EU failed to meet Lisbon goal of becoming world’s most competitive region

12 May 2010 | News
It will come as no surprise, but the World Economic Forum’s fifth and final biennial review finds Europe did not meet the Lisbon objectives.


It will come as no surprise, but the World Economic Forum’s study fifth and final biennial review assessing progress made by EU Members in reaching the goals of the Lisbon Strategy, finds Europe did not meet the objectives.

Sweden remains the most competitive economy as measured by the Lisbon criteria, followed by Finland, Denmark and the Netherlands, according to the Forum’s Lisbon Review 2010, published this week.

According to the study, several 2004 accession countries are ranked ahead of many longer-standing EU Members, including Estonia, Slovenia and the Czech Republic. This implies that a number of these more recent Members came closer to meeting the Lisbon Goals than many of the longer-standing Members.

Among potential future Members, Croatia and Montenegro outperform the four lowest-ranked EU Members – Poland, Italy, Romania and Bulgaria – and Turkey and Macedonia outperform Bulgaria.

“In 2000, the EU set for itself an ambitious action and development plan with the Lisbon Agenda,” said Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum. “As this review indicates, while some progress has been made, much remains to be achieved in order to fully harness Europe’s economic potential.”

As Europe and the world emerge from the most significant economic crisis in a half-century, accelerating the reform process articulated through efforts such as the new Europe 2020 Strategy will be critical for ensuring that the region gets back to growth, Schwab added.

The Nordic countries are the strongest European performers in the area of innovation, attributable to their companies’ aggressiveness in adopting new technologies and their level of spending on R&D, and the high degree of collaboration between universities and the private sector in research. Indeed, in terms of innovation “output”, they register among the highest rates of patenting per capita internationally.

These countries have also achieved a high level of social inclusion, with low unemployment, especially in Denmark, and strong participation of women in the workforce, especially in Finland and Sweden. These countries also have developed highly-skilled workforces through top-notch educational systems and strong on-the-job training programmes.

Among the other countries in the top 10, performance is more mixed, with some notable strength in specific areas. For example, the Netherlands is ranked 2nd both for its information society and for the extent of liberalisation. Germany and France have particularly strong network industries, ranking 1st and 3rd, respectively.

The assessment of the UK’s financial services has continued to worsen, a trend seen over the past few years, falling from 1st in this dimension in The Lisbon Review 2006 to 11th in 2008, and finally to 14th in the present assessment, no doubt related to weaknesses revealed and exacerbated by the recent financial crisis.

The eight dimensions measured by The Lisbon Review 2010 are:

  1. Creating an information society for all

  2. Developing a European area for innovation and R&D

  3. Liberalisation (completing the Single Market; state aid and competition policy)

  4. Building network industries

  5. Creating efficient and integrated financial services

  6. Improving the enterprise environment

  7. Increasing social inclusion

  8. Enhancing sustainable development

The assessment is based on publicly available statistics, for example, Internet penetration rates, unemployment rates and data from the World Economic Forum’s Executive Opinion Survey (EOS), an annual survey of business leaders that is carried out in over 130 countries, providing data for a variety of qualitative issues for which hard data does not exist, for example, the quality of the educational system, the government’s prioritisation of information and communications technologies.

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