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What Are World Leaders Getting Paid?

What Are World Leaders Getting Paid?

World leaders frequently rub shoulders with the rich and famous, but does that mean they themselves can be counted among this category of people? Data taken from the website PoliticalSalaries.com shows that it depends. Among current world leaders is one income millionaire: Lawrence Wong, the prime minister of Singapore. He brings in an annual salary of the equivalent of almost $1.69 million, which makes him the best-earning world leader. His remuneration places him far ahead of second-ranked Viola Amherd, president of Switzerland, who earns upwards of a converted $570,000 per year.

Year is indeed singular for Amherd, who started her term on January 1 and will end it on December 31. Swiss presidents are members of the country’s government cabinet voted in by the Swiss parliament for one year at a time. The cabinet consists of seven council members who can be re-elected, so it is possible that Amherd will serve another well-paid term as Swiss president in the future.

Many of the remainder of the world’s best-paid political leaders hail from Anglophone countries, including the American president, who earns $400,000 annually. As of August 29 currency conversion rates, this was less that what Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is making, but more than what the Prime Ministers of New Zealand and Canada, Christopher Luxon and Justin Trudeau, are bringing in per year. German-speaking countries also pay their leaders well, with Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer making slightly more than his German equivalent, Olaf Scholz.

Including leaders of non-sovereign entities, Hong Kong is applying a similar approach to Singapore’s, paying its current Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu the equivalent of almost $700,000 annually. While Singapore’s founding father Lee Kuan Yew was a proponent of competitive public sector pay, Hong Kong’s high remuneration has been tied to its history of high pay for colonial governors. Another leader that doesn’t helm a country, but is still handsomely rewarded is Ursula van der Leyen, the president of the European Commission. She is bringing in one of the European Union’s highest salary of approximately $358,000 per year. Similar wages are paid to other high-ranking EU administrators like the President of the European Parliament, the President of the European Council and the President of the Court of Justice of the European Union.

Relatively Well Paid

Taking a different approach to determining the highest-paid world leaders on a level relative to their countries’ economic prowess, Kenyan President William Rutto is the biggest earner, bringing in the equivalent of almost 2,000% of his country’s per-capita GDP in 2023. On the basis of 2023 average exchange rates, Rutto made the equivalent of $126,000 last year. This is in stark contrast to Kenya’s GDP per capita of just $6,300 annually. The Presidents of Tanzania and South Africa, Samia Suluhu Hassan and Cyril Ramaphosa, also crack the 1,000% mark, while aforementioned Singaporian Prime Minister Lawrence Wong and his $1.7 million salary stand at 1,158% of the per-capita GDP of the city state of $141,500.

Viola Amherd of Switzerland, Anthony Albanese of Australia and Christopher Luxon of New Zealand also reappear among the world leaders with the highest relative salaries, while U.S. President Joe Biden comes in rank 9 at a salary standing at 490% of per-capita GDP in 2023.

World leaders among the lowest paid include the Sri Lankan President, whose latest known annual salary came out to a converted $3,900 in 2023 or just 25% of GDP per capita. With the depreciation of the Sri Lankan rupee opposite the U.S. dollar over the past years, the presidential salary also fell. Some world currencies experience heavy swings and can therefore influence this ranking. The Nigerian president’s salary equaled just around $2,200 in August 2024 while it was the equivalent of 95% of the per-capita GDP of $6,300 in 2023 still. Other countries reportedly staying under 100% for this metric are Vietnam and Pakistan. Argentina’s famously low presidential salary was meanwhile changed by the country’s new administration under Javier Milei.

Charted by Statista