Wednesday, 5 November 2025

Philippines climbs to 56th in global competitiveness report

Philippines climbs to 56th in global competitiveness report

Louella Desiderio 
Philstar Global 
05 November 2025 

MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines climbed five places to the 56th spot out of 69 economies in this year’s World Digital Competitiveness Ranking (WDCR) released by the International Institute for Management Development (IMD) World Competitiveness Center (WCC).


The Philippines got a score of 50.87 this year, an improvement from 45.18 last year.

Released annually, the report measures the capacity and readiness of economies to adopt digital technologies for economic transformation in business, government and the wider society.

Economies are ranked using hard data and survey responses from business and government executives.

Through the report, IMD aims to help policymakers and companies understand what drives performance and where they should focus their resources.

IMD looks at digital competitiveness through the following factors: knowledge, technology and future readiness.

In the knowledge factor, the Philippines’ ranking slid to 65th from last year’s 64th.

The report cited female researchers as the country’s strength, while artificial intelligence articles were tagged as a weak point.

Meanwhile, the Philippines moved up to 54th place from the previous year’s 56th in terms of technology.

IMD said investments in telecommunications and high-tech exports are strong areas for the Philippines in technology, but starting a business, enforcing contracts and communications technology need improvement.

When it comes to future readiness, the Philippines went up to 52nd place from the previous year’s 58th spot.

While the Philippines is strong in flexibility and adaptability and public-private partnerships, the report showed that the country needs to work on the government’s cybersecurity capacity.

Within Southeast Asia, the Philippines lagged behind its neighbors Singapore (third), Malaysia (34th), Thailand (38th) and Indonesia (51st).

Overall, Switzerland topped the list, followed by the United States and Singapore.

Amid global trade fragmentation, the report said economies need to find new strategic advantages in the digital sphere.

IMD WCC director Arturo Bris said that trade fragmentation is affecting digital competitiveness in three main ways.

In particular, it is creating winners and losers in digital infrastructure, based on investments made in building a better framework for telecommunications and use of technologies.

While talent remains mobile, Bris also said that people are not entering certain countries in the same numbers due to geopolitical instability.

“This affects digital competitiveness when domestic policies and regional instability combust into a situation where more talent is leaving the country than entering it,” he said.

Bris also cited regulatory advantages as key determinants of digital competitiveness.

“Regulatory clarification and safety enable companies and governments to incorporate the technology available as efficiently and effectively as possible,” he said noting that the European Union, US and Southeast Asia are recognizing this through certain regulatory improvements.

Tuesday, 4 November 2025

Two Filipinos land on Forbes Asia’s 2025 ‘Power Businesswomen’ list

Two Filipinos land on Forbes Asia’s 2025 ‘Power Businesswomen’ list

JON VIKTOR D. CABUENAS
GMA Integrated News
04 November 2025

Two Filipinos were included in Forbes Asia’s Power Businesswomen list 2025, joining 18 other female leaders across Asia recognized for their role in driving growth and innovation as the region’s business and economic landscape continues to rapidly evolve.


Among them is Robinsons Land Corp. president and chief executive officer Mybelle Aragon-Gobio, the first woman and non-family member to lead the property arm of the Gokongwei group.

She joined Robinsons Land in 1993 as an administrative assistant, and later moved up to lead the company’s logistics unit and residential and office projects.

Gobio in May laid out a five year P125-billion expansion plan for the company, as she aims to double net income to P25 billion by 2030, increase malls to 69 from 55, and boost the office portfolio by 50% to 1.2 million square meters of leasable space.

Also listed is Ayala Corp. managing director Mariana Zobel de Ayala, the eighth-generation leader of the company handling leasing and hospitality of the property unit Ayala Land Inc.

Zobel is leading the P17.5-billion malls redevelopment program, covering flagship developments Greenbelt 2, Glorietta, TriNoMa, Ayala Center Cebu, among others. Ayala Land in August secured a $224-million loan from the International Finance Corp. (IFC) for the development of two malls.

Ayala Malls aims to add over 700,000 square meters of gross leasable area over the next five years including Parklinks, the joint estate development with Eton Properties in Quezon City and Pasig.

“The women on this year’s Forbes Asia’s Power Businesswomen list are not just adapting to change, but actively shaping the future of the region’s business landscape,” Forbes Asia editorial director Rana Wehbe Watson said in a statement.

“Some are forging paths in hot sectors like data centers, semiconductors, and rare earths, while others are guiding their family businesses to new heights,” she added. —VAL, GMA Integrated News

Sunday, 2 November 2025

Philippines to lead Asia‘s Gen Alpha boom by 2030

Philippines to lead Asia‘s Gen Alpha boom by 2030

Louella Desiderio
Philstar Global
02 November 2025

MANILA, Philippines — The Philippines is expected to have the biggest proportion of Gen Alphas among major Asian economies by 2030, a demographic that will define future consumer trends, according to research and analysis firm BMI.


In a report, the Fitch Solutions unit said that Asia is expected to have the biggest population of Gen Alphas across all years due to its already large population.

BMI said Asia is expected to have around 935.7 million Gen Alphas or almost 50 percent of the global Gen Alpha population in 2030.

Gen Alpha refers to those born between 2010 and 2024.

Within Asia, BMI said that “the proportion of Gen Alphas will be highest in the Philippines, making up 27 percent of total population in 2030.”

This will be followed by Malaysia and Vietnam, where Gen Alpha will account for 21 percent of the population in both markets.

In contrast, Japan and South Korea are expected to have the smallest proportion of Gen Alpha consumers at 12 percent and 11 percent, respectively, due to their aging population and low birth rates.

Those part of Gen Alpha are considered digital natives as they were born in a highly digitalized world and exposed to technology at a young age.

As the generation becomes increasingly integrated into the consumer market, BMI said that consumer trends would be in line with Gen Alphas’ preferences.

“Parents of Gen Alphas are predominantly millennials and older Gen Zs, whose spending habits and attitudes will set the foundation of how Gen Alpha evolve into the market,” BMI said.

At present, Gen Alpha accounts for 24 percent or two billion of the world’s total population of around 8.3 billion.

BMI said Gen Alpha is expected to remain at the two billion mark until 2050 due to the growing share of other generational cohorts such as Generation Beta (2025 to 2039) and Gamma (2040 to 2054) to the total population.