Singapore has returned to first place in the 2026 IMD World Competitiveness Ranking, rebounding from second place in 2025, displacing Switzerland at the top of the global leaderboard.
The annual index of 70 economies was published on 18 June by the Institute for Management Development (IMD), a Lausanne-headquartered, independent business school with hubs in Singapore, Shenzhen, and Cape Town.
The ranking is based on 92 survey questions and 172 pieces of data drawn from measurements of four factors: government efficiency, infrastructure, economic performance, and business efficiency.
Singapore, which last held the top spot in 2024, regained its position on the back of a seven-place jump to emerge at the top globally in business efficiency.
In the economic performance metric, it fell two positions to third place, but held steady to rank third for government efficiency; it gained one place to emerge fifth for infrastructure.
In a statement accompanying the ranking, IMD said that competitiveness is “no longer primarily a contest of cost, scale, or even of innovation, but one of institutional credibility”.
“The more fragmented the world becomes, the more valuable are predictable rules, enforceable commitments, and legitimate state capacity,” it added.
OCBC chief economist Selena Ling said that such geo-economic fragmentation and polarisation “play to Singapore’s strength as a neutral, pro-business, strong governance, institutional capability, and safe-haven status”.
“Retaking the pole position is a testament to Singapore’s open and nimble economic model,” she said.
“Strategy and adaptability remains an immense advantage; in fact, IMD cites Singapore’s ‘adaptive capacity to course-correct efficiently’ as an important competitive asset.”