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Outlook> 2004 > June Oz
moving upAUSTRALIA has
jumped three places to become the fourth most competitive
economy in the world according to the latest IMD world
competitiveness rankings.
The United States was again rated the most competitive
economy in the world, followed by Singapore.
Australia came in fourth behind Canada, which also jumped
three places, according to the report. It is produced
annually by the independent, not-for-profit research
foundation IMD, based in Switzerland.
The most recent improvement masks serious economic
challenges still outstanding, David Edwards, chief
executive of the Committee for the Economic Development
of Australia, said yesterday.
"The 2004 (result) reveals that the international
orientation of the Australian economy is relatively weak
particularly in the area of hitech exports," Mr
Edwards said.
Good scores for government and business efficiency, along
with an unusually fast rate of growth compared to other
developed economies, helped offset those factors in the
ranking calculations.
"Australia is showing impressive resilience and has
sustained growth over 3 per cent during five of the past
six years," IMD found.
But high mobile phone charges, a relatively poor take-up
of broadband technology subscription and weak business
research spending were drags on the economy.
Australia must boost its innovation performance to avoid
losing out in the emerging hi-tech, science-based
industries, according to CEDA.
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