Business Standard

Gujarat most competitiv­e state, finds NCAER study

- ISHAN BAKSHI New Delhi, 18 July

Gujarat, Delhi, Andhra Pradesh, Haryana, Telangana and Tamil Nadu are the top six states in India for business investment potential, finds a new study by the National Council for Applied Economic Research (NCAER).

The study, which estimates statewise investment potential, ranks their competitiv­eness on six pillars, namely — land, labour, infrastruc­ture, economic climate, political stability and governance, and business perception.

Among these six states, Haryana and Telangana have made the most gains on the index over the past year, moving up 12 and 8 spots, respective­ly. On the other hand, West Bengal, Chhattisga­rh, Rajasthan and Uttarakhan­d have fallen the most, finds the study.

Despite West Bengal ranks last on the index, followed by Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, these states do fare better on sub-indices. Bihar, for example, does better on labour; Uttar Pradesh on land and West Bengal on economic climate.

Surprising­ly, economic power house Maharashtr­a ranks eighth on the index, down three ranks from last year. Karnataka, the start-up hub, ranks ninth on the index. Delhi fares poorly on governance and political stability.

“On the infrastruc­ture pillar, Maharashtr­a, Karnataka and Odisha moved closer to the frontier, while Uttarakhan­d and Assam moved further away. West Bengal made the most gains on the economic climate and governance pillars, while Telangana, Punjab, Haryana and Kerala made significan­t gains under the perception pillar,” says the report.

While corruption continues to be a sore area for businesses, the report finds perception­s of corruption seem to be improving, indicating change. The percentage of respondent­s citing corruption as a constraint for conducting business has fallen from 79 per cent in 2016 to 57 per cent in 2017.

Getting approvals also continue to be a constraint. But, an improvemen­t is seen on this parameter, too, with the percentage of firms reporting it as a constraint having fallen from 72 per cent to 53 per cent.

“The 2017 N-SIPI perception survey shows that the availabili­ty and quality of skilled labour, access to finance and tax policy are the other major issues of concern to businesses,” the report adds.

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