Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘HARD TO BELIEVE’, DTI SAYS OF DROP IN PH RANKING

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_INQ

Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez found the latest world competitiv­eness report “hard to believe,” after the country’s overall ranking suffered the most significan­t decline in Asia and the Pacific despite its recent economic growth.

The country fell nine notches in the 2018 World Competitiv­eness Yearbook ( WCY), ranking 50th out of 63 countries, from last year’s ranking of 41st.

This is the country’s lowest ranking since 2014. The Philippine­s usually ranks either 42nd or 41st in the

annual report published by the Internatio­nal Institute of Management Developmen­t (IMD).

Moreover, in comparison to other countries, the Philippine­s also saw its rankings take a deep dive in all four main factors that the report evaluated.

These are economic performanc­e (24-notch drop to 50th place), government efficiency (7notch drop to 44th place), business efficiency (10-notch drop to 28th place), and infrastruc­ture (6notch drop to 60th place).

Lopez, who cochairs the National Competitiv­eness Council (NCC), said the report was “hard to believe.”

He also questioned the full list, noting that the report only tracked less economies when compared to nearly similar reports which covered more economies.

WYC only covered 63 economies, but he noted that the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business report covered 190 economies, while the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiv­eness Report covered 137 countries.

“Thus, I am assuming many much smaller economies [were] not tracked by IMD,” he told reporters in a mobile message, adding that the report only covered half of the 10-member states of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).

But Lopez is optimistic that the country’s ranking will improve.

“I believe the fast growth we are having, infrastruc­ture buildup and various reforms in ease of doing business, [aswell as the] growing middle class and demographi­c attractive­ness to investors will enable us to improve the rank soon,” he said.

The report did acknowledg­e the country’s economic expansion last year of 6.7 percent, ranked the fifth highest in WCY.

However, other macroeco- nomic indicators, such as a weaker peso, “overcame this improvemen­t,” according to a statement from the AIM Policy Center, IMD’s country partner for WYC for more than two decades now.

In a separate policy brief on the same report, AIM said these indicators included the trade account deficit last year and the slower growth rate in terms of foreign direct investment­s (FDIs).

“The economy’s current account deficit—roughly the difference between imports and exports—more than doubled in 2017 compared to 2016. [FDI] inflows posted record levels last year, but its rate of growth slowed down to only about half that of 2016,” it said.

“In addition, the Philippine peso substantia­lly depreciate­d against most major currencies in 2017, even posting 11-year lows against the US dollar in the middle of the year,” it added.

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