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Saturday, 2 May 2026

Saturday, May 02, 2026

Top 20 Best Countries for Business Development by 2035

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By Andrii Azarov (Andrew Azarov) — Professor of Business, Economics, and the Applied Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Development of Business Process Automation Software Systems. International Business Academy Consortium (United Kingdom).

Introduction

The most important strategic question for any serious entrepreneur is no longer simply, “Where can I register a company?” It is far more profound: “Where can I build a company that can survive, scale, attract capital, hire talent, win trust, and grow across borders?”[cite: 1]

In today’s world, entrepreneurship is no longer shaped only by tax rates or the speed of company registration. It is shaped by a much broader architecture: innovation capacity, legal certainty, digital infrastructure, funding access, openness to talent, and a country’s ability to integrate founders into wider systems of growth. In other words, the strongest entrepreneurial ecosystems are not just places where businesses are born; they are places where businesses can mature into institutions.

This article therefore does not present a simplistic ranking. It offers a strategic map of twenty leading countries whose ecosystems deserve serious attention from founders, investors, students, policymakers, and business educators. Each of these countries is strong for different reasons. Some offer access to capital. Some offer operational simplicity. Some offer extraordinary research depth. Others offer scale, geographic reach, or a uniquely favourable environment for international business.

The real lesson is simple: there is no single universal “best” country for entrepreneurship. There are only countries that are best aligned with particular ambitions.

1. Singapore 🇸🇬

Singapore remains one of the most compelling all-round entrepreneurial ecosystems in the world. It combines administrative efficiency, policy stability, world-class infrastructure, strong institutional trust, and a highly international business culture. It is especially attractive for founders building regional headquarters, fintech ventures, trade-linked companies, professional services platforms, and internationally scalable digital businesses.

2. United States 🇺🇸

The United States remains the most powerful entrepreneurial arena in the world for those aiming at scale. No other country combines such extraordinary market depth, venture capital concentration, research power, and global commercial influence. For founders in AI, biotechnology, software, deep tech, aerospace, enterprise solutions, and advanced manufacturing, America still represents the ultimate test ground.

3. United Kingdom 🇬🇧

The United Kingdom remains one of the world’s most strategically valuable ecosystems for entrepreneurs whose businesses depend on trust, legal credibility, international contracts, premium services, finance, media, consulting, education, and franchising. Britain’s true strength is not cost efficiency, but reputation and institutional quality.

4. United Arab Emirates 🇦🇪

The UAE has become one of the most strategically useful business ecosystems in the modern world. It offers a remarkable combination of international openness, logistical sophistication, tax efficiency, mobility, and access to markets across Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. It is especially strong for holding companies, investment vehicles, premium services, international trading structures, media projects, global consultancies, and event-driven businesses.

5. Switzerland 🇨🇭

Switzerland remains one of the world’s most sophisticated environments for entrepreneurship, particularly in high-value innovation. It is exceptionally strong in pharmaceuticals, life sciences, precision engineering, medtech, fintech, and advanced research-driven enterprise. The Swiss system is built on quality, stability, and trust.

6. Sweden 🇸🇪

Sweden continues to stand out as one of the most innovation-friendly countries in Europe. It has a strong public commitment to research, a highly educated population, and a business culture that consistently produces globally relevant companies. Stockholm has become one of Europe’s most admired startup cities, particularly in fintech, SaaS, climate technology, design-led innovation, and scalable digital products.

7. Canada 🇨🇦

Canada offers one of the most balanced and liveable entrepreneurial environments in the developed world. It is particularly attractive to founders who value predictability, research support, talent access, and a strong English-speaking business culture, while also wanting North American market access without launching directly in the United States.

8. Netherlands 🇳🇱

The Netherlands remains one of Europe’s most internationally minded entrepreneurial ecosystems. Amsterdam is a key hub for technology, creativity, digital commerce, logistics, and internationally mobile talent. The Dutch business environment is admired for its practicality, connectivity, and strong access to wider European markets.

9. Estonia 🇪🇪

Estonia has become an iconic entrepreneurial ecosystem because it reimagined what a digital state can be. Its e-Residency programme, streamlined administration, and highly digital corporate environment have made it especially attractive to founders running remote, international, or location-flexible businesses.

10. Germany 🇩🇪

Germany remains one of Europe’s most important entrepreneurial ecosystems because of its industrial strength, technical education, engineering culture, and research depth. It is particularly strong in industrial technology, automation, manufacturing innovation, climate technology, enterprise tools, mobility, and science-based startups.

