IMD ANNOUNCES ITS 2012 WORLD COMPETITIVENESS RANKINGS

LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND (May 31, 2012) – IMD, a top-ranked global business school based in Switzerland, today announced the findings of its annual World Competitiveness Yearbook (WCY). The WCY rankings measure how well countries manage their economic and human resources to increase their prosperity.

The most competitive of the 59 ranked economies in 2012 are Hong Kong, the US and Switzerland (see overall rankings table). Despite all its setbacks, the US remains at the center of world competitiveness because of its unique economic power, the dynamism of its enterprises and its capacity for innovation.

“US competitiveness has a deep impact on the rest of the world because it is uniquely interacting with every economy, advanced or emerging. No other nation can exercise such a strong “pull effect” on the world. Europe is burdened with austerity and fragmented political leadership and is hardly a credible substitute, while a South-South bloc of emerging markets is still a work in progress. In the end, if the US competes, the world succeeds!” said Professor Stephane Garelli, director of IMD’s World Competitiveness Center.

The most competitive nations in Europe are Switzerland (3), Sweden (5) and Germany (9), which have export-oriented manufacturing and fiscal discipline. Meanwhile, Ireland (20), Iceland (26) and Italy (40) look better equipped to bounce back than Spain (39), Portugal (41) and Greece (58), which continue to scare investors.

Emerging economies are not yet immune to turmoil elsewhere. China (23), India (35) and Brazil (46) have all slipped in the rankings, while Russia (48) climbed only one place. All Asian economies have declined apart from Hong Kong (1), Malaysia (14) and Korea (22). Latin America also had a tough year, with every nation falling except Mexico (37).

Globalization and economic reform under threat

One-third of the 329 ranking criteria come from an exclusive IMD survey of more than 4,200 international executives, which reveals a growing skepticism in some of the 59 economies toward globalization and the need for economic reforms (see charts).

Globalization is still seen as a positive development in Ireland, Scandinavia, Chile, the UAE and many Asian economies. But attitudes are much more negative in Greece, Russia, most of Eastern Europe, a growing part of Latin America, and, last of all, in France.

Attitudes toward reforms are more positive in Ireland, emerging Asia, Qatar and the UAE, Switzerland and Sweden. But the impetus for reform is much weaker in Argentina, the Czech Republic, Spain, and lastly – again – in France, where austerity is seen as a cure worse than the disease.

“The recession has made the world economy more fragmented and diverse than ever, forcing companies to operate several parallel business models,” said Professor Garelli. ”Emerging economies are relying on domestic demand and national champion companies to insulate themselves from economic turmoil, while the “submerging” developed economies are turning to re-industrialization. In both cases, economic nationalism is back and protectionism is tempting.”

THE 2012 WCY OVERALL RANKING
Rank 2012 Rank 2011 Country Score 2012 Rank 2012 Rank 2011 Country Score 2012
1 1 Hong Kong 100.00 31 33 Estonia 66.95
2 1 USA 97.75 32 36 Kazakhstan 66.89
3 5 Switzerland 96.68 33 30 Czech Republic 66.19
4 3 Singapore 95.92 34 34 Poland 64.18
5 4 Sweden 91.39 35 32 India 63.60
6 7 Canada 90.29 36 45 Lithuania 63.42
7 6 Taiwan 89.96 37 38 Mexico 63.18
8 13 Norway 89.67 38 39 Turkey 62.24
9 10 Germany 89.26 39 35 Spain 61.12
10 8 Qatar 88.48 40 42 Italy 60.64
11 14 Netherlands 87.16 41 40 Portugal 60.38
12 11 Luxembourg 86.05 42 37 Indonesia 59.50
13 12 Denmark 84.88 43 41 Philippines 59.27
14 16 Malaysia 84.22 44 43 Peru 58.71
15 9 Australia 83.18 45 47 Hungary 57.34
16 28 UAE 82.49 46 44 Brazil 56.52
17 15 Finland 82.47 47 48 Slovak Republic 55.67
18 20 United Kingdom 80.14 48 49 Russia 55.16
19 17 Israel 78.57 49 53 Jordan 53.23
20 24 Ireland 78.47 50 52 South Africa 53.16
21 18 Austria 77.67 51 51 Slovenia 52.96
22 22 Korea 76.75 52 46 Colombia 51.89
23 19 China Mainland 75.77 53 50 Romania 48.93
24 21 New Zealand 74.88 54 55 Bulgaria 48.45
25 23 Belgium 73.48 55 54 Argentina 48.20
26 31 Iceland 71.54 56 57 Ukraine 46.88
27 26 Japan 71.35 57 58 Croatia 45.30
28 25 Chile 71.28 58 56 Greece 43.05
29 29 France 70.00 59 59 Venezuela 31.45
30 27 Thailand 69.00
NB. The scores are indices (0 to 100) generated for the unique purpose of constructing charts and graphics (access through download link – green=up, red=down, white=unchanged).