Singapore Leaps Ahead While America Stumbles
For the first time ever, Singapore has knocked Switzerland off its perch to claim the number one spot in the 2025 Global Talent Competitiveness Index. The city-state's rise to the top reflects its robust education infrastructure, effective governance, and particularly its forward-thinking approach to building an AI-ready workforce that can adapt to rapid technological change.
The index, produced by business school INSEAD in partnership with the Portulans Institute, evaluates how well countries grow, attract, and retain talent across all income levels. This year's edition, themed "resilience in the age of disruption," ranked 135 economies using 77 indicators spanning six pillars, including measurements of soft skills and AI talent concentration.
America's Talent Troubles
Meanwhile, the U.S. is heading in the opposite direction. After holding third place in 2023, America tumbled to ninth in the latest rankings, marking its worst performance since 2013. The report shows the U.S. still scores well on talent development and support, but small declines in "openness and lifelong learning" dragged the country down.
The ranking shift mirrors deeper changes happening on the ground. Traditional entry-level corporate roles are either vanishing or transforming so quickly that college graduates are struggling to find their footing. Some Gen Z workers have responded by skipping conventional career paths entirely, instead pursuing roles directly serving the ultra-wealthy. And despite record corporate profits, AI-driven layoffs continue hitting high-skilled positions.
The H-1B Debate Heats Up
The talent question has become politically charged. President Donald Trump recently jumped into the H-1B visa debate, telling Fox News' Laura Ingraham that while foreign workers can impact U.S. wages, the country needs to import specialized talent because "we don't have certain talents" domestically. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent later clarified that H-1B visas should bring in skilled foreign specialists for short-term training of American workers, not as permanent replacements.
The bigger picture? Countries like Singapore are building talent pipelines for the AI era, while the U.S. grapples with both skill gaps and political debates about how to fill them.