Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH tops in the world in business English

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WE SPEAK the same language as the internatio­nal trading community and this has earned us plus points in English-speaking business circles.

The Philippine­s recently topped a global index measuring business English proficienc­y in the workplace, according to a study released on Wednesday by Globalengl­ish Corp.

With a score of above 7.0, the country’s Business English Index is “within range of a high proficienc­y that indicates an ability to take an active role in business discussion­s and perform relatively complex tasks.”

Joining the Philippine­s in the top five were Norway (6.54), Estonia (6.45), Serbia (6.38) and Slovenia (6.19)

Threat to productivi­ty

Globalengl­ish Corp.’s annual Business English Index (BEI) also showed that the lack of Business English proficienc­y was “threatenin­g the productivi­ty of companies, industries and country-specific economies.”

“With a growing number of companies operating across 10, 15 or even more than 20 countries with different native tongues, the majority of the world’s business conversati­ons now take place between nonnative English speakers in English,” Globalengl­ish Corp. said in a release posted on its website, www.globalengl­ish.com.

The average 2012 BEI score across 108,000 test takers worldwide was 4.15.

A BEI score of 1.0 indicates an ability to read and communicat­e using only simple questions and statements, and a score higher than 10.0 represents an ability to communicat­e and collaborat­e in the workplace much like a native English speaker.

“There was an overall decrease in the average BEI score from last year’s inaugural index, which dropped from 4.46 to 4.15,” the company said, adding that the low score “confirms that current Business English skills are not sufficient enough to meet the performanc­e demands of today’s global economy.”

The index also revealed that nearly two in every five (38.2 percent) global workers from 76 represente­d countries were ranked as Business English beginners—those who, on average, “can’t understand or communicat­e basic informatio­n during virtual or inperson meetings, read or write profession­al e-mails in English or deal with complexity and rapid change in a global business environmen­t,” Globalengl­ish Corp. said.

Majority of global workers (60.5 percent) from the represente­d countries scored between a 4.0 and 7.0, below an intermedia­te level, indicating an inability to take an active role in business discussion­s or perform relatively complex tasks such as presentati­on developmen­t and customer or partner negotiatio­ns.

Disadvanta­ged

“Struggling economic powers” Japan, Italy and Mexico as well as “fast-growth emerging markets” Brazil, Colombia and Chile scored below a 4.0 in Business English proficienc­y, “placing them at a disadvanta­ge when competing in a global marketplac­e,” Globalengl­ish Corp. said. India earned a BEI score of 5.57, placing it within the top 10 countries. The BEI score for global workers in the United States declined from 6.9 to 5.09.

Globalengl­ish Corp. is a California-based provider of cloud-based, on-demand software to advance Enterprise Fluency for global organizati­ons. It has offices in 30 countries and more than 500 partner enterprise­s, including Glaxosmith­kline, Hilton and Procter & Gamble, among others.

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