Merxwire
28 May 2026, 17:03 GMT+10
In the IMD World Competitiveness Ranking 2025, Switzerland, Singapore, and Hong Kong secured the top three positions, reflecting strong performances in governance, business efficiency, and infrastructure, while also highlighting the evolving global competitive landscape.

TAIPEI, TAIWAN (MERXWIRE) - According to the 2025 World Competitiveness Yearbook released by the International Institute for Management Development (IMD) in Switzerland, Switzerland, Singapore, and Hong Kong ranked as the world's top three economies among 69 evaluated economies. The results suggest that national competitiveness is no longer measured solely by GDP, exports, or employment figures, but by a comprehensive combination of government governance, business efficiency, infrastructure, and quality of life.
Under IMD's analytical framework, economic competitiveness cannot be assessed solely through productivity or economic scale, but must also consider political, social, cultural, and institutional factors. The evaluation framework covers economic performance, government efficiency, business efficiency, and infrastructure, while integrating global executive surveys and external hard data to assess the long-term competitiveness of economies from global, regional, and people-centered perspectives.
In the 2025 rankings, Switzerland returned to the number one position, largely benefiting from institutional stability and infrastructure advantages. Singapore remained firmly in second place thanks to its strong healthcare system, labor market, and infrastructure performance. Hong Kong ranked third, demonstrating strong market resilience and strategic positioning capabilities.
IMD World Competitiveness Ranking 2025 Top 10
| Rank | Country / Economy |
|---|---|
| 1 | Switzerland |
| 2 | Singapore |
| 3 | Hong Kong (SAR) |
| 4 | Denmark |
| 5 | United Arab Emirates |
| 6 | Chinese Taipei (Taiwan) |
| 7 | Ireland |
| 8 | Sweden |
| 9 | Qatar |
| 10 | Netherlands |
Looking at the top ten rankings, global competitiveness is becoming increasingly diversified across regions. While European economies continue to maintain their strengths, Asian and Middle Eastern economies are rapidly increasing their influence. The top ten economies were Switzerland, Singapore, Hong Kong, Denmark, the United Arab Emirates, Taiwan, Ireland, Sweden, Qatar, and the Netherlands.
Among them, Denmark stood out in education and sustainable development, while Ireland demonstrated strong investment attractiveness and economic performance. Sweden maintained its competitive edge through institutional stability and innovation capabilities, while the Netherlands continued to gain recognition for macroeconomic stability and transportation infrastructure.
Asia was also a major focus in this year's rankings. Singapore and Hong Kong continued to serve as key competitiveness hubs in the Asia-Pacific region, while Taiwan maintained its position within the global top ten, ranking first among economies with populations exceeding 20 million. Taiwan particularly excelled in business efficiency, with industrial operational efficiency and corporate competitiveness becoming major strengths.
Meanwhile, Middle Eastern countries have significantly increased their presence in global competitiveness rankings in recent years. Both the United Arab Emirates and Qatar entered the top ten, reflecting how labor market reforms and business vitality are gradually transforming into international competitive advantages. The UAE has drawn particular attention for its corporate dynamism and labor reforms, while Qatar achieved strategic progress in business and labor market development.
From a regional perspective, global competitiveness is no longer dominated by a single economic model. Europe continues to benefit from institutional and infrastructure advantages, Asia is growing rapidly through industrial efficiency and market resilience, while the Middle East is increasing its international visibility through reforms and economic transformation. This also suggests that the future key to national competitiveness will not only be economic growth rates, but also the ability to balance institutions, talent, innovation, and quality of life.
The latest IMD rankings also reflect a common global trend: amid ongoing geopolitical tensions, supply chain restructuring, and industrial transformation, truly competitive economies require not only strong market capabilities, but also stable institutions, flexible governance, and long-term development strategies. As global competition gradually shifts from "capital competition" toward "governance and resilience competition," how countries balance economic efficiency with quality of life will become an increasingly important indicator in the next stage of global development.
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