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Acknowledgments
“Racing to the Top”
was written by W. Michael Cox, senior vice president
and chief economist, and Richard Alm, economics writer,
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.The essay was inspired
by President and CEO Richard W. Fisher, who writes and
speaks frequently on globalization and its role in shaping
monetary policy. Julia K. Carter, senior economic analyst,
provided research assistance. Charlene Howell assisted
with photo research.
The authors wish to thank A.T.
Kearney Inc. for permission to use the A.T. Kearney/Foreign
Policy Globalization Index, Paul Laudicina of A.T. Kearney
for his insights into the index, and James Gwartney
and Robert Lawson, coauthors of Economic Freedom
of the World: 2005 Annual Report, for helpful comments
on the essay.
Exhibit Notes and Data Sources
Exhibit
1
Exports of goods and services and gross national income:
World Bank, World Development Indicators (WDI) database.
Foreign direct investment, outward
stock: United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD), Foreign Direct Investment database.
Portfolio investment assets (stock
measure): International Monetary Fund, International
Financial Statistics database.
International tourist arrivals:
World Tourism Organization; midyear world population,
U.S. Census Bureau.
Internet users, mobile phone subscribers,
international telephone traffic: International Telecommunication
Union.
Exhibit
2
Inflation, top seven countries by GDP, extracted using
Haver Analytics database: Bureau of Labor Statistics
(U.S.); Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications
(Japan); Statistisches Bundesamt (Germany); Institut
National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques
(France); Office for National Statistics (U.K.); Istituto
Nazionale di Statistica (Italy); and Statistics Canada.
Percentage change in consumer
prices: International Monetary Fund, International Financial
Statistics database.
Sound money scores: Economic
Freedom of the World: 2005 Annual Report (EFW),
James Gwartney and Robert Lawson, Fraser Institute,
September 2005, www.freetheworld.com. The sound money
index (category 3) is based on rate of money supply
growth, inflation variability, recent inflation and
freedom to own foreign currency.
A.T. Kearney/Foreign Policy Globalization
Index 2005, www.atkearney.com and www.ForeignPolicy.com.
Index is based on trade and foreign direct investment
flows, international travel, international telephone
traffic, cross-border remittances and personal transfers,
number of Internet users and secure servers, international
organization memberships, contributions to U.N. peacekeeping
missions, multilateral treaties, and international governmental
transfers and receipts. The Dallas Fed eliminated Croatia
and Botswana from the 62-country data set because other
indexes used for comparisons in this report do not always
include these countries.
Exhibit
3
Freedom to trade: EFW, category 4, parts A–D.
Index is based on taxes on international trade, regulatory
trade barriers, size of the trade sector relative to
its expected size, and the difference between official
and black-market exchange rates.
Capital market openness: EFW,
category 4, part E. Index is based on access to foreign
capital and restrictions on global capital transactions.
Freedom from overregulation: EFW,
category 5. Index is based on regulation of credit markets,
labor markets and regulatory obstacles for business.
Regulatory quality: World Bank
Institute, 2005 governance indicators (WBI), www.worldbank.org/wbi/governance/govdata.
Index is based on such measures of government intervention
policy as price controls, selective business protections,
barriers to starting a business, and excessive regulation
in such areas as administration and business development.
Favorable corporate taxes: Heritage
Foundation/Wall Street Journal, www.heritage.org/research/features/index/downloads.cfm.
Index is based on top marginal corporate tax rates,
a component of the 2006 fiscal burden of government
index.
Innovation policies: "National
Innovative Capacity," Michael E. Porter and Scott
Stern, www.isc.hbs.edu/Innov_9211.pdf. Index is based
on effectiveness of intellectual property protection,
a country’s ability to retain its scientists and
engineers, and the size and availability of research
and development tax credits for the private sector.
Political stability: WBI. Index
is based on stability of government’s power, vulnerability
to revolutions, internal and external conflicts and
wars, political assassinations, extremism and terrorism.
Accountability: WBI, voice and
accountability subcategory. Index is based on civil
liberties, political and human rights, government checks
and balances, and accountability of public officials.
Rule of law: WBI. Index is based
on incidence of crime, police quality, judicial effectiveness
and predictability, and contract enforceability.
Property rights: EFW, category
2. Index is based on judicial independence, impartial
courts, intellectual property protection, military interference
in the rule of law and political process, and legal
system integrity.
Government effectiveness: WBI.
Index is based on credibility and effectiveness of government
actions, consistency and stability of policy, competence
of civil servants and their independence from political
pressure, and quality of public service provision.
Anticorruption policies: Corruption
Perceptions Index, 2005, Transparency International,
www.transparency.org/surveys/index.html#cpi. Index is
based on frequency and size of bribes, misuse of public
office for personal or political gain, implementation
of anticorruption initiatives (audits and disclosures),
protections for whistleblowers and media coverage of
corruption.
Exhibit
4
Weeks of wages and labor market flexibility: 2006 Doing
Business database, World Bank Group. The Dallas Fed
calculated the flexibility index using the hiring and
firing workers subcategories, which measure cost of
hiring and firing workers, rigidity of working hours,
Social Security payments by the employer and retirement
benefits.
GDP per capita: WDI database;
International Institute for Management Development,
World Competitiveness Yearbook, 2005. GDP is adjusted
for purchasing power parity.
Exhibit
5
Government size: EFW, category 1. Index is based on
general government consumption spending as a percentage
of total consumption, government domestic redistributive
transfers and subsidies as a share of GDP, government
enterprises and investment as a share of total investment,
and top marginal income and payroll tax rate.
Transfers and subsidies: EFW,
category 1, part B. Index is based on government domestic
redistributive transfers and subsidies as a share of
GDP.
Individual income taxes: Heritage
Foundation/Wall Street Journal. Index is based on top
marginal income tax rates, a component of the fiscal
burden of government index.
Exhibit
6
World freedom index: The Dallas Fed calculated the index
using the EFW chain link index. The index measures size
of government, legal structure and property rights,
access to sound money, freedom to trade internationally,
and regulation of credit, labor and business. We estimated
missing values and weighted all values for 123 countries
by the corresponding population data.We summed each
year’s values and interpolated five-year intervals.
Gross world product per capita
(i.e., gross national income for the world), adjusted
for purchasing power parity: WDI database.
Photo Credits
www.belindalawley.com, p. 6.
AP Images, p. 13.
Photo European Parliament–Architecte:
Association des architectes du CIC: Vanden Bossche sprl,
C.R.V. s.a., CDG sprl, Studiegroep D. Bontinck, p. 14.
Yale University/The Office of
International Students and Scholars, p. 17.
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