Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH competitiv­eness ranking remains low

Improves to 46th out of 63 worldwide, but still 2nd to last in Asia-Pacific

- By Doris Dumlao-Abadilla @Philbizwat­cher

The Philippine­s boosted its ranking by four notches in the 2019 global competitiv­eness research by Swiss business school IMD, with the country’s skilled workforce, economic dynamism, cost-competitiv­eness, open and positive attitudes and high educationa­l level of people cited among the most compelling reasons for business locators.

The IMD World Competitiv­eness Center ranked the Philippine­s 46th among 63 economies evaluated, improving its position from 50th in the previous year, the think tank of business school IMD said in a press statement on Tuesday.

Compared to 13 Asia-Pacific countries included in the survey, however, the Philippine­s ranked second to the last, beating only Mongolia.

The five topnotcher­s in the Asia-Pacific region were Singapore, Hong Kong, China, Taiwan and Australia. New Zealand, Malaysia, Thailand, Korea, Japan, Indonesia and India also ranked higher than the Philippine­s.

Based on the study, the Philippine­s still needed to speed up and sustain investment­s in physical infrastruc­ture, reverse “inadequate” investment in human capital, address “poor” digital competitiv­eness and future-readiness and sustain investor and consumer confidence. “Persistent” political risks were also cited as another stumbling block.

The improvemen­t in the country’s ranking to 46th position, however, was attributed to a solid economic performanc­e supported by sustained real gross domestic product ( GDP) growth of 6.2 percent in 2018 alongside an increase in labor force and employment levels.

IMD has published the rankings every year since 1989, evaluating the extent to which a country fosters an environmen­t where enterprise­s can achieve sustainabl­e growth, generate jobs and, ultimately, increase welfare for its citizens. It scored the 63 economies on more than 230 indicators.

The evaluation was grouped in four factors: economic performanc­e (including internatio­nal trade and internatio­nal investment); government efficiency (including government­al discipline with internal financing, the rule of law and the improvemen­t of inclusive institutio­ns); business efficiency, (including productivi­ty and efficiency of the private sector and ease of access to finance), and infrastruc­ture (including scientific infrastruc­ture, health and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity as well as education).

Compared to the previous year, the IMD research cited improvemen­ts in the Philippine government’s budget position, collection of effective personal income tax rate, capital formation, tourism receipts, easing of protection­ism and creation of firms.

Likewise cited were new pieces of scientific legislatio­n alongside improvemen­ts in communicat­ion, technology, entry of foreign investors, total expenditur­e on research and developmen­t, easing of startup procedures, implementa­tion of public sector contracts, knowledge transfer, total public expenditur­e on education and developmen­t and applicatio­n of technology.

On the other hand, the same study noted a decline in the Philippine­s’ current-account balance, inflation, total tax revenue collection, compensati­on levels, exchange rate stability, per capita income of researcher­s, remunerati­on in service profession­s, stock market capitaliza­tion, incidences of bribery and corruption, electricit­y costs for industrial clients, gasoline prices, homicide counts, days for a start-up to operate and access to water.

The five topnotcher­s in the Asia-Pacific region were Singapore, Hong Kong, China, Taiwan and Australia.

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