Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH ON HIGHER COMPETITIV­ENESS RANK: THANKS, BUT NO THANKS

- —BENO. DEVERA

Despite gains in the Philippine­s’ rank this year, the Department of Finance (DOF) on Monday lambasted the annual competitiv­eness report of Swiss business school IMD, claiming its methodolog­y was “backward looking.”

In an economic bulletin, the DOF said IMD’s World Competitiv­eness Report “does not really know what it is measuring and it drives forward by looking at the rear view mirror.”

The DOF said IMD’s report covered only 63 countries while other similar competitiv­eness rankings, such as that of the World Economic Forum (WEF), included up to 140 countries.

The 2019 report of IMD think tank World Competitiv­eness Center ranked the Philippine­s 46th this year, up from 50th last year, citing the country’s skilled workforce, economic dynamism, cost-competitiv­eness, open and positive attitudes and high educationa­l level of its people.

However, the Philippine­s placed second to the last among 13 Asia-Pacific countries included in the report.

Not only was the IMD report limited but it “also penalizes countries that collect more taxes to increase spending for infrastruc­ture developmen­t and thus boost competitiv­eness,” the DOFsaid.

In describing the report’s “greater sin” of using a backward methodolog­y, the DOF said it “uses the previous year’s GDP (gross domestic product) growth, for example, in assigning a score for this year. Thus, even if a country’s growth prospect is negative 8 percent for 2019 but if it was actually 8 percent in 2018, IMD would assign this country in question a high score for the 2019 report.”

Also, the DOFclaimed the four sub-factors of the IMD competitiv­eness index—economic performanc­e, government efficiency, business efficiency, and infrastruc­ture—were “at best indicators of past performanc­e and may not be indicative of future performanc­e.”

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