The Borneo Post

Malaysia rises two spots on world competitiv­eness list

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia moved up two notches to 22nd place in the latest IMD World Competitiv­eness Rankings published by the Institute for Management Developmen­t (IMD) World Competitiv­eness Centre.

“Malaysia is the only economy (in Southeast Asia) to register an improvemen­t of two positions, driven by a strong rebound in economic performanc­e, especially in internatio­nal trade,” the Switzerlan­d-based research group said in a statement yesterday.

The top five most competitiv­e economies in the world remain the same as in 2017, but their order changed.

The United States returned to the number one spot from fourth place in the preceding year, driven mainly by its strength in economic performanc­e and infrastruc­ture. It was followed by Hong Kong, Singapore, the Netherland­s and Switzerlan­d.

Malaysia is the only economy (in Southeast Asia) to register an improvemen­t of two positions, driven by a strong rebound in economic performanc­e, especially in internatio­nal trade. Switzerlan­d-based research group

Singapore – which was unchanged at third place, globally, retained its lead among economies in Southeast Asia, aided by its strong government efficiency.

However, the country “continues to be weakened by the high levels of private debt in the economy and the high price level, especially in real estate, which reduces quality of life and talent attraction,” IMD said.

Besides Malaysia, Japan (ranked 25th), South Korea (27th), and India (44th) saw slight improvemen­ts.

Asian countries that dropped a few rungs are Taiwan (17th), Thailand (30th) and Indonesia (43rd).

The Philippine­s experience­d the most significan­t decline in the region, shifting nine places to 50th due to a decline in tourism and employment, the worsening of public finances and a surge in concerns over the education system, among others.

“Countries from the region that experience declines this year, with the exception of Taiwan, all show signs of a need to improve their tangible and scientific infrastruc­ture,” said IMD.

The IMD World Competitiv­eness Center has been publishing the annual rankings since 1989.

This year, it benchmarke­d the performanc­e of 63 economies based on more than 340 criteria measuring different facets of competitiv­eness. — Bernama

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