"The top ten most globalized countries in 2000 by rank were: Ireland, 
Switzerland, Singapore, the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Canada, Denmark, 
Austria and the U.K.
The bottom ten, from lowest up, were: Iran, Peru, Colombia, Indonesia, 
Brazil, Venezuela, Pakistan, Turkey, South Africa and China."

http://quote.bloomberg.com/fgcgi.cgi?mnu=news&ptitle=Politics%20UK&tp=ad_uknews&T=news_storypage99.ht&ad=uk_politics&s=APDyXkRNKSXJlbGFu

Ireland Tops List of Most Open Economies; U.S. Ranks 12th
By Blair Pethel


Washington, Jan. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Ireland, Switzerland and Singapore were 
the world's most open economies in 2000, while Colombia, Peru and Iran were 
the least globalized of the 62 nations surveyed, according to a study.

The globalization index, assembled by Washington-based Foreign Policy 
magazine and Electronic Data System Corp.'s global consultancy A.T. Kearney 
Inc., measures economic integration, cross-border personal contact, 
transnational political engagement and technology usage to reach its 
conclusions.

The U.S. ranks 12th on the list, scoring high in the technology and 
political engagement measures, but low on cross- border personal contact and 
economic integration.

``Countries with large internal markets tend to be less highly globalized 
than countries which have small internal markets and therefore are forced to 
seek relationship outside their borders to sustain themselves 
economically,'' said Paul Laudicina, vice president of A.T. Kearney.

U.S. citizens scored low on the personal contact measure because most people 
do not travel abroad or have foreign contact via telephone or e-mail, he 
said.

That explains the high rankings of Ireland, Singapore and Switzerland, 
Laudicina said. Those countries depend on trade, foreign investment and 
tourism for much of their national sustenance.

`High Water Mark'

Moises Naim, editor of Foreign Policy magazine, said that because of the 
global economic decline, the year 2000 probably represents the ``high water 
mark'' of globalization.

Since cross-border trade and investment flows dwindled to a trickle last 
year, the 2001 index could be drastically different when it is released next 
year, he said.

China, through its new membership in the World Trade Organization, could 
vault up the rankings in 2001 from its 2000 position of 53rd, he said.

``Last year, when Brazil experienced a downturn in foreign direct investment 
from $31 billion to $20 billion, China went from $42 billion to $50 
billion,'' said Laudicina.

Continued investment flows, coupled with a growing consumer class and 
further economic integration, should push the world's most populous nation 
up the rankings in coming years, he said.

The top ten most globalized countries in 2000 by rank were: Ireland, 
Switzerland, Singapore, the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Canada, Denmark, 
Austria and the U.K.

The bottom ten, from lowest up, were: Iran, Peru, Colombia, Indonesia, 
Brazil, Venezuela, Pakistan, Turkey, South Africa and China.




_________________________________________________________________
Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com

Reply via email to