The Borneo Post

Malaysia climbs two spots in rankings

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia climbed two spots to rank 23rd out of 137 countries in the Global Competitiv­eness Report 20172018 (GCR) compared to last year where it was placed 25th out of 138 countries. competitiv­eness.

The 12 pillars: Institutio­ns, Infrastruc­ture, Macroecono­mic Environmen­t, Health and Primary Education, Higher Education and Training, Goods Market Efficiency, Labour Market Efficiency, Financial Market Developmen­t, Technologi­cal Readiness, Market Size, Business Sophistica­tion and Innovation.

“Malaysia performed most strongly in financial market developmen­t, followed by health and primary education, infrastruc­ture and macroecono­mic environmen­t,” he said.

Minister of Internatio­nal Trade and Industry, Datuk Seri Mustapa Mohamad, welcomed the improvemen­ts in this year’s GCR, saying that the latest ranking affirmed the strength made by the country’s macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls and that the economic policies were on the right track.

“Our exports are doing well and we continue to receive healthy inflows of direct foreign investment­s,” he said.

He said the country would continue to adopt strong economic policies while hoping to do well in the ranking with continuous improvemen­ts in soft and hard infrastruc­tures.

“The country’s competitiv­eness can only be improved if there is a coordinate­d action by the government, private sector and civil society.

Mustapa said the WEF also highlighte­d that continuous benchmarki­ng and monitoring were needed to ensure that public-private collaborat­ions would result in more forward-looking

Among emerging economy in East Asia and Pacific region, Malaysia maintains its position as the most competitiv­e in the transition stage from efficiency-driven to innovation­driven.

policies for the benefit of everyone.

“In this connection, the government has establishe­d a task force chaired by the Chief Secretary to the government comprising representa­tives from several ministries, agencies and the private sector to monitor our economic performanc­e based on global competitiv­eness index to come up with better policy proposal,” he said.

“While the improvemen­t should be welcomed, we must not get too overwhelme­d and lose sight of future challenges.

“The landscape is rapidly changing and thus we must ramp up our efforts in fostering greater publicpriv­ate collaborat­ions and being on the forefront of future trends including the Industry 4.0,” he said. — Bernama

Datuk Mohd Razali Hussien, MPC director-general

 ??  ?? Datuk Mohd Razali Hussien said the better ranking was due to improvemen­ts in the scores in 10 of the indicators in the 12 pillars which measured both macro and micro economic aspects of competitiv­eness. — Reuters photo
Datuk Mohd Razali Hussien said the better ranking was due to improvemen­ts in the scores in 10 of the indicators in the 12 pillars which measured both macro and micro economic aspects of competitiv­eness. — Reuters photo
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