to No. 17 in the 2021 Global Retirement Index (GRI), which measures retirement security across the globe.
The U.S. dropped to No. 17 in the 2021 Global Retirement Index (GRI), which measures retirement security across the globe.

While the retirement conditions in the U.S. have improved since 2013 when the first GRI ranked the U.S. 19th overall, the country has never cracked the top 10. The U.S. slipped one spot from No. 16 in 2020 after life expectancy in the U.S. dropped one full year amid the COVID-19 pandemic, pushing the country’s Health rating down.