2013世界竞争力:美国第一 中国成赢家

GRAND KING

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新华网日内瓦5月30日电(记者刘美辰 吴陈)
http://news.xinhuanet.com/world/2013-05/30/c_115976649.htm

  瑞士国际管理发展研究院30日公布的《2013年世界竞争力报告》显示,美国位列第一,瑞士紧随其后,中国香港名列第三。中国内地则凭借迅速上升的位次,成为最大“赢家”。

  报告对全球60个经济体进行分析排名。报告显示,得益于金融业复苏、技术创新和成功的企业,美国从去年的第二位升至今年榜首;瑞士也上升一个位次,名列第二,位居欧洲国家之首;中国香港从去年的第一位降至第三位。此外,位居第21位的中国内地和位居第24位的日本竞争力不断增强,较去年分别上升 2个和3个位次。

  此外,国际管理发展研究院世界竞争力中心还列出了世界竞争力报告自1997年诞生以来的“赢家”和“输家”。根据相关定义,1997年以来排名上升5位及以上的经济体为“赢家”,排名下降5位及以上者为“输家”。根据这一定义,中国内地位居“赢家”之首。

  报告认为,在欧元区经济持续低迷背景下,瑞士、位居第四位的瑞典和位居第九位的德国得益于出口制造业、多样化经济、强有力的中小型企业和严格的财政纪律,在欧洲地区成为最具竞争力的三个国家,欧洲其他经济体却深受紧缩政策的掣肘。

  国际管理发展研究院世界竞争力中心主任斯特凡·加雷利表示,欧元区经济低迷,美国和日本经济表现较好,再次引发有关紧缩政策的争论。尽管结构性改革不可避免,经济增长仍是竞争力的前提。

  报告说,金砖国家表现不一,新兴经济体总体上仍高度依赖全球经济复苏。不过,加雷利认为,金砖国家仍充满机遇。

  加雷利表示,竞争力的黄金法则为,制造业、多样化、出口、基建投资、教育、支持中小企业、强化财政纪律以及最重要的因素——维持社会凝聚力。
 
IMD releases its 25th Anniversary World Competitiveness Rankings
http://www.imd.org/news/World-Competitiveness-2013.cfm
http://www.imd.org/uupload/imd.website/wcc/scoreboard.pdf
http://www.imd.org/uupload/imd.website/wcc/Perspective1997-2013.pdf

The good performance of the US (1), Switzerland (2), Hong Kong (3), Sweden (4) and even Japan (24) – while the euro zone stagnates – calls austerity into question

May 29, 2013 - IMD, a top-ranked global business school based in Switzerland, today announced its 25th anniversary world competitiveness rankings. In addition to ranking 60 economies for 2013, the IMD World Competitiveness Center also looks at the winners and losers since its creation.

Professor Stéphane Garelli, director of the IMD World Competitiveness Center, said: "While the euro zone remains stalled, the robust comeback of the US to the top of the competitiveness rankings, and better news from Japan, have revived the austerity debate. Structural reforms are unavoidable, but growth remains a prerequisite for competitiveness. In addition, the harshness of austerity measures too often antagonizes the population. In the end, countries need to preserve social cohesion to deliver prosperity."

Highlights of the 2013 ranking

The US has regained the No. 1 spot in 2013, thanks to a rebounding financial sector, an abundance of technological innovation and successful companies.

China (21) and Japan (24) are also increasing their competitiveness. In the case of Japan, Abenomics seems to be having an initial impact on the dynamism of the economy.

In Europe, the most competitive nations include Switzerland (2), Sweden (4) and Germany (9), whose success relies upon export-oriented manufacturing, diversified economies, strong small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and fiscal discipline. Like last year, the rest of Europe is heavily constrained by austerity programs that are delaying recovery and calling into question the timeliness of the measures proposed.

The BRICS economies have enjoyed mixed fortunes. China (21) and Russia (42) rose in the rankings, while India (40), Brazil (51) and South Africa (53) all fell. Emerging economies in general remain highly dependent on the global economic recovery, which seems to be delayed.

In Latin America, Mexico (32) has seen a small revival in its competitiveness that now needs to be confirmed over time and by the continuous implementation of structural reforms.

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A 25th anniversary perspective on World Competitiveness

In 1989, the IMD World Competitiveness Yearbook had a split ranking. The most competitive advanced economies were Japan, Switzerland and the Netherlands. Among emerging markets, Singapore, Hong Kong and Malaysia led the way. Globalization had not yet kicked in. China, Russia and several other nations (some of which did not exist back then) were not included.

By 1997, the world of competitiveness had become increasingly global, and IMD first produced a unified ranking including both advanced and emerging economies. Here are the countries that have risen and fallen the most since then:

Winners since 1997 (+ 5 or more ranks):China, Germany, Israel, Korea, Mexico, Poland, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan

Losers since 1997 (- 5 or more ranks):Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Finland, France, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Philippines, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, United Kingdom and Venezuela.

Winners:
- The US, Singapore and Canada, although not in the "winners" list, have very stable and enduring competitiveness models that rely on long-term advantages such as technology, education and advanced infrastructure.

- In Europe, Switzerland, Sweden and Germany share the same recipe for success: exports, manufacturing, diversification, competitive SMEs and budget discipline.

- In Asia, China's success has had a pull effect on the region's competitiveness, prompting many Asian economies to redirect their exports from the US and Europe to other emerging markets. - Mexico and Poland are seeing a revival in competitiveness that will need to be confirmed over time.

Losers:
- Europe has lost ground and accounts for more than half of the "losers" since 1997.

- The UK and France in particular are losing their dominant position and competitive clout, while The Netherlands, Luxembourg and Finland need to adapt their competitiveness models to a changing environment.

- In Southern Europe Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece are all lagging behind. They did not diversify their industry enough or control public spending and are now facing austerity programs.

- The fate of Ireland and Iceland shows that competitiveness needs to be sustainable, and that uncontrolled fast expansion can also lead to disaster.

- Latin America has been disappointing, with larger economies such as Chile, Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela all losing ground and being challenged by the emerging competitiveness of Asian nations.

Professor Garelli added: "Generalizations are, however, misleading. True, Europe's competitiveness is declining, but Switzerland, Sweden, Germany and Norway are shining successes. Latin America is disappointing, but there are great global companies all over that region. Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa are immensely different in their competitiveness strategies and performance, but the BRICS remain lands of opportunities."

"In the end, the golden rules of competitiveness are simple: manufacture, diversify, export, invest in infrastructure, educate, support SMEs, enforce fiscal discipline, and above all maintain social cohesion," concluded Professor Garelli.

The IMD World Competitiveness Center is a part of IMDIMD is a top-ranked business school. We are the experts in developing global leaders through high-impact executive education. Why IMD? We are 100% focused on real-world executive development. We offer Swiss excellence with a global perspective. And we have a flexible, customized and effective approach. Published since 1989, the World Competitiveness Yearbook is recognized as the leading annual report on the competitiveness of nations.
 
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