India up 16 places in WEF global competitiveness ranking

30 Sep 2015

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The World Economic Forum's (WEF) global competitiveness survey shows a big jump in India's ranking, indicating that the government's efforts to open up the economy to foreign investors are gaining acceptance.

India has jumped 16 places in the WEF global competitiveness ranking to 55 from 71 last year.

India now ranks 55 among 140 countries against 71 out of 144 last year.

While this is an improvement over last year's ranking, it is lower than India's rank in 2010 (49 of 133), 2009 (50 of 134), 2008 (48 of 131), and 2007 (43 of 125).

In its Global Competitiveness Report 2015-16, WEF said this dramatic reversal is largely attributable to the momentum initiated by the election of Narendra Modi, ''whose pro-business, pro-growth, and anti-corruption stance has improved the business community's sentiment toward the government''.

After taking charge in May last year, the National Democratic Alliance government launched a drive to improve the country's business environment, unveiling several campaigns (such as Make in India, to boost manufacturing; Skill India, to equip Indians with vocational skills), announcing swifter approvals for businesses; and moving towards a transparent and stable tax regime.

It is also working on making it easy to do business in India and has said it will improve India's ranking in the World Bank's Ease of Doing Business rankings to under 50 in five years.

India dropped two places to rank 142 among 189 nations in the World Bank's Ease of Doing Business 2015 study. The next study will be released in October. India expects its ranks to go up several notches.

The first place in the GCI rankings, for the seventh consecutive year, goes to Switzerland with its strong performance in all 12 pillars of the index despite the global financial crisis and subsequent shocks.

Singapore remains in second place and the United States third. Germany improves by one place to fourth and the Netherlands returns to the fifth place it held three years ago. Japan (sixth) and Hong Kong SAR (seventh) follow, both stable. Finland falls to eighth place – its lowest position ever – followed by Sweden (ninth). The United Kingdom rounds up the top 10 of the most competitive economies in the world.

In Europe, Spain, Italy, Portugal and France have made significant strides in bolstering competitiveness. Thanks to reform packages aimed at improving the functioning of markets, Spain (33rd) and Italy (43rd) climb two and six places respectively. Similar improvements in the product and labour market in France (22nd) and Portugal (38th) are outweighed by a weakening performance in other areas.

Greece stays in 81st place this year, based on data collected prior to the bailout in June. Access to finance remains a common threat to all economies and is the region's greatest impediment to unlocking investment.

Among the larger emerging markets, the trend is for the most part one of decline or stagnation. However, there are bright spots: India ends five years of decline with a spectacular 16-place jump to 55th. South Africa re-enters the top 50, progressing seven places to 49th.

Elsewhere, macroeconomic instability and loss of trust in public institutions drag down Turkey (51st), as well as Brazil (75th), which posts one of the largest falls.

China, holding steady at 28, remains by far the most competitive of this group of economies. However, its lack of progress moving up the ranking shows the challenges it faces in transitioning its economy.

Among emerging and developing Asian economies, the competitiveness trends are mostly positive, despite the many challenges and profound intra-regional disparities.

While China and most of the South-East Asian countries performing well, the South Asian countries and Mongolia (104th) continue to lag behind.

The five largest members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) – Malaysia (18th, up two), Thailand (32nd, down one), Indonesia (37th, down three), the Philippines (47th, up five) and Vietnam (56th, up 12) – all rank in the top half of the overall GCI rankings.

The end of the commodity super cycle has strongly affected Latin America and the Caribbean, and is already having repercussions on growth in the region.

Greater resilience against future economic shocks will require further reform and investment in infrastructure, skills and innovation. Chile (35th) continues to lead the regional rankings and is closely followed by Panama (50th) and Costa Rica (52nd). Two large economies in the region, Colombia and Mexico, improve to 61th and 57th, respectively.

It's a mixed picture in the Middle East and North Africa. Qatar (14th) leads the region, ahead of the United Arab Emirates (17th), although it remains more at risk than its neighbour to continued low energy prices, as its economy is less diversified.

These strong performances contrast starkly with countries in North Africa, where the highest placed country is Morocco (72nd), and the Levant, which is led by Jordan (64th).

With geopolitical conflict and terrorism threatening to take an even bigger toll, countries in the region must focus on reforming the business environment and strengthening the private sector.

Sub-Saharan Africa continues to grow close to 5 per cent, but competitiveness and productivity remain low.

This is something countries in the region will have to work on, especially as they face volatile commodity prices, closer scrutiny from international investors and population growth.

Mauritius remains the region's most competitive economy (46th), closely followed by South Africa (49th) and Rwanda (58th). Côte d'Ivoire (91st) and Ethiopia (109th) excel as this year's largest improvers in the region overall.

''The fourth industrial revolution is facilitating the rise of completely new industries and economic models and the rapid decline of others. To remain competitive in this new economic landscape will require greater emphasis than ever before on key drivers of productivity, such as talent and innovation,'' said Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum.

''The new normal of slow productivity growth poses a grave threat to the global economy and seriously impacts the world's ability to tackle key challenges such as unemployment and income inequality. The best way to address this is for leaders to prioritize reform and investment in areas such as innovation and labour markets; this will free up entrepreneurial talent and allow human capital to flourish,'' said Xavier Sala-i-Martin, Professor of Economics at Columbia University.

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