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Conference looks to raise VN's ease-of-doing-business ranking
HA NOI (VNS) - Viet Nam is
seeking to improve its business environment, which has also been recognised
by the Government as a vital task for ensuring economic growth and
competitiveness in the economy.
As part of the effort, the Central Institute for
Economic Management (CIEM) and the United States Agency for International Development
(USAID) jointly held a conference yesterday to discuss measures to implement
the Government's Resolution and enhance the country's ease of doing business
index, which is ranked by the World Bank.
The Resolution, issued in March 2014, aims to
improve the business environment and competitiveness of Viet Nam by reducing
costs, time and risks involved in doing business in the country.
At a Government meeting earlier this month, Prime
Minister Nguyen Tan Dung expressed the Government's determination for
improving the country's business climate, saying that it is critical for
socio-economic development and has become an urgent task for Viet Nam amidst
rapid global integration.
Dung said ministries must come up with detailed
measures aimed at administrative reform, including tax, customs and power
access, and create a breakthrough in the business climate within this year.
Nguyen Dinh Cung, head of CIEM, said the
institute is working with the business community and associations to figure
out solutions for challenges that will hit Viet Nam while improving the
business environment and enhancing competitiveness. He said the framework of
USAID's Government for Inclusive Growth project has offered opportunities to
Vietnamese policy-makers for learning from international experiences in
improving business climate.
During the six-day conference, discussions will
be carried out about the 10 topics covered in the World Bank's "Doing
Business" report.
These include getting electricity, trading across
borders, enforcing contracts, registering property, getting credit, dealing
with construction permits, resolving insolvency, protecting minority
investors, starting a business and labour market regulation.
The World Bank's experts said Viet Nam needs to
target a roadmap for reducing administrative procedures and cutting costs for
businesses. The latest "Doing Business" report by the World Bank
announced last October ranked Viet Nam 72nd among 189 countries in terms of
ease of doing business.
The Government expects the ease of doing business
index to reach the average level of the ASEAN-6 (Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia,
Philippines, Singapore and Thailand) by the end of this year and of the
ASEAN-4 (Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Philippines) by 2016. - VNS
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Thứ Sáu, 13 tháng 3, 2015
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