11. Denmark 🇩🇰

Denmark is one of the highest-quality entrepreneurial ecosystems in the world, particularly for founders interested in sustainability, climate solutions, health innovation, design, and advanced business services. Its ecosystem combines trust, institutional reliability, transparency, and strong support for innovation.

12. Finland 🇫🇮

Finland is often underestimated, but it remains one of Europe’s strongest environments for technical entrepreneurship. It is particularly well suited to deep tech, software development, industrial R&D, education technology, gaming, and science-driven innovation. The Finnish ecosystem is shaped by seriousness, technical competence, and a culture that values substance over noise.

13. South Korea 🇰🇷

South Korea is one of Asia’s most dynamic technology-driven entrepreneurial ecosystems. It excels in electronics, semiconductors, robotics, AI, biotech, gaming, and export-oriented innovation. Seoul is a fast-moving, ambitious, and highly sophisticated startup environment.

14. Japan 🇯🇵

Japan remains one of the world’s most important but often underappreciated entrepreneurial environments. It is especially strong in robotics, precision manufacturing, healthcare innovation, automation, mobility, and industrial technologies. The Japanese ecosystem rewards quality, continuity, and technical mastery.

15. India 🇮🇳

India is no longer simply an emerging opportunity. It is already one of the defining entrepreneurial theatres of the modern world. Its strengths are scale, digital public infrastructure, cost efficiency, talent, and a rapidly expanding market. It has become especially important in fintech, e-commerce, edtech, SaaS, digital infrastructure, and platform-based business models.

16. France 🇫🇷

France has emerged as one of Europe’s most serious entrepreneurial ecosystems, particularly in deep tech, industrial innovation, sustainability, and scale-up support. Paris has grown significantly as a startup city, and national institutions such as Bpifrance have given France a strong public backbone for entrepreneurial financing and development.

17. Australia 🇦🇺

Australia offers a stable, credible, and internationally connected entrepreneurial ecosystem. It is especially strong in agritech, medtech, mining technology, clean technology, digital services, and innovation linked to applied science. It combines strong rule of law, English-language business, and a supportive innovation environment.

18. Israel 🇮🇱

Israel remains one of the most remarkable innovation ecosystems in the world. It is especially strong in cybersecurity, defence-related technologies, semiconductors, software, applied AI, health innovation, and deep tech. Its entrepreneurial culture is famously intense, problem-solving-oriented, and innovation-driven.

19. Poland 🇵🇱

Poland has become one of the most interesting entrepreneurial ecosystems in Central Europe. It offers access to the European Union, relatively competitive operating costs, a growing innovation infrastructure, and increasing relevance for startups and international businesses seeking a strategic foothold inside Europe.

20. New Zealand 🇳🇿

New Zealand is often overlooked because of its size, but it remains a highly credible and innovation-friendly ecosystem, particularly for agritech, clean technology, digital services, food innovation, research-based ventures, and globally minded niche businesses. It combines institutional trust, government support, and a strong culture of practical entrepreneurship.

How to Read This Global Map Properly

The greatest mistake a founder can make is to ask, “Which country is number one?” The more intelligent question is: “Which country is number one for the kind of company I want to build?”

If you need the most powerful venture and scale environment, the United States remains exceptional.

If you need an elegant, globally connected all-round business base, Singapore and the UAE are especially strong.

If you need trust, prestige, contracts, and premium services architecture, the United Kingdom remains highly strategic.

If you need digital simplicity, Estonia stands apart.

If you need industrial and technical depth, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Switzerland, Sweden, and Finland are all highly compelling.

If you need market scale and fast-growing demand, India changes the equation.

If you want an intelligent European base, the Netherlands, France, Denmark, and Poland each deserve close study.

Entrepreneurial ecosystems do not build great companies by themselves. But they shape the conditions in which great companies become possible. They influence access to capital, talent, confidence, legal clarity, and long-term survival. In a fragmented and competitive world, the founder who chooses the right ecosystem is already ahead before the first real battle begins.

Final Conclusion

The map of entrepreneurship is no longer defined by one centre of gravity. It is now a network of different strengths. Some countries dominate through finance. Others through technology. Others through digital administration, market scale, or innovation systems. The best founders understand that launching a business is not just an act of registration — it is an act of positioning.

And in that sense, the most important entrepreneurial decision may come even before the product is launched: choosing the right ecosystem in which to build the future.



Saturday, May 02, 2026

GLOBAL BUSINESS WEEK 2026 will be held in Davos

Every year, leading entrepreneurs from five continents who are interested in developing business connections, studying and supporting innovation, establishing new trade missions, and shaping a global business civilisation gather at GLOBAL BUSINESS WEEK — an international platform for a series of business forums and strategic corporate retreats.

