Evaluation of International Competitiveness

Competitiveness can be defined in a number of ways. We can think of it as of a successful performance of a company or organization; or we may talk about competitiveness in a macro context such as a favourable exchange rate of a national currency. Can we also talk about competitiveness of a nation?...

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Main Author: Gediminas Ramanauskas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius University Press 2004-12-01
Series:Ekonomika
Online Access:https://www.journals.vu.lt/ekonomika/article/view/17399
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spelling doaj-4ef22b781bfa48a29227d4a35e3297fd2020-11-25T02:13:22ZengVilnius University PressEkonomika1392-12582424-61662004-12-0168Evaluation of International CompetitivenessGediminas Ramanauskas0International School of Management (ISM) Competitiveness can be defined in a number of ways. We can think of it as of a successful performance of a company or organization; or we may talk about competitiveness in a macro context such as a favourable exchange rate of a national currency. Can we also talk about competitiveness of a nation? What is it and how can it be evaluated? There does not seem to be a common definition of what the international competitiveness of nations is. Some feel that the very notion of international competitiveness of nations is unfair and unacceptable. They argue that the nations themselves do not compete, their enterprises do. For others the notion of international competitiveness of nations is fair. They believe that creating appropriate measures of international competitiveness is central for tracking and understanding the sources of competitiveness of countries. In this paper I classify and compare the measures developed by various authors. I suggest that the studies on the measurement of competitiveness can be classified into five groups: 1. Particular sector studies. 2. Competitiveness studies at the regional / country level. 3. Particular competitiveness indicator studies. 4. Competitiveness studies at an international level. 5. Cross-country economic policy studies. Since the competitiveness studies serve a different audience and purpose, we cannot discuss which is best without first asking: best at what? https://www.journals.vu.lt/ekonomika/article/view/17399
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gediminas Ramanauskas
spellingShingle Gediminas Ramanauskas
Evaluation of International Competitiveness
Ekonomika
author_facet Gediminas Ramanauskas
author_sort Gediminas Ramanauskas
title Evaluation of International Competitiveness
title_short Evaluation of International Competitiveness
title_full Evaluation of International Competitiveness
title_fullStr Evaluation of International Competitiveness
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of International Competitiveness
title_sort evaluation of international competitiveness
publisher Vilnius University Press
series Ekonomika
issn 1392-1258
2424-6166
publishDate 2004-12-01
description Competitiveness can be defined in a number of ways. We can think of it as of a successful performance of a company or organization; or we may talk about competitiveness in a macro context such as a favourable exchange rate of a national currency. Can we also talk about competitiveness of a nation? What is it and how can it be evaluated? There does not seem to be a common definition of what the international competitiveness of nations is. Some feel that the very notion of international competitiveness of nations is unfair and unacceptable. They argue that the nations themselves do not compete, their enterprises do. For others the notion of international competitiveness of nations is fair. They believe that creating appropriate measures of international competitiveness is central for tracking and understanding the sources of competitiveness of countries. In this paper I classify and compare the measures developed by various authors. I suggest that the studies on the measurement of competitiveness can be classified into five groups: 1. Particular sector studies. 2. Competitiveness studies at the regional / country level. 3. Particular competitiveness indicator studies. 4. Competitiveness studies at an international level. 5. Cross-country economic policy studies. Since the competitiveness studies serve a different audience and purpose, we cannot discuss which is best without first asking: best at what?
url https://www.journals.vu.lt/ekonomika/article/view/17399
work_keys_str_mv AT gediminasramanauskas evaluationofinternationalcompetitiveness
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