US tops economic competitiveness ranking

Geneva, October 31:

The United States has regained its status as the world’s most competitive economy thanks to strong innovation and excellent universities, according to a survey released today by the World Economic Forum.

The US rebounded from sixth place last year to knock Switzerland from the top spot in the ‘global competitiveness index’. The Swiss were second this year, followed by Denmark, Sweden, Germany and Finland.

The study by the Geneva-based Forum said the US was boosted by its close cooperation between universities and business on research and development, high intellectual property protection, as well as efficient use of employees and investment. But increasing public indebtedness in the US threatens to hamper the country’s growth, it said.

“This danger has most recently been demonstrated by the fallout and contagion caused by country’s subpri-me mortgage crisis and ensuing global credit crunch,” said Xavier Sala-i-Martin, a professor of economics at Columbia University and one of the authors of survey.

Sala-i-Martin said the weaknesses ‘present a risk to the country’s overall competitiveness potential and to the global economy as a whole’. Switzerland was credited with an excellent capacity for innovation, a sophisticated business culture, outstanding scientific research institutions and strong intellectual property protection.

Denmark and Sweden were ranked third and fourth respectively, followed by Germany and Finland.

The Nordic countries — traditionally strong in the survey — were praised for their budget surpluses and very low levels of public indebtedness. Germany’s good performance is largely due to its high-quality infrastructure and the efficiency of its goods and financial markets, according to the survey. The same positive elements also boosted Britain, which came in ninth.

More than 11,000 business leaders in 131 countries took part in the survey which ranked Singapore seventh, followed by Japan, Britain and the Netherlands.

China and India, two emerging economies, were in the middle of the 131-nation list. China has improved to 34th from 54th last year.

India’s 48th place ranking was mainly attributed to the high availability of scientists and engineers and good quality of scientific research institutions in an economy with a large market size.

At the bottom of the list were countries primarily in sub-Saharan Africa, such as Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Burundi and Chad.