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      • The latest edition of the EF EPI, English Proficiency Index, found that for economies around the world, higher English proficiency correlates with higher gross domestic product, higher net income, and higher productivity. To be clear, there’s no evidence that English proficiency drives this economic success.
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  2. Mar 16, 2017 · Mar 16, 2017. This article is published in collaboration with the Harvard Business Review. Data suggests that countries who speak English see economic benefits. Image: REUTERS/Hannah McKay. Billions of people around the globe are desperately trying to learn English—not simply for self-improvement, but as an economic necessity.

  3. Jan 18, 2022 · English accounts for 60 percent of world internet content and is the lingua franca of pop culture and the global economy. All 100 of the world’s most influential science...

  4. Feb 26, 2024 · The dominance of English in the 21st century has exerted a profound influence on the global economic landscape, political configurations, and cultural systems of nations...

  5. UK economy. Research shows how a good command of English can not only enhance an individuals economic prospects but also contribute to national growth and competitiveness. In a 2012 survey by the Economist Intelligence Unit, nearly 70 per cent of executives said their workforce will need to master English to realise corporate expansion

  6. Dec 16, 2021 · Senior writer: Kathryn O'Neill. In 14.009 (Economics and Society's Greatest Problems), a first-year class taught by Nobel laureates, MIT students discover the power of economics to help solve major societal problems.

  7. The latest edition of the EF EPI, English Proficiency Index, found that for economies around the world, higher English proficiency correlates with higher gross domestic product, higher net income, and higher productivity. To be clear, there’s no evidence that English proficiency drives this economic success.

  8. Growth in Economic Perspective. Michael Reksulak,* William F. Shughart II,f and Robert D. Tollison+. This article examines systematically the growth of the English language from the year 252 cE through 1985.

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