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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  





2 Formulation  





3 Utility  





4 Country rankings 2021  





5 See also  





6 References  














Economic Complexity Index






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Economic complexity index)

Rank in the Economic Complexity Index (2015)

The Economic Complexity Index (ECI) is a holistic measure of the productive capabilities of large economic systems, usually cities, regions, or countries. In particular, the ECI looks to explain the knowledge accumulated in a population and that is expressed in the economic activities present in a city, country, or region. To achieve this goal, the ECI defines the knowledge available in a location, as the average knowledge of the activities present in it, and the knowledge of an activity as the average knowledge of the places where that economic activity is conducted. The product equivalent of the Economic Complexity Index is the Product Complexity Index or PCI.

Higher economic complexity as compared to country's income level drives economic development.

Background

[edit]

The ECI was developed by Cesar A. Hidalgo, from the MIT Media Lab and Ricardo Hausmann, from Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government. ECI data is available in The Observatory of Economic Complexity. The original formulation of the Economic Complexity Index was published in PNAS in 2009.[1]

Formulation

[edit]

In its strict mathematical definition, the ECI is defined in terms of an eigenvalue of a matrix connecting countries to countries, which is a projection of the matrix connecting countries to the products they export. Since the ECI considers information on the diversity of countries and the ubiquity of products, it is able to produce a measure of economic complexity containing information about both the diversity of a country's exports and their sophistication. For example, Japan or Germany, with high ECIs, export many goods that are less common and that are produced by highly diversified countries, indicating that these are diverse and sophisticated economies. Countries with low ECI, like Angola or Botswana, export only a few products, which are of relatively high ubiquity and which are exported by countries that are not necessarily very diversified, indicating that these are countries that have little diversity and that the products that they export are not very sophisticated.

Utility

[edit]

Hidalgo and Hausmann propose the concept of ECI not only as a descriptive measure, but also as a predictive tool for economic growth and income inequality. According to the statistics models presented in their Atlas of Economic Complexity (2011),[2] the ECI is a more accurate predictor of GDP per capita growth than traditional measures of governance, competitiveness (World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Index) and human capital (as measured in terms of educational attainment). ECI also shows a strong negative correlation with income inequality, suggesting that more knowledge intense productive structures are more inclusive in terms of income distribution, and providing a statistically more powerful explanation of cross-national variations in income inequality than Kuznets Curve.[3]

Economic development requires the accumulation of productive knowledge and its use in both more and more complex industries. According to this metric, many low-income countries, including Bangladesh, Venezuela, and Angola have failed to diversify their knowhow and face low growth prospects while those like India, Turkey, and the Philippines have added productive capabilities to enter new sectors and are expected by some drive growth over the coming years.[4]

