Here is a source that ranks Economic freedom. Here are the top seven - all ranked "Free":
The United States is in the next group of 27, considered to be "mostly free".
Then comes Moderately Free, Mostly Unfree, and Repressed. Therein we will probably find your favorites -- Cuba, Venezuela, and North Korea?
https://www.heritage.org/index/ranking/
Singapore has its share of socialism:
The sovereign wealth fund Temasek Holdings holds majority stakes in several of the nation's largest bellwether companies, such as Singapore Airlines, SingTel, ST Engineering and MediaCorp. Temasek Holdings (Private) Limited, or simply
Temasek, is a Singaporean state holding company owned by the Government of Singapore.
The Singapore government owns two investment companies, GIC Private Limited and Temasek Holdings, which manage Singapore's reserves. Both operate as commercial investment holding companies independently of the Singapore government, but Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and his wife Ho Ching serve as chairman and CEO of these corporations respectively.
In May 2022, six major banks agreed to pay $64.5 million to resolve antitrust allegations that they worked together to rig benchmark Singapore interest rates. The banks involved included Credit Suisse AG, Deutsche Bank AG, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited, ING Bank N.V., Citibank N.A. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Both media ownership and content are carefully regulated by the Government. Given how
government-linked companies appear to exercise a near monopoly over the mainstream media in Singapore, the view has been taken that the mainstream media take a predominantly pro-PAP stance in their reporting and suppress or disregard the viewpoints of opposition parties.
They have elections in Singapore, but often they are uncontested, meaning there's only one candidate.