(Credit: iStock / erhui1979) |
|
|
Competitiveness, Michael Porter remarked in The Competitive Advantage of Nations, his 1990 best-selling book, means different things to different people. As a member of US President Ronald Reagan’s competitiveness commission in the 1980s, the American economist met business leaders who believed it was about a global strategy to compete in world markets and members of Congress who thought it meant having a positive balance of trade. Today this commonly used term continues to defy definition and to divide opinion, Kevin Fletcher writes in F&D. If increasing competitiveness means boosting productivity, economists would agree that this is almost always and everywhere a worthy goal. But they would also note that more productivity raises a country’s welfare regardless of its effects on exports and even if the country doesn’t trade at all with other countries. Competitiveness, however, implies that relativity matters—that policymakers are less concerned about their country’s absolute level of productivity than about how it compares with that of other countries. If another country’s productivity is on the rise, it must be bad news, because their own country is becoming less competitive. Does this reasoning stand up? |
|
|
(Credit: Chantal Jahchan) |
|
|
Europe: From Adversity to Advantage |
|
|
“The European Union must unite to shape today’s global economy, rather than be shaped by it.”— F&D editor-in-chief Gita Bhatt
|
|
|
(Credit: Getty Images/Mirrorpix) |
|
|
(Credit: Courtesy Monetary Authority of Macao) |
|
|
For Currency Notes, Salsa Mazlan tells how Macao SAR’s unique history has yielded different yet equally elegant versions of the same banknote. Simon Johnson discusses technology, inequality, and democracy with Bruce Edwards for Café Economics. Picture This shows how stalled trade and rising tariffs are testing global economic resilience. Andreas Adriano profiles Agustín Carstens, finance minister, head of the BIS, and central banker with a start-up mentality, for People in Economics. For books, Mouhamadou Sy reviews Our Dollar, Your Problem: An Insider’s View of Seven Turbulent Decades of Global Finance, and the Road Ahead by Kenneth Rogoff. Volker Wieland reviews Crisis Cycle: Challenges, Evolution, and Future of the Euro by John H. Cochrane, Luis Garicano, and Klaus Masuch. And Vivek Arora reviews Entropy Economics: The Living Basis of Value and Production by James K. Galbraith and Jing Chen. |
|
|
| | Managing Editor | Finance & Development |
| |
|
|
|