Country rankings 2021

[edit]
Country Complexity Rankings [5]
Rank Country Index
(2021)
5-year
change
10-year
change
1 Japan 2.06 Steady Steady
2 Switzerland 1.94 Steady Increase1
3 Taiwan 1.93 Increase4 Increase9
4 South Korea 1.82 Decrease2 Decrease2
5 Germany 1.81 Steady Decrease1
6 Singapore 1.74 Decrease2 Increase1
7 Czechia 1.56 Decrease1 Increase2
8 Sweden 1.54 Steady Decrease3
9 Austria 1.50 Steady Increase5
10 United States 1.46 Increase3 Increase3
11 United Kingdom 1.43 Increase1 Increase1
12 Slovenia 1.42 Increase2 Decrease1
13 Finland 1.42 Decrease2 Decrease5
14 Hungary 1.36 Decrease2 Increase3
15 France 1.35 Steady Increase1
16 Slovakia 1.31 Decrease2 Decrease1
17 Ireland 1.29 Steady Decrease7
18 Belgium 1.28 Steady Increase6
19 Italy 1.27 Steady Steady
20 Israel 1.21 Increase6 Increase3
21 Hong Kong 1.16 Decrease1 Decrease1
22 Netherlands 1.09 Increase2 Increase9
23 Mexico 1.09 Steady Decrease2
24 Malaysia 1.09 Decrease3 Decrease6
25 China 1.07 Steady Increase5
26 Romania 1.07 Increase3 Increase1
27 Denmark 1.02 Steady Decrease5
28 Poland 1.01 Increase2 Increase4
29 Thailand 0.97 Decrease7 Decrease1
30 Lithuania 0.91 Increase1 Decrease1
31 Saudi Arabia 0.90 Increase5 Increase10
32 Canada 0.90 Decrease4 Decrease7
33 Belarus 0.84 Increase1 Increase1
34 Croatia 0.81 Increase3 Increase6
35 Spain 0.78 Increase3 Increase10
36 Serbia 0.74 Increase33 Increase71
37 Philippines 0.72 Decrease4 Increase1
38 Norway 0.69 Increase1 Decrease2
39 Bosnia and Herzegovina 0.65 Increase2 Steady
40 Bulgaria 0.63 Increase2 Increase2
41 India 0.61 Decrease1 Increase5
42 Turkey 0.61 Increase10 Increase8
43 Portugal 0.56 Decrease8 Decrease8
44 Ukraine 0.49 Decrease1 Steady
45 Russia 0.46 Steady Decrease2
46 New Zealand 0.46 Decrease2 Increase8
47 Lebanon 0.35 Increase4 Increase10
48 Kuwait 0.34 Increase10 Increase37
49 Brazil 0.33 Decrease2 Decrease1
50 Greece 0.32 Decrease4 Decrease24
51 Panama 0.31 Decrease1 Decrease2
52 Costa Rica 0.24 Increase11 Increase11
53 Tunisia 0.22 Increase2 Increase7
54 North Macedonia 0.20 Decrease5 Decrease3
55 United Arab Emirates 0.16 Increase2 Decrease3
56 Colombia 0.14 Increase4 Decrease3
57 Uruguay 0.10 Increase11 Increase8
58 Vietnam 0.10 Increase24 Increase23
59 South Africa 0.10 Decrease11 Increase8
60 Argentina 0.07 Decrease6 Decrease5
61 Indonesia 0.04 Increase1 Increase1
62 Jordan 0.03 Increase18 Increase6
63 Dominican Republic −0.00 Decrease7 Decrease7
64 Georgia −0.01 Increase1 Decrease3
65 Moldova −0.02 Decrease1 Increase21
66 El Salvador −0.04 Increase1 Increase4
67 Iran −0.09 Decrease6 Decrease34
68 Egypt −0.10 Increase25 Increase28
69 Kyrgyzstan −0.12 Decrease3 Increase3
70 Qatar −0.17 Increase4 Decrease6
71 Armenia −0.19 Decrease18 Decrease13
72 Albania −0.19 Steady Increase1
73 Oman −0.20 Decrease14 Decrease14
74 Chile −0.22 Decrease42 Decrease37
75 Jamaica −0.23 Increase14 Increase36
76 Guatemala −0.24 Increase7 Steady
77 Kazakhstan −0.28 Decrease2 Increase1
78 Morocco −0.28 Decrease1 Decrease9
79 Uzbekistan −0.38 Decrease8 Decrease32
80 Paraguay −0.38 Increase18 Increase9
81 Sri Lanka −0.39 Decrease3 Decrease15
82 Australia −0.41 Decrease9 Decrease11
83 Kenya −0.46 Increase14 Increase17
84 Honduras −0.50 Increase11 Decrease9
85 Azerbaijan −0.52 Increase33 Decrease8
86 Turkmenistan −0.55 Decrease2 Increase5
87 Pakistan −0.55 Increase3 Decrease5
88 Senegal −0.59 Increase12 Increase28
89 Benin −0.61 Decrease2 Decrease1
90 Niger −0.62 Increase1 Increase12
91 Peru −0.63 Decrease6 Decrease4
92 Cambodia −0.64 Decrease11 Decrease18
93 Botswana −0.67 Increase16 Decrease1
94 Tajikistan −0.69 Decrease15 Increase12
95 Laos −0.70 Decrease7 Decrease2
96 Zambia −0.74 Increase12 Increase5
97 Namibia −0.77 Increase19 Increase7
98 Zimbabwe −0.78 Decrease4 Decrease1
99 Ethiopia −0.80 Decrease3 Decrease20
100 Togo −0.81 Increase19 Increase33
101 Bangladesh −0.85 Decrease31 Increase21
102 Burma −0.85 Decrease16 Decrease12
103 Algeria −0.88 Decrease4 Increase2
104 Ecuador −0.89 Decrease12 Decrease20
105 Uganda −0.92 Decrease3 Decrease7
106 Bolivia −0.97 Increase11 Increase2
107 Republic of the Congo −1.02 Increase13 Increase11
108 Nicaragua −1.03 Decrease2 Decrease14
109 Madagascar −1.07 Decrease2 Decrease26
110 Venezuela −1.08 Increase1 Increase5
111 Tanzania −1.09 Increase4 Increase6
112 Iraq −1.12 Decrease7 Decrease13
113 Yemen −1.15 Decrease12 Decrease18
114 Libya −1.18 Increase18 Increase13
115 Cote d'Ivoire −1.19 Decrease1 Decrease12
116 Afghanistan −1.20 Decrease4 Increase3
117 Mongolia −1.23 Decrease41 Decrease37
118 Ghana −1.27 Decrease15 Decrease6
119 Mauritania −1.32 Increase2 Increase1
120 Sudan −1.33 Decrease16 Decrease10
121 Cameroon −1.36 Decrease8 Decrease7
122 Mozambique −1.36 Increase7 Increase2
123 Gabon −1.41 Decrease1 Decrease4
124 Angola −1.37 Increase1 Decrease3
125 Mali −1.43 Increase3 Increase3
126 Nigeria −1.53 Increase4 Steady
127 Burkina Faso −1.79 Decrease4 Decrease2
128 Democratic Republic of the Congo −1.81 Increase5 Increase1
129 Papua New Guinea −1.84 Decrease19 Decrease20
130 Guinea −1.84 Decrease3 Decrease3
131 Chad −1.93 Decrease7 Steady

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Cesar A. Hidalgo, Ricardo Hausmann (2009). "The Building Blocks of Economic Complexity". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 106 (26). PNAS: 10570–10575. arXiv:0909.3890. Bibcode:2009PNAS..10610570H. doi:10.1073/pnas.0900943106. PMC 2705545. PMID 19549871.
  • ^ Ricardo Hausmann, Cesar Hidalgo; et al. "The Atlas of Economic Complexity". Puritan Press, Cambridge MA. Archived from the original on 18 May 2012. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  • ^ Dominik Hartmann, Miguel Guevara, Cristian Jara-Figueroa, Manuel Aristaran, Cesar Hidalgo (2018), "Linking Economic Complexity, Institutions, and Income Inequality", World Development, 93: 75–93, arXiv:1505.07907, doi:10.1016/j.worlddev.2016.12.020, S2CID 45386522{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • ^ "India tops list of fastest growing economies for coming decade: Harvard study". The Economic Times. 2020-05-04. Retrieved 2020-10-31.
  • ^ "Complexity rankings The Observatory of Economic Complexity". OEC. Retrieved 2023-05-02.

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