Exploring Global Competitiveness

Explore trade competitiveness among regions and countries — and see how regional trade and integration impacts economies

GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS SCORECARDS

A wide range of indices – developed by international organizations, think tanks, and researchers – measure economic freedom and global competitiveness. These traditional measures offer important insights into their respective fields, but the networked and globalized economy of the 21st century has created a new environment in which economies and firms must simultaneously compete and cooperate.

With this new environment in mind, the George W. Bush Institute-SMU Economic Growth Initiative synthesized respected third-party sources – which rate countries on indicators ranging from business startup costs and the macroeconomic environment to technological readiness and the rule of law – to create a composite score for each country. The criteria for incorporating indices into the Bush Institute-SMU Economic Growth Initiative Scorecard required that each index:

  • Reflect important components of economic growth or quality of life
  • Offer accessible data that are necessary to compare individual countries in North America, Latin America, Europe, and Asia
  • Provide ratings for at least 14 years in order to show a trend over time

REGIONAL ECONOMIC INTEGRATION AS A GROWTH STRATEGY

To achieve cost efficiencies while increasing quality and staying ahead on the innovation curve, companies often rely on a mix of materials and services from suppliers around the world. As more countries have opened their economies to trade and investment, suppliers of specific components and inputs have become linked through ever-growing and evolving global supply networks.

Regional economic integration has emerged as a policy strategy to pursue growth and job creation objectives, while enabling manufacturers to better meet consumer demands. As firms leverage global differences and complementary resources, they are incentivized to focus on countries in geographic proximity. Policy arrangements like free trade agreements, investment agreements, and other forms of deeper informal or formal economic integration are intended to capture as much manufacturing value-added as possible within the region while strengthening the ability of regionally-made products to compete globally.

In this section, we analyze the approaches to macroeconomic integration in North America, the European Union, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), and the Central America Free Trade Agreement (U.S.-DR-CAFTA) to discern the impact on each region’s global competitiveness.

We believe that, done right, regional economic integration promotes growth, per capita growth, global trade, and job creation – but we invite you to engage with the data and reach your own conclusions.

COMPETITIVENESS

North America scores the highest among trade groups on the George W. Bush Institute-SMU Economic Growth Initiative’s Scorecard with a 76.3 (B+). When weighted by GDP, the strength of the U.S. economy brings the score up to 90.5 (A).

North America scores the highest among trade groups on the George W. Bush Institute-SMU Economic Growth Initiative’s Scorecard with a 76.3 (B+). When weighted by GDP, the strength of the U.S. economy brings the score up to 90.5 (A).

Canada, Mexico, and the U.S. together outperform the world’s other major regions on the Scorecard – including the European Union, APEC in Asia, and the Pacific Alliance in Latin America. The three parties to the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) agreed to modernize and replace NAFTA with the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) that went into effect July 1, 2020. Notably, USMCA was updated to include the latest intellectual property and digital commerce provisions. However, changes to rules of origin in certain manufacturing sectors may constrain supply chain decisions, replacing free-market latitude with rules and regulations that will be defined and enforced by government agencies. View North America integration data.

Within the Scorecard’s six categories, North America’s highest score is for investment environment (73.9), followed by business environment (69.1) and legal system and property rights (67).

North America’s trade environment score has decreased since 2007, largely driven by a substantial drop in the score of the U.S. – which fell from 85 in 2007 to 63 in 2020. This can likely be attributed to increased security measures in the U.S. over this period. Despite an emphasis on free trade, security procedures at customs and border checkpoints in response to September 11, 2001 have increased the cost and complexity of trading with and travelling to the U.S. However, the World Bank reports that the time and cost of border compliance, documentary compliance, and domestic transport within the overall process of exporting or importing a shipment of goods has increased substantially in all three countries over the past ten years. As a result, North America’s average percentile rank on the World Bank “trading across borders” indicator has fallen from 75% to 60% over the past decade. This decline signals the need for the three countries to invest more in digitization, targeted development and coordinated pre-screening programs at the borders. As the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic linger, these needs will only grow more urgent.

In the Bush Institute-SMU Economic Growth Initiative’s Scorecard indicators, the U.S. excels in higher education and training, financial market development, innovation and sophistication, and labor market efficiency. Canada shines when it comes to measures of primary education, property rights protections, credit and labor markets, and financial stability. Mexico rates highly on the ease of obtaining credit, and its investment environment has improved markedly over the past decade thanks to recent far-reaching economic policy reforms in sectors including energy and telecommunications. However, recent interference and arbitrary regulations initiated by the Mexican government suggest that these market-opening reforms may be subject to retreat.

Overall, investment environment is North America’s highest score, and it signals the region’s success at attracting and protecting cross-border investment – thanks in part to agreements such as NAFTA and USMCA. To maintain its score, the region must continue to preserve the free movement of goods, services, capital, and labor, along with effective mechanisms to resolve investor disputes that may arise.

There is also room for improvement. All three nations are plagued by low scores in the macroeconomic environment, where North America receives its lowest score of 57.3. Specifically, the U.S. must reduce fiscal deficits and indebtedness to restore confidence in its long-term macroeconomic outlook. Above all else, Mexico needs to improve rule of law, strengthen institutions, and reduce corruption. Mexico’s score for legal system and property rights has decreased considerably since 2007 – indicating that attempted reforms have been ineffective. In Canada, company spending on research and development is lagging, and non-tariff barriers still impede trade in some industries such as dairy.