Business Mirror
January 18, 2006
IFC: Doing biz in RP very difficult
By David L. Llorito
Research Head
THE
The most business-friendly countries, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) said, is New Zealand -ranked number 1-followed by Singapore , United States , Canada , Norway , Australia , Hong Kong , Denmark , United Kingdom , and Japan . Among Asian countries,
The International Finance Corporation, the investment arm of the World Bank that celebrated its 50th anniversary Tuesday, provides loans, risk management services and structured finance products to developing countries worldwide.
In ranking countries, the IFC and the World Bank used 10 variables: the ease of starting a business, ease of dealing with licenses, ease of hiring and firing, ease of registering property, ease of getting credit, ease of protecting investors, ease of paying taxes, ease of trading, ease of enforcing contracts and ease of closing a business.
"[A] high ranking on the ease of doing business does mean that the government has created a regulatory environment conducive to the operation of business," said IFC and the World Bank in its report titled "Doing Business in 2006: Creating Jobs."
The report said: "Often, improvements on the Doing Business indicators proxy for broader reforms to laws and institutions which affect more than the administrative procedures and time and cost of complying with business regulations."
For ranking 113, the Philippines shares the poor status with Mozambique (ranked 110), Bolivia (111), Honduras (112), Iraq (114), Indonesia (115), India (116), and Albania (117), Croatia (118), Brazil (119) and Venezuela (120).
The WB-IFC report clarified that a high ranking in the Doing Business Index does not mean that countries like
or no regulation.
"All the top-ranking countries regulate businesses, but they do so in less costly and burdensome ways," said the WB-IFC report.
Nordic countries like Norway (ranked 5), Denmark (8), Iceland (12), Finland (13) and Sweden (14) do have regulations, but these regulations are simple, thus allowing businesses to be productive by focusing government intervention where it counts-protecting property rights and providing social services.
The IFC-WB report complains of the
"Entrepreneurs can expect to go through 11 steps to launch a business over 48 days on average, at a cost equal to 20.3 percent of gross national income (GNI) per capita," said the report. "They must deposit at least 2.0 percent of GNI per capita in a bank to obtain a business registration number."
The same report said that in
Undoing these bureaucratic tangles and unreasonable regulations, the IFC-WB report said, is necessary for the economy to grow faster and create more jobs.
"An increasing number of those jobs will be in the formal economy because of the benefits of being formal (such as easier access to credit and better utility services) often outweigh the costs (such as taxes)," the report said. "And more formal jobs will mean that more workers are protected by pensions, safety regulations, and health benefits."
The report has noted that in complying with licensing and permit requirements alone would take 23 steps and 197 days to complete the process at a cost equivalent to 121 percent of income per capita. For the same activity in
"In
Even the procedures involved in simply paying taxes-where people give money to the government-have been described as more difficult in the
"The effective tax that a medium size company in the
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