Ratings aim to contribute to public good

Published by rudy Date posted on July 19, 2009

The reason for competing is to improve the human condition.

This is why the Asian Institute of Management (AIM) Policy Center continues engaging in competitiveness studies—it is not to rank or study the ranking of countries or cities for the sake of ranking. The purpose is to spur activities that will lead to economic growth and thus contribute to the public good.

The World Competitiveness Yearbook (WCY) rankings, for all the criticisms hurled by those who cannot believe the sad news they portend, provide evidence on the most critical areas that require government intervention. And the report is especially necessary where intervention must be laser-focused because resources are extremely tight.

Even while the areas of greatest uncompetitiveness that the Yearbook will identify might actually be improving on an absolute basis, it also means that the rate of improvement is not good enough. And this slow rate of improvement means a country is relatively being dragged downwards.

The Yearbook is the product of the International Institute for Management and Development (IMD) of Lausanne, Switzerland.

Since 1997, the AIM Policy Center has contributed to the Yearbook as the Philippine local research partner, albeit in a limited way, that collects the hard data, identifies a pool of respondents according to the report qualification requirements, and sends survey forms to these respondents.

Hard data is obtained from international, national and regional organizations and private institutions whose data are acceptable to the IMD.

Both the AIM Policy Center and the IMD collect the data, and in case of doubt, it is the IMD that has the final say on the acceptability of the hard data.

The survey is conducted among executives in top and middle management (chief executive officers, chief finance officers, department heads, entrepreneurs, etc.), who work in a business-related environment, with international experience, and from a cross-section of the business community in each economic sector—primary, manufacturing and services.

The AIM Policy Center does not have information on who actually sent answers to the IMD.

The center also does not participate in the processing of the data or the determination of the methodology and applicable formulas. These are done by IMD researchers, who explain their methodology in the Yearbook and which methodology can be read online at http://www.imd.ch/research/publications/wcy/upload/methodology.pdf.

The IMD identified four competitiveness factors affecting nations’ competitiveness: economic performance; government efficiency; business efficiency; and infrastructure.

These and 20 sub-factors are then determined by 135 hard data indicators and responses in 110 survey questions, coming up with 245 criteria that are computed for their standardized value. The standardized values are indexed. Then the countries are ranked. — Ma. Lourdes A. Sereno, Manila Times

July 2025

Nutrition Month
“Give us much more than P50 increase
for proper nutrition!”

Invoke Article 33 of the ILO Constitution
against the military junta in Myanmar
to carry out the 2021 ILO Commission of Inquiry recommendations
against serious violations of
Forced Labour and Freedom of Association protocols.

Accept National Unity Government (NUG)
of Myanmar.  Reject Military!

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July


3 July – International Day of Cooperatives
3 Ju
ly – International Plastic Bag Free Day
 
5 July –
World Youth Skills Day 
7 July – Global Forgiveness Day
11 July – World Population Day 
17 July – World Day for
International Justice
28 July – World Nature Conservation Day
30 July – World Day against Trafficking in Persons 


Monthly Observances:

Schools Safety Month

Nutrition Month
National Disaster Consciousness Month

Weekly Observances:

Week 2: Cultural Communities Week
Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprise
Development Week
Week 3: National Science and
Technology Week
National Disability Prevention and
Rehabilitation Week
July 1-7:
National Culture Consciousness Week
July 13-19:
Philippines Business Week
Week ending last Saturday of July:
Arbor Week

 

Daily Observances:

First Saturday of July:
International Cooperative Day
in the Philippines

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