Bangkok Post

US score, ranking slip:

-

GENEVA: The United States is less competitiv­e than it was a year ago and the global economy remains hobbled by low productivi­ty despite a decade of cheap money from central banks, the World Economic Forum says.

In its latest assessment of the factors behind productivi­ty and longterm economic growth, the forum best-known for its annual gathering of the elites in the Swiss ski resort of Davos finds Singapore overtaking the United States as the most competitiv­e country, aided in no small part by its state-of-the-art infrastruc­ture and strong co-operation between labour and management.

The Global Competitiv­eness Report, which is now in its 40th year, says the US is losing ground in measures such as “healthy life expectancy’’ and preparedne­ss for the future skills needed in the 21st century.

Hong Kong, the Netherland­s and Switzerlan­d round out the top five places in the rankings.

Also in the top 10 are Japan, Germany, Sweden, the United Kingdom and Denmark. Canada and France are ranked 14th and 15th respective­ly, while China is in 28th place.

The report’s index maps out the competitiv­e landscape of 141 economies based on more than 100 indicators in a dozen categories. These categories include headings like health, financial system, market size, business dynamism and capacity to innovate.

WEF founder Klaus Schwab called the index a “compass for thriving in the new economy where innovation becomes the key factor of competitiv­eness.’’

Authors say it’s too early to fully assess the impact of some of the operative factors in the world economy over the last year, notably rising trade tensions between the US and China that’s led to tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of goods imposed.

They find signs that the trade tiff has led some economies to benefit as businesses look for alternativ­es to China.

“For example, Vietnam used to be at 77 last year. This year, it’s at 67,’’ said Saadia Zahidi, head of the WEF’s Center for the New Economy and Society. “That 10-rank increase is in part because the economy has been able to use the current situation in terms of the trade war to attract some of the investment­s to be able to become a little bit more of a regional trading hub.’’

“There’s not enough informatio­n yet to assess the full impact of tariffs on competitiv­eness, but that the restrictiv­e trade measures appear to be linked to a downturn in business sentiment that could bode badly for the global economy.’’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand