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Thursday, June 18, 2015

Greek Competitiveness: Is it Possible 'Hard Leftist' Governments aren't all Bad?

     As I've been on a Greek kick this morning I did see this interesting little piece on Greece. Apparently there has been some improvements despite it's white knuckle negotiations with the ECB and its 25% unemployment rate. 

     With a 25% UR what of note could possibly be going right? Apparently it's easier to do business  now. 

     "You might head there for a beach holiday or to see the Acropolis, but have you considered doing business in Greece?"

     "In spite of the knife-edge negotiations to stop the country from defaulting on its debt, Greece has jumped in the IMD (International Institute for Management Development) annual world competitiveness ranking, which rates the ease of conducting business in various countries. The top-ranking Swiss business school judged countries' competitiveness by a combination of their economic performance, government efficiency, infrastructure and business efficiency."
    "While the U.S. clung on to its top spot in the ranking for 2015, with Hong Kong and Singapore just behind, Greece bounced from 57th place to 50th."
    "That may seem pretty low—the IMD only rated 61 countries in total—but it's surprising for a country that is locked in dispute with international bailout supervisors and hampered by a hard-left government that is threatening to default on its debts."
    "The IMD highlighted improvements to Greek investment flows abroad and a recent uptick in real gross domestic product (GDP), with the economy expanding by 0.8 percent in 2014 after six years of declines."
     "The IMD also rated Greece highly for the availability of skilled labor, placing it in an impressive second place out of all 61 countries on this measure. Greece also scored second place for its number of qualified engineers, pupil-teacher ratio in primary schools and level of secondary school enrollment."
     "So why is Greece at risk of leaving the euro zone, rather than leading it? Once factor is that one-quarter of its working population is out of work, placing it bottom of the IMD's rankings for unemployment. It is also bottom of the pile for tax evasion, pension funding and sovereign credit rating, with Greece awarded a speculative CCC+ grade by Standard & Poor's."
     "Still if it is the pace of recent improvements that counts, Greece beat its austerity bête noire Germany. That country fell to 10th place from sixth in the IMD ranking, reflecting "a fall in business efficiency."
     http://www.cnbc.com/id/102707262
     All this despite being 'hampered by a hard-left government.' I know that correlation doesn't prove causation but if Greece is a better place to do business under the devilish left-wing government of Tsipras don't you have to at all reconsider your priors?
     

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