Millennial Asia, volume 9, issue 2, pages 119-139

What Can We Learn from Global and Regional Rankings of Countries?

Hüseyin Aytuğ 1
Siong Hook Law 2
Nirvikar Singh 3
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2018-08-16
Journal: Millennial Asia
scimago Q1
SJR0.457
CiteScore4.5
Impact factor1.3
ISSN09763996, 23217081
Sociology and Political Science
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Political Science and International Relations
Cultural Studies
Development
Abstract

We use principal component analysis (PCA) to extract the essential information contained in 10 different country rankings, measuring different country characteristics such as GDP per capita, human development, quality of governance, environmental quality and business environment. Globally, the first principal component accounts for about 82 per cent of the variation across countries, and the first three principal components account for over 92 per cent. The percentages are similar for regions such as Europe, North America and Asia, but lower for South America and Africa, but even in the last of these regions, the first three principal components account for 86 per cent of the variation. Excluding GDP per capita does not change our results appreciably. The analysis suggests that various different indices may add relatively little new information to more basic measures of development. Regional comparisons suggest that Asia’s economic structures, as implied by the rankings, may be closer to those of Europe and North America than South America and Africa.

JEL Codes: C38, O1, O57

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