The Australian passport is now among the top five most powerful [based on visa-free access to countries], according to the latest rankings, which also show a Southeast Asian nation has retained its top spot. Here’s how our little blue book fared.

    • zero_gravitas
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      5 months ago

      Yeah, that is very silly. The usual convention when you have a tie for a ranking is to skip the appropriate number of rankings afterwards. Probably deliberate so that more countries’ media picks up the story because their country has a high ranking.

      Also, hats off to Henley & Partners for somehow convincing the media that a very straightforward ranking needs to be a brand-named ‘index’. They don’t even compile the data! They just take it from IATA.

      Full rankings and more info here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henley_Passport_Index

  • Affidavit
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    5 months ago

    Honestly, this is pretty impressive IMO. Particularly since visa-free travel is not reciprocal. The below is just plain wrong; Australia is even less open than it appears:

    Ranked 83rd out of 99, Australia is one of the least open nations. Citizens of just 34 countries can visit Australia without prior visa authorisation

    Barring some niche cases (e.g. royal family, military/crew, transiting, Torres Strait Islanders), only one country’s citizens can travel to Australia without prior visa authorisation; New Zealand (and even they can be refused clearance at the border). Every other foreign country needs to apply for and be granted a visa before they are permitted to board the plane. Australia has somehow managed to convince 33 countries that their ETAs and eVisitor visas are not really visas. They just happen to be permission that a person needs to obtain before they are allowed to enter a country… If only we had a word for that.

    I’m honestly surprised how well the Australian passport performs considering Australia effectively has a universal visa requirement. That being said, it’s also one of the most expensive passports in the world.

    • Dave.
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      5 months ago

      I’m honestly surprised how well the Australian passport performs considering Australia effectively has a universal visa requirement.

      Look at it from another country’s immigration perspective:

      • G20 country
      • Modern public health system
      • Stable democracy/part of Commonwealth
      • Generally high per-capita earnings and education
      • Generally plays nice/aligned with local nations
      • Generally plays nice on the world stage

      Ticks a lot of boxes, as in, we’d likely not cause any issues, we’ve got plenty of cash for our stay, and we’ll go home once our visit is over.