Paul R. Gregory's writings on Russia, the world economy, and other matters that he finds of interest.
Showing posts with label World Economic Forum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Economic Forum. Show all posts
Thursday, October 18, 2018
World Economic Forum confirms the US is great again under Trump
The No. 1 ranking of the United States as the world’s most competitive economy by the world’s elite shows that those who value productivity, innovation and growth may be coming around to Trump, despite his inflammatory tweets and rhetoric. Have they decided that what counts is results and not persona?
go to The Hill
Labels:
America#1,
Davos,
Trump,
World Economic Forum
Friday, September 7, 2012
New York Times Downplays U.S. Decline
In my World Economists Confirm America's Decline Under Obama, I stressed the headline that the World Economic forum’s Global Competitiveness Index lowered the United States’ world ranking from first to fifth during the first three years of Obama’s term.
Unbeknownst to me, the World Economic Forum published its 2012 ranking the next day. With the U.S. election just two months off, the true headline should have been: “U.S. Decline Continues as We Fall from First to Seventh Under Obama.”
The New York Times ignored this headline by emphasizing the growing competitiveness gap within Europe. In its Competitiveness Gap Widening in Europe, the venerable Times gives one brief mention to the further collapse of U.S. competitiveness hidden in the middle of the article:
“Switzerland,
which is not a part of the European Union, takes top place in the global table,
with Singapore second, the United States
occupying 7th position — down two places from last year — and Canada at
14th. China,
in 29th place, is rated the most competitive among large emerging markets.”
And the Managing
Editor of the Times denies any form of media bias in her newspaper.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
World Economists Confirm America’s Decline under Obama
U.S. voters are being barraged by claims and counter claims of
how many jobs were lost or created under the Obama administration, did the
Detroit bailout hurt or help, and whether Obama or Republican stonewalling are to blame for the feeble
recovery. This partisan din kicks up a huge cloud of dust as self-appointed “independent
fact checkers” and “nonpartisan” think tanks contradict each other. Large
numbers of economists, some prominent and others less so, line up on both sides.
Pity the harried undecided voters in search of non-partisan information.
American voters could
well look above our political fray to the World
Economic Forum’s Global
Competitiveness Index (GCI). Every
year starting in 2004, the GCI ranks the world economies by their “competitiveness,”
defined as “the set of institutions,
policies, and factors that determine the level of productivity of a country,”
which, in turn, determines “the level of prosperity that can be earned by an
economy.”
Throughout most of its short history, the
GCI ranked the United States
first or second. At times, Switzerland,
Finland, Singapore, Denmark,
and Finland have given the U.S. a
run for its money.
The GCI, to its credit, addresses what should be the
core issue of any political debate in any country: How well have country
leaders managed the economic and political institutions that create prosperity
and growth? Obama should be re-elected or “let go” depending on how American
voters evaluate his stewardship of America’s political and economic institutions.
The World Economic Forum’s motto is: “Committed
to Improving the State of the World.” Its annual winter meeting in Davos, Switzerland attracts the world’s jet-setting political,
business, and intellectual glitterati as they discuss issues de jure -- the world
economy, health and HIV, climate change, and globalization. Presidents, prime ministers,
central bankers, queens and parliamentary/congressional notables rub shoulders
with Bill Gates, Russian oligarchs, Henry Kissinger, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Al
Gore, and Kofi Annan.
Barack Obama fits
the intellectual, cosmopolitan, and global profile of the World Economic Forum
to a T. A GCI conclusion that U.S.
political and economic institutions deteriorated under Obama’s stewardship could
not be spun as partisan by Obama’s spin masters.
go to forbes.com
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