Mexico moved up one position in the 2025 World Competitiveness Ranking conducted by the Institute for Management Development (IMD) of Switzerland, which evaluates 69 economies globally. But the results indicate that there’s plenty of room for improvement. Mexico’s slight increase from spot 56 to 55 reflects a marginal improvement in the country’s economic development and performance compared to 2024. Among the Latin American nations that IMD evaluated, Mexico ranks below Chile (42) and Colombia (54), but above Brazil (58), Peru (60) and Argentina (62). In the overall ranking, Switzerland, Singapore, Hong Kong, Denmark and the United Arab Emirates ranked as the world’s most competitive economies. Meanwhile, Canada (No. 11), Germany (No. 19) and Luxembourg (No. 20) climbed the most within the top 20. The United States came in at No. 13 and the United Kingdom at No. 29. The IMD is an independent academic institute with Swiss roots and campuses in Singapore and China. It emphasizes that its competitiveness ranking is not based solely on the usual economic indicators. “An economy’s competitiveness cannot be reduced to its GDP, productivity or employment levels,” reads a statement on the IMD website. “It can be gauged only by considering a complex matrix of political, social and cultural dimensions.” Still, currencies and trade are important factors in the ratings. “Strong currencies are emerging as an indicator of long-term success,” Arturo Bris, director of the Global Competitiveness Center (GCC), which compiled the ranking for the IMD, said. “At the same time, the reorganization of global trade networks is revealing how accessible countries have been acting in their best interests, and the consensus is proving positive for economies, in stark contrast to the effects of polarization.”
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