U.S. Economy Most Competitive
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The United States, boosted by its emergence from recession, has replaced long-dominant Japan as the world’s most competitive economy, according to an international study released today.
Singapore comes a close second in a league table covering 41 developed and major developing countries. Japan, wracked by political and economic woes, was pushed into third place, the annual World Competitiveness Report says.
The report, widely used as a key guide for business and investment, was prepared by analysts at the Lausanne Institute for Management Development and published with the Geneva-based World Economic Forum.
The IMD defines international competitiveness as “the ability of a country to proportionally generate more wealth than its competitors in world markets.” It compiles its tables from hard statistics and evaluations by business leaders.
About 16,500 executives around the world were surveyed for their views on key factors affecting each country’s competitiveness, from government policies to business infrastructure to management and work force quality.
The report says the U.S. outlook is clouded by relatively low educational standards and poor work force attitudes, as well as the volatility of the dollar.
The rankings:
1. United States
2. Singapore
3. Japan
4. Hong Kong
5. Germany
6. Switzerland
7. Denmark
8. Netherlands
9. New Zealand
10. Sweden
11. Norway
12. Austria
13. France
14. Britain
15. Australia
16. Canada
17. Malaysia
18. Taiwan
19. Ireland
20. Finland
21. Belgium and Luxembourg
22. Chile
23. Thailand
24. South Korea
25. Spain
26. Mexico
27. Argentina
28. Portugal
29. Turkey
30. Colombia
31. Indonesia
32. Italy
33. Philippines
34. India
35. South Africa
36. Czech Republic
37. Greece
38. Brazil
39. Hungary
40. Venezuela
41. Poland
Source: Reuters
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