Singapore rebounds to third spot in global competitiveness ranking
SINGAPORE — Singapore has climbed two spots to become the world’s third-most competitive economy, after falling from first to fifth place last year.
Denmark and Switzerland ranked ahead of Singapore in the Institute for Management Development (IMD) World Competitiveness Ranking, which released its latest list on Wednesday (June 15).
IMD is based in Switzerland and Singapore.
Singapore, which held the top spot in 2019 and 2020, is the top Asia-Pacific economy this year, followed by Hong Kong, Taiwan, and China, which took the fifth, seventh and 17th spot globally.
IMD said Singapore’s recovery stemmed from huge improvements in the domestic economy, where it leapt from 15th position to first place, employment jumped from 18th to third, public finance from 12th to sixth, and productivity and efficiency climbed from 14th to ninth.
Article continues after this advertisementThe Republic bagged the top spot in both international trade and technological infrastructure, and second place for business legislation.
Article continues after this advertisementBut Singapore came in 14th for management practices, 16th for scientific infrastructure, and 25th for health and environment.
“Indicators based on executives’ sentiment also highlight concerns with respect to hybrid work models and the overall attractiveness of the city-state to foreign highly skilled professionals,” said IMD.
“If these concerns materialise, they might hinder Singapore’s capacity to attract overseas talent in the following years, potentially curbing its long-term competitiveness.”
IMD said the rankings this year show how differing Covid-19 policies have helped or hindered economic recovery from the pandemic.
Mr Christos Cabolis, chief economist at IMD’s World Competitiveness Centre – which produces the ranking – said global challenges affecting the competitiveness of countries include Covid-19 variants and the number of infected people around the world; differing national policies to address the pandemic ranging from the zero-tolerance to living with the virus; as well as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
“Inflationary pressure is affecting most economies,” said Mr Cabolis.
“It is clear that inflationary pressure is now amplifying the already problematic supply-chain bottlenecks throughout the world,” he added.
The IMD World Competitiveness Ranking this year ranked 63 economies, by measuring economic well-being through statistical data and survey responses from executives.
IMD said Russia and Ukraine were not included this year due to the limited reliability of the data collected.
Bahrain entered the ranking for the first time, coming in at 30th.
IMD also cautioned against focusing on short-term pressures, instead of long-term ones such as sustainability.
It said business executives now perceive inflationary pressures, geopolitical conflicts and supply chain bottlenecks to be impacting their businesses more than regulation on greenhouse emissions and socio-economic disparities.
“This short-term issue prioritisation may lead to the neglect of long-term trends, such as those related to environmental sustainability, which could have a severe global impact,” said Mr José Caballero, senior economist at IMD.
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