The US economy sits atop of the World Economic Forum's annual global
competitiveness survey for the first time since the 2007-2009 financial
crisis, benefiting from a new ranking methodology this year, the
Swiss body said on Tuesday.
In its closely-watched annual Global
Competitiveness Report, the WEF said the US is the country closest to the
"frontier of competitiveness," an indicator that ranks
competitive productivity using a scale from zero to 100.
The US beat off
Singapore, Germany, Switzerland and Japan, the other top four markets, with a
score of 85.6 out of 100, the report said, due to its "vibrant"
entrepreneurial culture and "strong" labor market and financial
system.
The World Economic Forum, the same organization that runs the
Davos meeting of global power brokers each January, bases its rankings of 140
economies on a dozen drivers of competitiveness, including a country's
institutions and the policies that help drive productivity.
This year the
WEF changed its methodology to better account for future readiness for
competition, such as a country's idea generation, entrepreneurial culture,
and the number of businesses that disrupt existing markets.
China ranked overall in 28th place, unchanged from its ranking in 2017.
The last time
the US topped the list was 2008.
The WEF said it was too early to factor in
how the Trump administration's recent trade policies would affect its
ranking.
"While it is too early for the data to filter through in this
year's report, we would expect trade tensions with China and other trading
partners to have a negative impact on the US' competitiveness in the future,
were they to continue," Saadia Zahidi, the managing director at the World
Economic Forum, said in an email.
"Open economies are more
competitive."
Source(s): Reuters