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, holds the position of an undisputed leader in global currency rankings. Following the Kuwaiti Dinar are:
Bahraini Dinar (BHD), Omani Rial (OMR), and Jordanian Dinar (JOD) represent the Middle East as the epicenter of high-value currencies. The British Pound (GBP) from the United Kingdom appears in the top five, followed by European giants: Swiss Franc (CHF), Euro (EUR), and US Dollar (USD).
The complete ranking also includes: Cayman Islands Dollars (KYD), Gibraltar Pound (GIP), Bahamian Dollars (BSD), Bermudian (BMD), and Canadian Dollars (CAD), as well as Singapore Dollar (SGD) and Brunei Dollar (BND). These currencies represent the strongest global economies and the largest financial centers, but their economic strength does not always translate into international mobility for their citizens.
Concerning Contrast: The Most Powerful Passports Belong to Other Countries
The ranking of the most powerful passports reveals a surprising truth: countries with the most expensive currencies do not necessarily offer their citizens the greatest freedom to travel. This is a measure of the ability to visit visa-free or with a visa issued at the border, also called eTA.
The top spots are occupied by: Singapore, South Korea, and Japan, offering access to over 190 destinations without visa restrictions. In the second group are European giants: Germany, Spain, Italy, France, Sweden, Netherlands, Finland, Austria, Denmark, the United Kingdom, Luxembourg, Belgium, Switzerland, and Norway.
The third group includes: Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Malta, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States. The fourth group comprises: Hungary, Poland, Czechia, Iceland, Slovakia, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, Slovenia, and Malaysia.
Leaders Without Borders: When Mobility Surpasses Currency
Poland, with the most powerful passport, ranks higher in international mobility than in currency strength. This shows that the economic power of a currency does not define citizens’ ability to move freely across borders. Countries like Singapore combine both currency strength (Singapore dollar at the top) and extraordinary passport mobility. Other European countries achieve excellent results in passport rankings despite their currencies not being among the top twelve most expensive.
This divergence between the most expensive currency and the most powerful passport illustrates the complexity of the global financial and political system, where a country’s economic wealth does not always equate to the international mobility of its citizens.