The document discusses the Global Competitiveness Index, which measures national competitiveness based on 12 pillars. It provides details on each pillar, including what it captures and why it is important. The pillars include institutions, infrastructure, health, education, market efficiency, financial system development, market size, business dynamism, and others. Maintaining competitiveness across these pillars helps countries sustain growth, income levels, and resilience against economic shocks.
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views25 pages
Ba 220
The document discusses the Global Competitiveness Index, which measures national competitiveness based on 12 pillars. It provides details on each pillar, including what it captures and why it is important. The pillars include institutions, infrastructure, health, education, market efficiency, financial system development, market size, business dynamism, and others. Maintaining competitiveness across these pillars helps countries sustain growth, income levels, and resilience against economic shocks.
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 25
Evaluation of Global
Operations GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS INDEX AS A MEASURE OF COUNTRY PERFORMANCE THE 12 PILLARS OF COMPETITIVENESS Competitiveness -the set of institutions, policies, and factors that determine the level of productivity of a country.
The concept of competitiveness thus involves static and dynamic
components. Although the productivity of a country determines its ability to sustain a high level of income, it is also one of the central determinants of its return on investment, which is one of the key factors explaining an economy’s growth potential. GLOBAL TRENDS AND IMPLICATION • All economies must invest in broader measures of competitiveness today to sustain growth and income in the future. The results demonstrate a strong correlation between competitiveness and income level. • Enhancing the fundamentals of competitiveness today will improve resilience to shocks. Building economic resilience through competitiveness is more important than ever in today’s volatile context, with a wide range of vulnerabilities, technological change, geopolitical tensions and potential flash points around the world. GLOBAL TRENDS AND IMPLICATION • While openness is good for growth governments must support those who lose out to globalization. At a time of escalating trade tensions and backlash against globalization, the report reveals the importance of openness for competitiveness: more open economies are more innovative and their markets more competitive. • Technology-based leapfrogging remains elusive. The promise of leveraging technology for economic leapfrogging remains largely unfulfilled. There are, at most, 4.5 billion smartphones in use in the world and more than half of humanity has never gone online. While the promise of ICTs for productivity is high—and although ICTs can clearly be catalysts for other drivers of productivity, such as innovation and business dynamism—it would be misguided to rely on technology alone to solve all problems, in education, health, governance or transport infrastructure, for example. GLOBAL TRENDS AND IMPLICATION • Agility and future-readiness are key in a changing world. Amidst the transformations and disruptions brought about by the 4IR, adaptability and agility of all stakeholders—individuals, governments and businesses—will be key features in successful economies. • Weak institutions continue to hamper competitiveness. Weak institutions—defined as including security, property rights, social capital, checks and balances, transparency and ethics, public-sector performance and corporate governance—continue to hinder competitiveness, development and well-being in many countries. GLOBAL TRENDS AND IMPLICATION • A formula for innovation remains obscure for most economies. Once the preserve of the most advanced economies, innovation has become an imperative for all advanced economies and a priority for a growing number of emerging countries. • The financial system continues to be a source of weakness in some economies. Building on the learning from the global financial crisis, this composite indicator captures the sturdiness of the banking sector, using measures such as the soundness of banks, nonperforming loans, the difference between the credit supply and its trend, and banks’ regulatory capital ratio. GLOBAL TRENDS AND IMPLICATION • Achieving equality, sustainability and growth together is possible but needs proactive, far-sighted leadership. There is a worldwide consensus on the need for a more holistic model of economic progress that promotes higher living standards for all, respects planetary boundaries, and does not disadvantage future generations. The Global Competitiveness Index 4.0 2018 Rankings • Covering 140 economies, the Global Competitiveness Index 4.0 measures national competitiveness—defined as the set of institutions, policies and factors that determine the level of productivity. THE GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS INDEX Pillar 1: Institutions What does it capture? Security, property rights, social capital, checks and balances, transparency and ethics, public-sector performance and corporate governance. Why does it matter? By establishing constraints, both legal (laws and enforcement mechanisms) and informal (norms of behaviors), institutions determine the context in which individuals organize themselves and their economic activity. Institutions impact productivity, mainly through providing incentives and reducing uncertainties Pillar 2: Infrastructure What does it capture? The quality and extension of transport infrastructure (road, rail, water and air) and utility infrastructure. Why does it matter? Better-connected geographic areas have generally been more prosperous. Well-developed infrastructure lowers transportation and transaction costs, and facilitates the movement of goods and people and the transfer of information within a country and across borders. It