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The EIU(Economist Intelligence Unit) study explores the proficiency of countries in six categories: overall business environment, IT infrastructure, human capital, R&D environment, legal environment, and support for IT industry development.
The U.S. is No. 1 in all but two of those categories: IT infrastructure, where Switzerland is ranked first and the U.S. ninth, and legal environment, where the U.S. is second to Australia.

Among the other leaders in IT infrastructure are Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Australia; in human capital, China, Australia,
South Korea, and the U.K.; in R&D environment, Israel, Taiwan, Finland, and Singapore; in legal environment, the Netherlands, Germany,
and Denmark; and in support for IT industry development, Canada, Ireland, Singapore, and Norway.

While countries move up and down the overall ranking in each successive IT Industry Competitive Index, the top 20 countries have been relatively stable since the study's inception in 2007 "because of the solid competitive foundations they have built up through years of investment," according to the report. Notes Prof. David Hsu of the Wharton Business School in one of the interviews the EIU conducted for the report: "Advantage begets advantage."

Only France and Belgium have fallen out of the top 20 since 2007, replaced by Austria and Hong Kong, says Robert Holleyman, CEO of the Business Software Alliance, a multinational IT industry group that commissions the EIU study. "There are no shortcuts to IT innovation," Holleyman said in an interview.

Unchanged from the 2009 report is the overall No. 1 ranking of the U.S. and No. 2 ranking of Finland, though the U.S. earned 1.6 more points to score an 80.5 while Finland dropped 1.6 points to 72. Rounding out the top 10 in the index are Singapore, up six positions; Sweden, down one; the U.K., up one; Denmark, up two; Canada, down three; Ireland, up three; Australia, down one; and the Netherlands, down five.

The most upwardly competitive countries are Malaysia, rising 11 spots to No. 31; India, up 10 to No. 34; and Singapore, up six to No. 3. The report attributes India's rise to its advances in human capital (plentiful, highly skilled and educated workers) and R&D (such factors as IT patent generation and private R&D spending). Malaysia gets higher marks for R&D, especially its patents, while Singapore's gains came across the board.

The biggest decliners in the index are three former Soviet republics: Lithuania, down 10 spots to No. 41; Russia, down eight spots to No. 46; and Kazakhstan, down six to No. 60. Russia and Lithuania get dinged for their intemperate R&D climates.

Details: http://globalindex11.bsa.org

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