World Bank:
Singapore
and Hong Kong rank the world's best places to run a business, while mainland
China remains far down the list, according to the World Bank's annual
competitiveness survey Tuesday.
The Southeast Asian entrepots and
finance centers topped the survey for the eighth straight year, with
The lower ranks of the 189-country list was populated with
African countries like
But
a rising African country,
China,
which was furious to receive a ranking of 91 last year and has pressured the
World Bank to drop the 11-year-old study, fell five notches this year to 96th
place and was leapfrogged by Russia.
The
"Doing Business 2014" report said many countries are making it
easier for people to start and run a local business, with low-income
economies moving more quickly than larger ones to improve.
"Regulation
is a reality from the beginning of a firm's life to the end," the report
says. "Navigating it can be complex and costly."
But
in many areas, it added, "there has been remarkable progress in removing
some of the biggest bureaucratic obstacles to private sector activity."
The
rankings focus on what a small or medium-sized business faces in its home
country, as opposed to how a multinational giant would fare in the same
environment.
The
data was based on surveys of more than 10,000 professionals, mostly people
who routinely help administer or give advice on legal and regulatory issues
in a country.
The
countries are scored on a range of issues, from how many days and procedures
does it take to start a business, to the length of time to get a power
hookup, to the ease of credit and the cost of exporting or importing a
container.
Countries
credited with progressing the most in the past five years include
It
scored particularly poorly on the challenges of starting a business, dealing
with construction permits, making tax payments and protecting investors.
Even
in trade, the mainstay of the world's second largest economy, it ranked only
74 on the list.
Last
year
Bin
But
Kim tied the issues the report raises to the Bank's campaign to end poverty.
"It
is indisputable that 'Doing Business' has been an important catalyst in
driving reforms around the world," he argued.
Augusto
Lopez-Claros, Director of Global Indicators and Analysis at the Bank, called
support for the study "overwhelming".
"The
reason why the World Bank has decided to keep the aggregate ranking is, most
importantly, that they still gives you a sense of the best practices in the
world.
"Countries
find that very useful."
But
others criticized the study's methodology, pointing out hard-to-justify
conclusions.
For
instance, in how hard it is for a company to get an electricity hookup,
And
under "protection for investors," underdeveloped
"It
is an extremely low-quality report," one World Bank source said.
"They rank things that have nothing to do with each other. It's no
longer economics."
AFP
|
Thứ Hai, 28 tháng 10, 2013
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