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CEDA Media Release: Strong demand in Asia boosts Australia’s global competitiveness
CEDA Media Release: Strong demand in Asia boosts Australia’s global competitiveness
Posted : Monday, May 24, 2010
Media release
issued: Monday, 24 May 2010
Melbourne: Strong demand from Asia has boosted
Australia's position in the world's most comprehensive and
long-running competitiveness study.
The 2010 World Competitiveness Yearbook, is produced by IMD's World
Competitiveness Centre with the help of CEDA and other
international partners. Australia moved up to 5th place of the 58
nations included in the study, after ranking 7th for the past two
years.
For the first time in decades, Singapore (1) and Hong Kong (2)
pushed the US (3) from first place. However, according to IMD, they
are so close it is better to define them as the leading "trio".
Of Australia's ranking, CEDA's Chief Executive, David Byers,
said the rise to 5th place pointed to the relative strength of the
domestic economy and its resilience to economic cycles. As strong
Asian demand for commodities had underpinned the rise, it
emphasized the critical need to maintain high levels of investment
in the resources sector. "The Yearbook provides independent,
international verification that Australia is in a solid comparative
position after the GFC", Mr Byers said.
"Yet the rankings also reflect familiar weaknesses. Australia
likes to think of itself as a great trading nation yet in reality,
international trade as a proportion of GDP is relatively low by
world standards. A 2007 CEDA Report, Competing From Australia,
noted that Australia is relatively weakly integrated with the
global economy, ranking 20th out of 22 nations for "trade
intensity" - that is, international trade as a percentage of
overall national economic activity.
"The terms of trade remain in Australia's favour but we need to
build on our services and resource industry strengths and boost
exports as a percentage of overall GDP", he said.
In this context the Federal Government's plan for a Resources
Super Profits Tax could become a real concern.
"Mining is a risky business and like other risky businesses, the
distribution of profitability has a greater variance than the more
predictable manufacturing and services sectors. The proposed "super
profits" tax is a tax on all uncertain (that is, most) projects and
risks sending capital investment elsewhere. The proposal to tax
those that are most successful is a tax in fact on all prospective
and uncertain investments, not a tax on so-called pure economic
rent," he said.
The results also highlight the importance of delivering a robust
competitive telecommunications industry through a variety of
channels.
"Infrastructure has dropped another six places in the rankings
due primarily to low rankings in technological and
telecommunications infrastructure ", he said.
Figure 1. Australia's Competitiveness
Landscape

Source: IMD World Competitiveness Yearbook 2010: Australia
Country Profile, page 66
"Improving delivery of broadband services remains an issue but
previous work by CEDA suggests that the Federal Government's
current approach is not the way to go. The proposed National
Broadband Network is a $43 billion mistake. The task is to promote
real competition across the four infrastructure 'doors' - copper
telephone lines, wireless, coaxial cable and fibre - allowing
rivals to differentiate their services and compete more vigorously
along their supply chains."
The survey shows the biggest decline in overall performance for
Australia (measured by largest percentage change) was in the
government's financial position, with the budget deficit increasing
from -0.4 per cent of GDP to -4.87 per cent of GDP. Three of the
top five nations (Singapore, Hong Kong and Switzerland) were in a
stronger Government budget position (measured as surplus/deficit %
GDP).
The Yearbook was compiled before the federal budget released
earlier this month.
About the World Competitiveness Yearbook
The Yearbook is produced by IMD, one of the world's top business
schools, with the help of CEDA and other international partners.
Its rankings and country-based data sets are used by business and
governments around the world.
ACCESS TO THE YEARBOOK
Media can access the Yearbook press centre, including
Australia's Country Profile, for a limited time at:
www.worldcompetitiveness.com/press
Password (case sensitive): Yearbook2010
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