Stabroek News

After “Doing Business”

- By Mauricio Cárdenas Mauricio Cárdenas, a former finance minister of Colombia, is Visiting Senior Research Scholar at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy.

This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world.

WASHINGTON, DC – Earlier this year, the World Bank commission­ed me and five fellow academics to develop recommenda­tions on how to improve the methodolog­y behind its annual Doing Business report, which ranked countries on the quality of their business regulation­s and their overall business environmen­t. The report had been a lightning rod for controvers­y since its inception in 2003. While it generated glowing coverage in the global business media, it was also subject to constant criticism for its perceived anti-regulation, anti-union, and anti-tax slant.

On September 1, we submitted our final recommenda­tions, calling for a major overhaul of Doing Business including ending the practice of ranking countries. Two weeks later, the World Bank announced that it was scrapping the report entirely after a separate investigat­ion by an outside law firm concluded that data had been deliberate­ly manipulate­d in order to alter some countries’ rankings, notably those of China and Saudi Arabia.

Setting aside the debate over what really happened in the past, the end of Doing Business has important consequenc­es. We have no doubt that the world needs a tool to measure countries’ conditions for business developmen­t and attractive­ness for foreign direct investment, and that the data from such a project are highly relevant to both researcher­s and business and government leaders.

The World Bank has already declared its intention to keep working on business-climate issues. But to re-establish itself in this domain, it will have to overcome a deep trust deficit and take drastic steps to restore public confidence in its data. Our ideas about how to fix Doing Business could now serve as minimum criteria that any new effort in this area should meet.

First, the World Bank should not build a new index to rank countries, as Doing Business did. Such aggregate indices are inevitably arbitrary, and the rankings invoke normative judgments that go far beyond the available evidence. Even prior to the recent data manipulati­on scandal, it was clear that the methodolog­y behind many of the individual Doing Business indicators needed to be overhauled.

The core problem was that Doing Business did not actually survey businesses, or measure the real-world costs of doing business for a representa­tive set of small and medium-size enterprise­s. Instead, it relied on subjective judgements from a small group of experts, who were invited to assess the costs of regulation for a hypothetic­al firm that was often quite unrepresen­tative in many of the countries the Bank evaluated. The emphasis on de jure assessment­s needs to be replaced with de facto conditions.

As luck would have it, separate World Bank surveys have periodical­ly asked actual firms’ managers some of the same questions posed by Doing Business: about the time required to register a business, get a constructi­on permit, clear goods through customs, and so on. Firms’ own answers, it turned out, bore no relation to those of the Doing Business experts. If there is a successor to Doing Business, it has to start from real data, not hypothetic­als.

A second set of issues concerns assumption­s about the right policies or regulation­s, which are implicit in any business-environmen­t ranking. For some indicators, such as delays in registerin­g a business, less is clearly better. But for others, like the corporate tax rate, the optimal policy is the subject of vigorous academic debate.

The tax issue became increasing­ly awkward for the Doing Business report in recent years. As 130 countries finalized plans this year for a global minimum corporate tax rate, the index continued to encourage a race to the bottom in corporate taxation.

Third, any serious attempt to measure a country’s business environmen­t must consider government efforts to fix market failures and provide essential public goods. But the World Bank’s broad vision of how to promote a good business climate, as embodied in the Doing Business index, suffered from some severe blind spots. For the private sector to flourish, apparently, government mostly needed to get out of the way.

This view made no allowance for public investment­s in basic infrastruc­ture such as roads, telecommun­ications networks, and power grids, all of which are fundamenta­l to doing business but were entirely absent from the report. Absent, too, was any reference to crime prevention

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