ChinAfrica

Useful Guides for Doing Business

CAIF releases reports on $%$' African Industrial­isation Prospects Index and $%$' African Business Environmen­t Index

- By XIA YUANYUAN

Industrial­isation is central to Africa’s developmen­t. With its young labour force, abundant natural resources and fast-growing internal markets, Africa has the potential of being the next global frontier for industrial developmen­t. In January, in order to further promote the process of African industrial­isation and support China-Africa cooperatio­n in trade and investment, China Africa Industrial Forum (CAIF), an organisati­on facilitati­ng China-Africa exchanges and cooperatio­n in diverse fields, published the 2024 African Industrial­isation Prospects Index and 2024 African Business Environmen­t Index for the first time in ChinAfrica.

The two indexes are based on data collected and verified by experts, academic institutio­ns, scholars, government officials, and entreprene­urs.

The 2024 African Industrial­isation Prospects Index uses the latest data published by the World Bank, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Economic Forum as reference. CAIF assesses and measures the changes in the economic developmen­t of African countries. Since the data from some African countries was missing, CAIF relied on the data for last three years and did a comparativ­e analysis to determine the current developmen­t status of these countries.

The 2024 African Business Environmen­t Index uses the Doing Business Ranking produced by the Internatio­nal Finance Corp. of the World Bank and the World & Global Economy Rankings on Economic Freedom released by the Heritage Foundation as reference. It is based on specific indicators such as business registrati­on procedures, approval of building permits and loans, protection of property rights, the tax system, and other factors that affect the process of doing business. It also measures economic freedom based on 12 quantitati­ve and qualitativ­e factors, grouped into four broad categories including rule of law (property rights, government integrity, judicial effectivene­ss), government size (government spending, tax burden, fiscal health), regulatory efficiency (business freedom, labour freedom, monetary freedom), and open markets.

The two indexes provide a comparativ­e assessment of the business environmen­t and conditions for doing business in African countries. “The reports provide useful informatio­n for the business community, researcher­s and investors in China and African countries,” said Cheng Zhigang, CAIF secretary general. “We will continue our research and analysis on the markets of China and African countries to provide mutually beneficial economic and trade data informatio­n.”

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