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Professor Arturo Bris, director of the IMD, valued the city’s gateway role for foreign direct investment in mainland China. Photo: AFP

Hong Kong reclaims crown as world’s most competitive economy

City’s efforts to create business friendly environment give it edge over rival Singapore and former champion, the US

Despite constant concerns that Hong Kong is losing its edge to mainland and regional rivals, the city has reclaimed the title of the world’s most competitive economy, according to the IMD World Competitiveness Centre.

The annual survey of 61 jurisdictions around the world pushed the city up one place to the top for 2016, saying Hong Kong had “encouraged innovation through low and simple taxation and imposed no restrictions on capital flows”.

In a separate report on competitiveness released yesterday by Beijing’s top think tank, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), Hong Kong lost out to Shenzhen for the second year in a row.

IMD surveyed more than 5,400 business executives on four main factors – economic performance, government efficiency, business efficiency and infrastructure – while the CASS survey focused on innovation, among other factors.

Hong Kong claimed the top spot in the 2012 IMD rankings, but lost it to the United States for the next three years. Singapore, which ranked fourth in the same survey, was the only other Asian entrant in the top 10 this year.

IMD director Professor Arturo Bris said the city’s efforts to create a business-friendly environment had been central to its ability to defy regional challenges.

Bris said Hong Kong was also valued as a gateway for foreign direct investment in the mainland, “the world’s newest economic superpower”, enabling business there to access global capital markets.

In contrast, the US “was no longer able to maintain its dominance”, falling to third in this year’s survey, behind Switzerland.

Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said Hong Kong retaking the top spot showed that the city would be able to resist global downward pressure if it made use of available opportunities.

“We should be confident about Hong Kong’s economy,” he said before an Executive Council meeting on Tuesday morning.

He also said Shenzhen had seen rapid advancements in innovation technology in recent years, and Hong Kong could look to it as a reference.

Financial Secretary John Tsang Chun-wah said he was delighted to see that Hong Kong had regained the title of the world’s most competitive economy.

“In light of the fierce competition in the global arena, we will strive to uphold our prevailing competitive edge and continue to search for new growth areas, so as to strengthen our position as an international financial, trading and business centre and enhance Hong Kong’s long-term competitiveness,” Tsang said in a statement on Tuesday morning.

Despite the city’s grim economic outlook, Hong Kong was helped to the top of the list by worse conditions in other economies, analysts said.

“Hong Kong is doing relatively OK ... Many other places are facing much deeper troubles,” Baptist University associate finance professor Billy Mak Sui-choi said.

Many major Asian jurisdictions and countries, including Taiwan, Malaysia and Indonesia, suffered significant falls from their 2015 positions, dragged down by lower commodity prices, a strong US dollar and deterioration of balance sheets in both the private and public sectors, IMD said.

“Hong Kong is a small and open economy, which enables it to tackle economic headwinds in a more flexible way,” Chinese University lecturer Stephen Wong Yuen-shan said.

Wong said the city managed to climb to the top despite a government that had not done enough to nurture the technology industry and protect labour rights.

“It proves that Hong Kong is a much blessed city,” he said.

But, in the latest annual report on China’s urban competitiveness, the city was again upstaged by rising neighbour Shenzhen.

The CASS report said innovative industries in cities like Shenzhen and Shanghai were booming, which had put some pressure on Hong Kong’s advantaged ­sectors.

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