Our read on the 2026 Best Countries Index: what a nation’s brand signals about growth, investment, and talent, and where Australian businesses should focus.
Australia overall
Nations scored
Perception attributes
A country’s brand is an economic asset — not a vanity metric.
WPP & the BAV brand-analytics tool, with the Wharton School (Prof. David Reibstein)
That is the premise behind the Best Countries Index, the perception study run by WPP and its BAV tool together with the Wharton School. The argument, advanced by Wharton’s David Reibstein, is straightforward: how a country is perceived shapes where capital flows, where talent moves, and who the world wants to do business with. As Reibstein frames it, a strong national brand helps attract foreign direct investment and top talent — the same way a strong corporate brand lets a company command a premium.
The 2026 edition scores 85 nations on 73 attributes, grouped into ten themes, from a survey of roughly 15,131 respondents across 33 markets. Those 85 countries account for around 93% of global GDP. Australia comes out near the very top.
Overall, of 85 nations
Adventure and Agility
Cultural Influence
Figures above are Australia’s factor positions as reported in the 2026 Index. We cite individual data points; the full country profile and all rankings sit with the original publishers.
A top-five global brand is a tailwind most Australian mid-market businesses never put on the balance sheet — yet it shapes their world. It means an offshore customer, investor, or hire arrives with a positive prior about “made in Australia,” about Australian governance, and about the reliability of an Australian counterparty. That prior is worth money. It lowers the cost of trust in a first conversation.
But the Index also exposes an imbalance worth understanding. Australia scores strongly on Agility and Adventure — perceptions of dynamism, responsiveness, and openness — while sitting much lower on Cultural Influence and Power. For a mid-market leader, the read-through is that Australia’s brand opens doors on trust and ease of doing business rather than on scale or dominance. That should shape how you position when you go offshore.
Borrow the national brand when you expand. If you are entering a new market or courting offshore investment, Australia’s perceived agility and trustworthiness is an asset you can lean on explicitly in your positioning — most businesses leave it unstated.
Perception is a managed asset, not a fixed one. The Index notes the UAE climbing from #17 to #10 after deliberate investment in its brand. The same logic scales down: how your business, sector, or region is perceived can be shaped on purpose — and it moves real economic outcomes.
Mind the gap between brand and substance. A strong perception ranking is only valuable if the experience matches it. For leaders, the discipline is making sure the operational reality a customer or investor encounters lives up to the national brand they arrived expecting.
Perception studies like this one are easy to skim as trivia — a league table of nations. We think that misses the point. The underlying idea, that brand is a measurable economic input, is exactly the lens mid-market leaders should apply one level down: to their own business, sector, and region. The question isn’t “where does Australia rank?” It’s “what is our reputation worth, where is it strong, and what are we doing on purpose to build it?”
That is a strategy conversation, not a marketing one — and it’s the kind of evidence-based, outside-in thinking we bring to client work.
This is ReedKnapp’s independent commentary on a third-party study. The Best Countries Index 2026 is the work of WPP, the BAV brand-analytics tool, and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania; all rankings, data, and country profiles belong to those publishers. We have cited selected figures with attribution and link to the original so you can explore the full findings at the source. Individual data points are drawn from the 2026 Index as published.
We can turn outside-in signals like brand, market perception, and investor confidence into practical strategic choices.
Where does reputation already create trust?
Where does perception lag capability?
What proof points would change the conversation?
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