Arab Times

Kuwait up in global competitiv­eness

Arab ‘fifth’

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KUWAIT CITY, Oct 9, (Agencies): Kuwait Direct Investment Promotion Authority (KDIPA) announced Wednesday that Kuwait has advanced by eight places to reach the 46th rank out of 141 countries in the Global Competitiv­eness Index (GCI) 2019 based on the report issued by World Economic Forum (WEF).

Kuwait also ranked fifth most competitiv­e Arab economy according to the report.

According to a KDIPA press release, as compared to its 54th rank in GCI 2018 out of 140 countries. Kuwait also increased its distance to frontier score by 3 points to reach 65.1 in GCI 2019 up from 62.1 in GCI 2018.

Kuwait maintained its top rank in the macroecono­mic stability pillar, in the first place, said KIDPA.

It added that Kuwait notably improved its rank in the health pillar (12th rank out of 141 countries in GCI 2019 up from 38th rank out of 140 countries in GCI 2018), in the financial system pillar (34th rank up from 48th rank), and in ICT adoption pillar (37th rank up from 62nd rank).

Out of the 103 components under the 12 GCI pillars in 2019 report, Kuwait witnessed improvemen­t in 45 components, whereas 14 components remained stable, and the report showed no comparable date for seven components that were introduced in this report, with no available date for two components.

Overall, Kuwait improved or stabilized in 9 out of 12 pillars of GCI 2019 that included macroecono­mic stability, health, ICT adoption, skills, product market, labor market, financial system, business dynamism, market size.

KDIPA reiterated that the improvemen­t in Kuwait position in the GCI 2019 coincided with similar improvemen­t in the Ease of Doing Business Index DB2020.

Kuwait joined, for the first time, the top 20 improvers out of 190 countries according to the initial announceme­nt made earlier by the World Bank Group, awaiting publicatio­n of the full report before end of this month.

This progress has been attained with the leadership guidance and foresight of His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah and His Highness the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber AlSabah, said the press release.

The press release also commended the commitment of His Highness the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak AlHamad Al-Sabah to improve Kuwait position in internatio­nal indices, making it at the top priority of the government work program.

The efforts were carried out with full collaborat­ion among the competent government entities, the private sector, and the civil society, to improve business climate and enhance the competitiv­eness of the national economy in accordance with the National Vision 2035 and its developmen­tal goals.

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 said Wednesday.

In its latest assessment of the factors behind productivi­ty and long-term economic growth, the organizati­on best-known for its annual gathering of the elites in the Swiss ski resort of Davos found Singapore overtaking the United States as the most competitiv­e country, aided in no small part by its state-of-the-art infrastruc­ture and strong

cooperatio­n between labor and management.

The Global Competitiv­eness Report, which is now in its 40th year, said 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 rounded out the top five places in the rankings.

The report’s index maps out the competitiv­e landscape of 141 economies based on more than 100 indicators in a dozen categories.

Those categories include headings like health, financial system, market size, business dynamism and capacity to innovate.

The US did remain “an innovation powerhouse” and the world’s most competitiv­e large economy, and despite the prospects of a future skills gap, the US still ranks highly for “ease of finding skilled employees” today.

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 found 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.”

Zahidi said 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.

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