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Switzerland tops US in competitiveness

Posted Sep 08 2009, 06:09 AM by Douglas McIntyre
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Image credit: Halsteadk, GNU free documentation license The World Economic Forum says that the United States is no longer the world’s most competitive economy. Switzerland has taken that role. The culprits behind the U.S. position are its weakened financial markets and what the organization calls worsening macroeconomic stability. As part of the project, more than 13,000 business leaders were polled in 133 economies.

Rounding out the top 10 nations in global competitiveness in the report were Singapore, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Japan, Canada, and the Netherlands.

The analysis has a number of weaknesses. The report defines competitiveness as the "institutions, policies, and factors that determine the level of productivity of a country.”

That, in turn, is based on twelve factors: 1) the effectiveness of institutions, 2) infrastructure, 3) macroeconomic stability, 4) health and primary education, 5) higher education and training, 6) goods market efficiency, 7) labor market efficiency,  financial market sophistication, 9) technical readiness, 10) market size, 11) business sophistication, and 12) innovation.

The weakness of this analysis is that a number of the factors contradict one another. Switzerland has advantages in education and market sophistiation because of its market size. The U.S. cannot be measured by the same standard because it has more than 300 million people. China cannot be measured on the standard because of its 1.4 billion people. The labor market in China may be efficient due to low cost workers, but it may not be able to use that to make up the productivity of a highly educated workforce in a highly developed country like Japan.

A list of the reasons that comparing global competitiveness across over 100 nations cannot be fairly benchmarked based on the World Economic Forum’s broad measurements could go own for hundreds of pages. The most reasonable argument is that, over so may nations, there are too many apples-to-oranges match-ups.

Top Stocks blogger Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

Image credit: Halsteadk, GNU free documentation license

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Comments

 

Wunderbar! Smaller also means more flexible. It takes a while for a giant to start running after a pretty nasty fall.

Damn straight Carl ...

we sukk america. consume and play, consume and play.

I have lived in Europe for years and I dont agree with this article. Certainly, the US is not perfect but comparing with Europe we are extremely competitive. Europe is dead with the exception of UK and Germany. All in all, Europe is another world comparing with the US. Without any doubt, we are way beyond Europe and the US is extremely competitve.Economics is not a fiction tale in the US. US plays hard. Europe is Disneyland.

I agree not because I am Swiss but look at the infrastructure, I live in Houston. Potholes all over, power poles  in the city, a real eyesore. In Switzerland this is all underground, yes they pay more but they like to look their place look neat. No corrugated roofs allowed because they look cheap and I could go on.  Yes, our rich  are richer but our poor are also a lot poorer.

This article means nothing & is just garbage. Just more scare tactics to make you think things are worse than they really are.

Before you get excited, realize that the U S economy has grown twice as fast as Switzerland's over the last 20 years, and Switzerland has a very low tax rate.

Also, don't even think of trying to emigrate there.

SO WHAT!!!  What should matter is what kind of life working class people have.  Are labor laws strong enough?  Are workers free to unionize?  Are workers free to strike?  Is the standard for working people good?  Is there economic security for working people?  Do people have good health care?  Can people EASILY get health coverage?  Do retired people have economic security?  Are poor people helped, or are they hated?  Is our nation economically and industrially self-sufficient?

Those should be the things that matter.

We are blessed with almost everything we need as far as natural resorces go.  We don't need Europe or Japan.  They need us.

I agree that comparing the economy of the U.S. to countries like Sweden, Denmark, and the Netherlands is a bit like comparing a Tonka truck to a Mac or a Peterbuilt.  But there is also the consideration that these countries aren't saddled with anchors like NAFTA and CAFTA.  I do believe that Canada participated in that debacle but they appear to have actually benefitted from it since many of the outsourced American jobs went to Canada.  My stove and refrigerator were assembled in canada as was my pickup truck.  The same can be said for Mexico, South America, and Central America.

If I were to try and "buy American" today I would have to live in a cave, walk around naked throwing rocks at potential game until I could accumulate enough hides to make a garment to cover my privates, and bathe in and drink from the nearest polluted stream.  Low dollar/high volume industries are all but gone in the U.S. and the next targets are our ramaining big industry.  Future headlines might say "Aerobus In Hostile Takeover of Boeing" and "Korean Firm LG Makes Bid for GE."  Make no mistake America is 'For Sale' and in this difficult economy many large corporations may very well consider cutting their losses and sell out.  To some extent it has already started with Chrysler going to the Italians and parts of the former GM being shopped all over Europe and the Far East.

We could try and blame this on our governmental leaders but they got sold the same bill of goods that most of us did out of simple naive te' and ignorance of economic principles.  Someone convinced them that it would be good for business and our economy.  Well it has been a boon for some of the businesses because they have now moved off shore where labor is cheap, environmental restrictions are minimal, and local government leaders can be bought.  As for our economy I don't think that requires much comment LOL.  No, we can only blame ourselves for not heeding the warnings and insisting on blindly voting along party lines knowing full well where it would lead.  

They are saying that the USA is going to have more bank failures in 2010 than we have ever had in USA's history. I guess we'll see if it happens or not.

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