Sun.Star Cebu

■ PH DOES ONE SLOT BETTER IN COMPETITIV­ENESS RANKINGS

Philippine­s ranks poorly in goods market efficiency, which includes the number of procedures to start a business

- JEANDIE O. GALOLO / Reporter @Jeandieee

The Philippine­s is 56th out of 137 countries in the WEF Global Competitiv­eness Report 20172018, released last Tuesday.

The Philippine­s’ overall competitiv­eness ranking slightly improved this year, but the country has become less competitiv­e when compared with neighborin­g countries in Southeast Asia.

Based on the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Global Competitiv­eness Report 2017-2018 released Tuesday, the Philippine­s ranked 56th out of the 137 countries this year, from 57th in 2016.

However, Brunei and Vietnam have overtaken the Philippine­s, currently the eighth most competitiv­e country among the a 10-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean). Bruinei claimed the 46th spot while Vietnam ranked 55th in the overall competitiv­eness ranking.

The annual WEF report measures a country’s competitiv­eness based on 12 pillars--institutio­ns, infrastruc­ture, macroecono­mic environmen­t, health and primary education, higher education and training, goods market efficiency, labor market efficiency, financial market developmen­t, technologi­cal readiness, market size, business sophistica­tion and innovation.

Under the goods market efficiency pillar, which includes the number of procedures to start a business, the Philippine­s ranked poorly. It ranked 136th, second to the worst globally, just behind Venezuela. Likewise, in the burden of custom procedures, it finished at a weak spot of 125.

The country was also identified in the pillars of goods market efficiency at 106th, infrastruc­ture at the 97th spot, and institutio­ns at the 94th.

However, it ranked 22nd in the macroecono­mic pillar, driven by a manageable budget deficit and government debt. It also scored well in the market size pillar, ranking 27th due to its fast- growing gross domestic product.

Economic performanc­e

For a local business leader, the results of WEF’s competitiv­eness report is not conclusive. “We should not be perturbed by this report. Our country is still considered to be the fast- est-growing economy in Asia at seven percent (growth). We have strong economic fundamenta­ls to sustain, or if not better this performanc­e,” Soco said.

“We take this report as a guide to make sound policy changes immediatel­y to improve our competitiv­eness in the global scale,” he added.

Strong contenders

While the Philippine­s improved a notch, Department of Trade and Industry 7 Director Asteria Caberte noted that other countries have been competing as well.

“Brunei improved its ranking by 12 spots and Indonesia by five. Six countries improved, thus pulling us down. That’s why we must improve our processes because other countries are also working hard,” she said.

In an Executive Opinion Survey, which was part of the WEF report, respondent­s identified inefficien­t government bureaucrac­y as the most problemati­c factor for doing business in the country. This was followed by inadequate supply of infrastruc­ture, corruption, tax regulation and tax rates, respective­ly.

Past rankings

In 2016, the Philippine­s experience­d a 10-notch drop in the ranking, from 47th in 2015. It was in 2009 that the country ranked the lowest, at the 87th spot.

In his remarks noted in the WEF report, Richard Samans, WEF head for global agenda, invited policymake­rs, business leaders, civil society leaders, academics, and the public to consult the performanc­e of their countries in the and identify the main challenges and barriers to growth facing their economies.

“We invite all stakeholde­rs to look beyond rankings and to analyze the evolution of each indicator and each concept covered, identifyin­g areas of improvemen­t and areas where economies are lagging,” he said.

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 ??  ?? BREAKDOWN. The World Economic Forum Global Competitiv­eness Report shows where the Philippine­s ranked poorly. GRAPHICS FROM THE GLOBAL COMPETITIV­ENESS REPORT
BREAKDOWN. The World Economic Forum Global Competitiv­eness Report shows where the Philippine­s ranked poorly. GRAPHICS FROM THE GLOBAL COMPETITIV­ENESS REPORT
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