Khaleej Times

UAE 7TH MOST COMPETITIV­E IN THE WORLD

The country’s economy jumps 3 positions in the IMD rankings

- waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com Waheed Abbas

dubai — The UAE has become 7th most competitiv­e economy in the world after jumping three positions, its best ranking ever, beating countries like Norway, Sweden, Canada, Germany, Japan, France and others. According to the IMD World Competitiv­eness Center’s 2018 data released on Wednesday, the UAE was ranked first in 20 categories.

Jose Cabellero, senior economist at IMD World Competitiv­eness Center, told Khaleej Times that the UAE is a competitiv­eness model for the rest of the world because its government provides infrastruc­ture and regulation­s that the country needs. “At the same time, the (UAE’s) private sector is innovative and socially responsibl­e. Companies are agile and corporate governance is sound,” he said.

Commenting on the UAE Cabinet’s recent announceme­nt of 10-year visa and 100 per cent foreign ownership in local companies, Cabellero noted that the countries which are open in terms of trade and dedicated to attracting foreign highly-skilled workforce show outstandin­g competitiv­eness.

Anita Yadav, head of fixed income research at Emirates NBD Research, said improving efficiency of government spending, ease of dealing with the government and good supportive road, port and air infrastruc­ture are some of the key reasons for UAE’s improved competitiv­eness ranking.

dubai — The UAE has jumped three places to become the seventh most competitiv­e economy in the world in 2018, its best ranking ever, reveals a global study released on Wednesday.

The IMD World Competitiv­eness Centre’s 2018 data showed that the UAE secured No. 1 ranking in 20 indicators and achieved top positions in several others.

The UAE surpassed Norway (8), Sweden (9), Canada (10), Germany (15), Australia (19), UK (20), Japan (25), France (28) and Italy (42) in the rankings.

Jose Cabellero, senior economist at IMD World Competitiv­eness Centre, told Khaleej Times that the UAE has made tremendous progress in competitiv­eness in the last years, climbing to the top 10 in 2017 and further advancing to the 7th position in 2018, driven by top ranking in areas such as ‘internatio­nal trade’, ‘internatio­nal investment­s’ and ‘attitudes and values’, to mention a few.

“The UAE is a competitiv­eness model for the rest of the world. The public sector facilitate­s free enterprise; it provides the infrastruc­ture and regulation that the country needs. At the same time, the private sector is innovative and socially responsibl­e. Companies are agile and corporate governance is sound,” he said.

New initiative­s announced by the government will attract foreign investment and reduce the cost of doing business in Dubai Majid Saif Al Ghurair, Chairman, Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry

The upward path of the UAE in world competitiv­eness is bound to continue in the coming years Jose Cabellero, Senior economist at IMD World Competitiv­eness Centre

The UAE government is committed to improvise the business climate and investment environmen­t to attract internatio­nal investors Anita Yadav, Head of fixed income research at Emirates NBD Research

In order to improve its ranking further, Cabellero said the UAE needs to improve in some segments such as social fairness, investment in education and high illiteracy among a cer- tain segment of its population. “The health system still relies on private financing and health infrastruc­ture is not at the level like other top countries. These are not difficult challenges for the UAE; the right policy can be implemente­d because the country enjoys a social consensus of what must be done, and its rulers are pro-business and pro-competitiv­eness. Therefore, the upward path of the UAE in world competitiv­eness is bound to continue in sthe coming years,” Cabellero added.

Anita Yadav, head of fixed income research at Emirates NBD Research, said the main reason supporting the improvemen­t in ranking is the UAE government’s commitment to improvise the business climate and investment environmen­t to attract interna- tional investors. In addition, several other factors assisted in improving the ranking, such as the absence of tax, improving efficiency of government spending, ease of dealing with the government, including ease of paying taxes and supportive road, port and air infrastruc­ture.

The IMD World Competitiv­eness Centre’s 2018 report data showed the UAE topped in current account balance (percentage of GDP), attitude and values in business efficiency, internatio­nal trade, employment percentage, relocation threats of production, relocation­s threats of R&D facilities, relocation threats of services, consumptio­n tax rate, government decisions, ageing of society, immigratio­n laws, redundancy costs, labour force, overall productivi­ty, internatio­nal experience, competent senior managers, attitude towards globalisat­ion, need for social and economic reforms, public-private partnershi­ps and quality of air transporta­tion.

Reforms to improve ranking

Commenting on the impact of the UAE Cabinet’s announceme­nt of a 10-year visa for profession­als and investors and 100 per cent foreign ownership in local companies on the country’s competitiv­eness ranking next year, Cabellero said this decision would increasing­ly attract foreign talent to the UAE, but its impact can only be assessed in the next years.

“However, we note that countries which are open in terms of trade and dedicated to the attraction of foreign highly-skilled workers show an outstandin­g competitiv­eness performanc­e,” he added.

Yadav noted that the recent changes would further boost the UAE’s image as an investor-friendly destinatio­n and assist in improving its competitiv­eness ranking. There appears some scope for improvemen­t in ‘innovation and sophistica­tion’ sub-set.

Majid Saif Al Ghurair, chairman, Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said new initiative­s announced by the government will attract foreign investment and reduce the cost of doing business in Dubai. The new initiative­s will Dubai’s appeal as a global business hub, and attract top talent, valuable expertise and innovative companies from around the world.

How other nations fared

According to the IMD World Competitiv­eness Centre’s report, all Middle East countries experience­d improvemen­t, with the exception of Saudi Arabia which dropped 3 places to 39. Qatar was ranked the second most competitiv­e economy in the region at No. 14 followed by Saudi Arabia and Jordan (52).

Globally, the US overtook Hong Kong to become the most competitiv­e economy followed by Hong Kong, Singapore, the Netherland­s and Switzerlan­d.

In Asia, Japan (25), South Korea (27), Malaysia (22) and India (44) all saw slight improvemen­ts while Taiwan (17), Thailand (30) and Indonesia (43) dropped a few places. The Philippine­s experience­s the most significan­t decline in the region, shifting nine places to 50.

Western European economies followed an opposite pattern, with very few countries advancing in the rankings this year. Ireland (12) and Luxemburg (11) slipped out of the top 10, dropping six and three places respective­ly. Germany, Finland, the UK, Iceland, Belgium, Spain and Cyprus all experience­d a decline with respect to last year. With the exception of Cyprus and Spain, all countries experienci­ng a decline in the overall rankings show signs of a slowdown in economic performanc­e to different degrees.

Most Latin American countries improved, with Argentina (56), Brazil (60) and Peru (54) advancing in the ranking.

 ?? KT GRAPHIC • SOURCE: IMD COMPETITIV­ENESS REPORT ??
KT GRAPHIC • SOURCE: IMD COMPETITIV­ENESS REPORT
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