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Posted

Thailand slips a place in digital competitiveness ranking

By The Nation

 

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Thailand’s world digital competitiveness ranking dropped one place to 40th in 2019 from 39 the previous year, according to an IMD World Digital Competitiveness Ranking (WDCR) report released late on Thursday.

 

 

The WDCR said that Thailand dropped one place to 40th as a result of a mixed performance across three digital factors while future readiness (50th), knowledge (43rd) and technology (27th) improved compared to 2018. Several indicators related to public investment in education, agility of companies and the use of big data and analytics in firms declined.

 

Meanwhile, the United States held on to the WDCR number one spot in 2019, with all top five economies in the ranking unchanged: US, Singapore, Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland.

 

Digital Competitiveness Ranking 2019

 

In the top 10, the Netherlands, Hong Kong SAR and South Korea moved up (to 6th, 8th and 10th, respectively), while Norway dropped to 9th and Canada fell from 8th to 11th.

 

Now in its third year, the WDCR produced by the IMD World Competitiveness Centre measures the capacity and readiness of 63 economies to adopt and explore digital technologies as a key driver for economic transformation in business, government and wider society.

 

Technology not only affects how businesses perform but also how economies function and prepare for the future.

Governments around the world are investing heavily in their digital economy to enhance value creation and prosperity.

 

The top five share a common thread in terms of their focus on knowledge generation, but they each approach digital competitiveness differently, the report said. The United States and Sweden follow a balanced approach between knowledge generation, the creation of a supportive environment for technology development and a readiness to adopt innovation. Singapore, Denmark and Switzerland give priority to one or two factors, the report added.

 

“In the midst of uncertainty and a fluid global situation, it seems that business and societies that are agile correlate strongly with the IMD World Digital Competitiveness ranking. Knowledge also remains of paramount importance for the digital performance of different economies,” said Professor Arturo Bris, director of the IMD World Competitiveness Centre.

 

Several Asian economies advanced significantly in the ranking compared to 2018. Hong Kong SAR and South Korea entered the top 10 while Taiwan and China moved up to 13th and 22nd respectively. All these economies experienced marked progress in their technological infrastructure and the agility of their businesses. Further down the ranking, India and Indonesia jumped four and six positions respectively, supported by positive results in talent, training and education as well as the enhancement of technological infrastructure.

 

In the Middle East, the UAE and Israel remained key regional digital hubs but followed opposing trends with respect to 2018. The UAE climbed five places thanks to improvements in capital availability and supportive regulation for technology development. Israel dropped four positions, due to a decline in business agility and e-government indicators.

 

In Latin America, Mexico and Colombia were the only economies to advance in the rankings this year. The lack of resources to support talent and technological development prevents most economies in the region from improving knowledge generation and getting the most from digital transformation.

 

To evaluate an economy, WDCR examines three factors:

 

knowledge - the capacity to understand and learn the new technologies; technology - the competence to develop new digital innovations; future readiness - the preparedness for the coming developments.

 

This year, two new variables related to robotics were introduced in the calculation of the WDCR: “industrial robot” to measure the total number of robots in operation; and “robots in education and R&D” worldwide. The data is provided by the International Federation of Robotics.

 

Source: https://www.nationthailand.com/business/30376797

 

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-- © Copyright The Nation Thailand 2019-09-28

 

Posted

Thailand only falls because of xenophobic policies and supreme ineptitude.  So many digital nomads love Thailand, but they are treated like criminals, where they would love to help the average Thai.  We had several that would teach classes for free in China just because they loved what they did..  Most countries embrace these people, but not Thailand. 

  • Like 1
Posted

Reality is probably even far worse; with their retarded education system they cannot hope to compete with anyone and that isn't something that is easily or quickly fixed (not that anyone is trying in earnest anyway).

 

They're in desperate need of technology transfer and fresh blood to have a real shot in the digital arena, but thanks to their ingrained xenophobia that is not going to happen.

 

  • Like 1
Posted
9 hours ago, Caldera said:

Reality is probably even far worse; with their retarded education system they cannot hope to compete with anyone and that isn't something that is easily or quickly fixed (not that anyone is trying in earnest anyway).

 

They're in desperate need of technology transfer and fresh blood to have a real shot in the digital arena, but thanks to their ingrained xenophobia that is not going to happen.

 

Thailands M.O is not to educate the masses... they want them to stay ignorant to be the servants of the elite.... educating the masses would only bring a future challenge to the leadership, now the top end is governed by the elite, companies are family owned, all the education goes to their families to protect the legacy.

It wouldn't do to educate the lower classes to the point where 90% wake up and realise that they're being screwed and have the brain capacity to do something about it !

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