Friday, 1 May 2026

Friday, May 01, 2026

Secret of German Economy

Germany is often described through the language of engineering, exports, and industrial discipline. But beneath those familiar labels lies something even more distinctive: a deeply rooted culture of family business. In Germany, family firms are not a niche or a romantic leftover from an earlier era. They are the core of the economy. 

Depending on the definition used, family-owned or family-controlled companies account for roughly 86–90 percent of all German businesses. They employ about 54 percent of the national workforce, and under a broader “family-controlled” definition they account for around 58 percent of jobs subject to social-security contributions. In revenue terms, they generate about 43–46 percent of total business turnover.

One important methodological note is that Germany does not have a single universally cited “official” statistic for the exact share of national GDP produced by family businesses alone. German research institutes and family-business foundations more often publish turnover, employment, and ownership figures than a direct GDP share. So the best careful formulation is this: family businesses produce around 43–46 percent of aggregate business revenues in Germany, while the broader Mittelstand sector—much of it family-run—accounts for more than half of the country’s economic output and nearly 60 percent of jobs.

Friday, May 01, 2026

Women's Diplomacy: World Woman Forum will be held in Davos, 9-12 July 2026

WORLD WOMAN FORUM 2026 will take place in the unique environment of the Davos Congress Centre in Switzerland, a venue globally recognised as the home of the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting and one of the world’s symbolic spaces for international dialogue, strategic thinking and the future of business and society, according to the Davos Congress Centre.

The Forum is designed as an international platform dedicated to women’s leadership, entrepreneurship, innovation, education, family business, social impact and global cooperation. It will bring together women leaders, entrepreneurs, investors, executives, educators, public figures and changemakers from different countries to exchange ideas, build partnerships and strengthen the role of women in the global economy.
The deeper purpose of the Forum is even more important: women are not only invited to attend, but are given a voice, a stage and the opportunity to shape the global agenda.

The Forum will be opened by Dr Christina Batruch, daughter of Bohdan Hawrylyshyn, co-founder and first Director of the World Economic Forum. This year marks the 100th anniversary of his birth, making the opening of the Forum especially symbolic and historically meaningful.

Friday, May 01, 2026

Startup World Cup Championship 2026: Davos to Host the Next Generation of Global Entrepreneurs

From 9 to 12 July 2026, Davos, Switzerland, will become a meeting point for a new kind of global leadership: young founders, visionary educators, business angels, investors, diplomats, trade representatives, policymakers, and innovation leaders. The 26th Startup World Cup Championship 2026 will gather some of the world’s most forward-looking entrepreneurial and intellectual communities to evaluate youth-led startups and select the best projects of the year as World Champions 2026.

The Championship is part of a broader international movement dedicated to practical entrepreneurship education, innovation, and business diplomacy. According to the official Davos event listing, the Startup World Cup Championship brings together young and mature entrepreneurs, inventors, investors, entrepreneurs, and government representatives from more than 35 countries, with projects assessed by an international jury across innovation, feasibility, scalability, and business potential. (davos.ch)

The 2026 competition will involve 35 educational partners from different countries, stretching across continents — from the United Kingdom to Australia, from the United States to Azerbaijan, from Ukraine to Taiwan, from Lithuania to Turkmenistan, from Switzerland to Kazakhstan, from South Africa to Germany, from the UAE to Iraq, and from the Philippines to Thailand. This geography reflects the Championship’s central idea: startup culture is no longer limited to Silicon Valley or major financial capitals. It is becoming a global educational language.

A New Era of Young Entrepreneurs

Friday, May 01, 2026

UAE Leaves OPEC: Scenario № 1 or 2?


The announced withdrawal of the United Arab Emirates from OPEC and OPEC+ is more than a technical change in an oil producers’ club. It is a geopolitical signal, a market shock, and a challenge to the old architecture of energy coordination. According to Reuters, the UAE announced on 28 April 2026 that it would leave OPEC and OPEC+ effective 1 May 2026, marking a major shift for one of the group’s most important Gulf producers. (Reuters)

For decades, OPEC’s power was built not only on barrels, but on the image of unity. The organisation has always had internal disagreements: between price hawks and volume maximisers, between Saudi Arabia and other Gulf producers, between sanctioned and non-sanctioned states, and between political rivals inside the same cartel. Yet OPEC’s public message was usually the same: discipline, coordination and market stability. The UAE’s exit breaks that image.

Why the UAE Matters