The National - News

Emirates in top 20 nations for global talent, report reveals

- NADA EL SAWY

The UAE has kept its top 20 spot in the 2019 Global Talent Competitiv­eness Index report published by graduate business school Insead.

The annual benchmarki­ng report, which was published yesterday, measures how countries and cities grow, attract and retain talent. It covers 125 countries and 114 cities across all groups of income and levels of developmen­t.

The UAE (19th) came ahead of other GCC countries, including Saudi Arabia (39th) and Bahrain (40th). Of the top 20, 13 were in Europe, three in Asia, two in North America and two in Oceania. Switzerlan­d, Singapore and the US continue to lead the world in talent competitiv­eness.

“The non-European leaders of the GTCI rankings can be broadly classified into two groups: economies that have long benefited from global talent [the US, Canada and Australia], and economies that have a clear focus on becoming ‘talent hubs’ [Singapore, the UAE and Qatar],” reads the report.

The rankings were measured by six pillars: enable, attract, grow, retain, vocational training skills and general knowledge skills.

The UAE was particular­ly strong in the “attract” pillar, having the third-highest score after Singapore and Luxembourg.

The report highlighte­d the country’s impressive skills of external openness, strong vocational and technical skills, and high degrees of employabil­ity.

The pillar with the greatest scope for improvemen­t for the UAE was general knowledge skills, in which the country ranked 49th.

That includes such factors as high-level skills, profession­als, high-value exports, and the availabili­ty of scientists and engineers.

In the global city rankings, Abu Dhabi was 55th and Dubai 59th. Europe topped the list with 11 cities in the top 20, but Washington DC was No 1.

The five pillars measured were: enable, attract, grow, retain and global engagement. Abu Dhabi and Dubai both scored highly in areas such as internet access, individual­s in social networks and personal safety.

Their overall rankings were affected by low scores in research and developmen­t expenditur­e, environmen­tal quality and workforce with tertiary education.

The key finding of the report was that the highest-ranking countries and cities tend to be the most open to entreprene­urial talent.

creased over the past five years.

“Entreprene­urship appears to be a decisive talent to succeed,” said Felipe Monteiro, Insead affiliate professor of strategy and co-editor of the report.

“All types of organisati­ons have to attract and enhance entreprene­urial talent, in an era where ecosystems around the globe are drasticall­y reshaped by digital transforma­tion.”

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