Nine parameters, 125 countries and in the global race for competitiveness, India is ranked 43, up two points over the previous year. In its Global Competitiveness Report 2006-2007, released by World Economic Forum yesterday, India tops among BRIC countries — Brazil is ranked 66, Russian Federation 62 and China 54. India is also ahead of all its geographical neighbours — Sri Lanka’s 79, Pakistan’s 91, Bangladesh’s 99, Nepal’s 110.
Standing right at the top, rising three ranks is Switzerland. The other big rise has come from Sweden, which rose from 7 to 3. The biggest fall in the top 10 has come in the United States, which fell from being the most competitive economy last year to No. 6 this year.
At the bottom of the list are Angola, Burundi, Chad, Timor-Leste and Mozambique.
The global competitiveness index (GCI) “provides a holistic overview of factors that are critical to driving productivity and competitiveness”. It is these nine factors (See table) that finally are put together and based on which countries are ranked.
India scores well on innovation factors (rank 26) - with “business sophistication” and “innovation” being ranked 25 and 26 respectively. The best in this category is Japan, followed by Switzerland, Germany, the US and Sweden. China, at 57, is way down.
What has pulled down India’s score is its “basic requirements.” At 60, it is far below China’s 44 or the US’s 27. Within this, India’s worst scores come, predictably, in the areas of “health and primary education” (rank 93) and macroeconomy (88).
... contd.