also ensures access to power and water—both necessary conditions for modern economic activity. Pillar 3: ICT adoption What does it capture? The degree of diffusion of specific information and communication technologies (ICTs). Why does it matter? ICTs reduce transaction costs and speed up information and idea exchange, improving efficiency and sparking innovation. As ICTs are general purpose technologies increasingly embedded in the structure of the economy, they are becoming as necessary as power and transport infrastructure for all economies. Pillar 4: Macroeconomic stability What does it capture? The level of inflation and the sustainability of fiscal policy. Why does it matter? Moderate and predictable inflation and sustainable public budgets reduce uncertainties, set returns expectations for investments and increase business confidence—all of which boost productivity. Also, in an increasingly interconnected world where capital can move quickly, loss of confidence in macroeconomic stability can trigger capital flight, with destabilizing economic effects. Pillar 5: Health What does it capture? Health-adjusted life expectancy (HALE)—the average number of years a newborn can expect to live in good health. Why does it matter? Healthier individuals have more physical and mental capabilities, are more productive and creative, and tend to invest more in education as life expectancy increases. Healthier children develop into adults with stronger cognitive abilities. Pillar 6: Skills What does it capture? The general level of skills of the workforce and the quantity and quality of education. While the concept of educational quality is constantly evolving, important quality factors today include: developing digital literacy, interpersonal skills, and the ability to think critically and creatively. Why does it matter? Education embeds skills and competencies in the labour force. Highlyeducated populations are more productive because they possess greater collective ability to perform tasks and transfer knowledge quickly, and create new knowledge and applications. Pillar 7: Product market What does it capture? The extent to which a country provides an even playing field for companies to participate in its markets. It is measured in terms of extent of market power, openness to foreign firms and the degree of market distortions. Why does it matter? Competition supports productivity gains by incentivizing companies to innovate; update their products, services and organization; and supply the best possible products at the fairest price. Pillar 8: Labour market What does it capture? It encompasses “flexibility”, namely, the extent to which human resources can be reorganized and “talent management”, namely, the extent to which human resources are leveraged. Why does it matter? Well-functioning labour markets foster productivity by matching workers with the most suitable jobs for their skillset and developing talent to reach their full potential. By combining flexibility with protection of workers’ basic rights, well-functioning labour markets allow countries to be more resilient to shocks and re- allocate production to emerging segments; incentivize workers to take risks; attract and retain talent; and motivate workers. Pillar 9: Financial system What does it capture? The depth, namely the availability of credit, equity, debt, insurance and other financial products, and the stability, namely, the mitigation of excessive risk-taking and opportunistic behavior of the financial system. Why does it matter? A developed financial sector fosters productivity in mainly three ways: pooling savings into productive investments; improving the allocation of capital to the most promising investments through monitoring borrowers, reducing information asymmetries; and providing an efficient payment system. At the same time, appropriate regulation of financial institutions is needed to avoid financial crises that may cause long-lasting negative effects on investments and productivity. Pillar 10: Market size What does it capture? The size of the domestic and foreign markets to which a country’s firms have access. It is proxied by the sum of the value of consumption, investment and exports. Why does it matter? Larger markets lift productivity through economies of scale: the unit cost of production tends to decrease with the amount of output produced. Large markets also incentivize innovation. As ideas are non-rival, more potential users means greater potential returns on a new idea. Moreover, large markets create positive externalities as accumulation of human capital and transmission of knowledge increase the returns to scale embedded in the creation of technology or knowledge. Pillar 11: Business dynamism What does it capture? The private sector’s capacity to generate and adopt new technologies and new ways to organize work, through a culture that embraces change, risk, new business models, and administrative rules that allow firms to enter and exit the market easily. Why does it matter? An agile and dynamic private sector increases productivity by taking business risks, testing new ideas and creating innovative products and services. In an environment characterized by frequent disruption and redefinition of businesses and sectors, successful economic systems are resilient to technological shocks and are able to constantly re-invent themselves. Pillar 12: Innovation capability What does it capture? The quantity and quality of formal research and development; the extent to which a country’s environment encourages collaboration, connectivity, creativity, diversity and confrontation across different visions and angles; and the capacity to turn ideas into new goods and services. Why does it matter? Countries that can generate greater knowledge accumulation and that offer better collaborative or interdisciplinary opportunities tend to have more capacity to generate innovative ideas and new business models, which are widely considered the engines of economic growth. SUMMARY OF COMPETITIVENESS - PHILIPPINES THANK YOU!