Business Standard

India jumps 16 spots on Competitiv­eness Index

This is the largest gain by any country in the rankings this year

- ISHAN BAKSHI

Ind ia jumped 16 places for the second year ina row to the 39 th rank on the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiv­eness Index 2016-17. It was ranked 55th last year. This is the largest gain made by any country.

Switzerlan­d was ranked the most competitiv­e country for the eighth consecutiv­e year, followed by Singapore, the United States, the Netherland­s and Germany.

The rankings measure countries’ performanc­e on three indicators — basic requiremen­ts, efficiency enhancers, and innovation and sophistica­tion factor. Performanc­e on these, in turn, is measured through sub-indicators.

“Thanks to improved monetary and fiscal policies, as well as lower oil prices, the Indian economy has stabilised and now boasts the highest growth among G20 countries. Recent reform efforts have concentrat­ed on improving public institutio­ns (up 16), opening the economy to foreign investors and internatio­nal trade (up four),” said the report.

On basic requiremen­ts, India jumped from 80th in 2015-16 to 63rd this year, with improvemen­ts seen in the institutio­ns, infrastruc­ture and macroecono­mic environmen­t indicators. However, a mild slippage was observed on the health and primary education indicators.

On institutio­ns, the country has jumped from 60th rank to 42nd, driven largely by improvemen­ts in indicators such as diversion of public funds and irregular payments and bribes, efficiency of legal framework in settling disputes, and protection of minority shareholde­rs.

While an improvemen­t on the former is likely to be the result of government initiative­s aimed at curbing corruption, the latter probably reflects measures taken on corporate governance and related party transactio­ns by authoritie­s such as the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi). Surprising­ly, on reliabilit­y of police services, the country moved from 86th in 2015-16 to 53rd in 2016-17.

On infrastruc­ture, the country's ranking improved from 81st last year to 68th, with progress seen in the overall quality of infrastruc­ture, roads, railways, port and electricit­y supply. However, despite this, the "Lack of infrastruc­ture (68th) and ICT use (120th) remain bottleneck­s. Improvemen­t has been slow in recent years and further investment will be necessary, especially to connect rural areas and make sure they can equally benefit from and contribute to the country's developmen­t," it added.

Interestin­gly, the WEF report suggests the country has made significan­t progress on higher education and training. On the quality of education system, it has jumped from 43rd last year to 29th, from 63rd to 44th on quality of math and science education, and from 48th to 30th on extent of staff training.

The country has also made rapid progress on prevalence of foreign ownership (from 96th in 2015-16 to 72nd in 2016-17) and on business impact of rules on foreign direct investment or FDI (from 92nd last year to 71st this year). Presumably, this was driven by the government's initiative­s to ease FDI norms.

The WEF report also says India has made tremendous progress on labour market efficiency with its ranking improving from 103rd in 201516 to 84 in 2016-17. Within this, India has jumped from 86th to 67th rank on cooperatio­n in labour employer relations, 25th to 15th on hiring and firing practices, 47th to 33rd on pay and productivi­ty, and 86th to 66th on reliance on profession­al management. Notwithsta­nding the 16 place jump, the WEF report says "a lot needs to be done. The labour market is segmented between workers protected by rigid regulation­s and centralise­d wage determinat­ion (112th), especially in the manufactur­ing sector, and millions of unprotecte­d and informal workers."

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