In just two-minutes, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern rattled off some of her party's biggest achievements to date.

She spoke about her "key headline achievements" since being voted in two years ago in a quick-fire video shared online.

Ardern, sitting at her desk, spoke about how her government created 92,000 jobs, banned semi-automatic and assault rifles, built more than 2200 state houses, introduced the zero carbon bill, deployed over 1600 new police officers, and banned single-use plastic bags.

She also spoke about the 140 million trees that were planted, the free lunches in schools programme, and increased wages for police, nurses and teachers.

Twitter/Screenshot In just two-minutes, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern rattled off some of her party's biggest achievements to date.

The short clip swept around the world with people in Australia, Pakistan, Zimbabwe talking about it.

READ MORE:

* Winston Peters: Superannuation leak 'malicious',

* New Zealand announces upgrade to China trade deal

* What is the East Asia Summit and why is Jacinda Ardern there?

* Making history and the news

* The impact and true value of journalism

Haqeeqat TV, a news outlet from Pakistan shared the clip on Twitter and pointed out how the prime minister didn't keep it under 2-minutes.

"It took her two minutes and fifty seconds but its [sic] simply brilliant," it wrote.

Pakistani fashion designer Asim Jofa used the video to call out the country's governing political party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf.

"I'm waiting for your two minutes video," he wrote online.

Zimbabwean politician Nelson Chamisa shared the clip, along with the comment: "This is leadership!"

Australian journalist Jamila Rizvi also used social media to bring the video to the attention of Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

"Hey [Scott Morrison] how good is [Jacinda Ardern]."

Former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark also commented on the clip.

"At a time when protesters in many countries are demanding that their governments address inequality and sustainability, the progress in NZ is refreshing," she wrote on Twitter.