The Asian Age

India jumps 14 places in ease of doing biz

■ The country now ranks 63 on the World Bank index

- MADHUSUDAN SAHOO FC BUREAU

India has moved up 14 notches to the 63rd spot in the World Bank’s ease-ofdoing-business global rankings 2019, released on Thursday. India figured among the world’s top 10 most improved countries for the third consecutiv­e year on the back of faster bankruptcy resolution and issuance of constructi­on permits.

The improved rankings are expected to facilitate higher foreign investment into the country to pace up growth at a time when the Reserve Bank of India, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank have slashed India’s economic growth forecast for 2019-20.

India also ranked Number One in South Asia. India went up ahead by 23 and 30 places, respective­ly, in the past two years.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said that besides implementa­tion of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, efforts would be made to simplify Goods and Services Tax for further improving India’s ranking in the index. “In the next ranking, the World Bank will include the business climate in Kolkata and Bengaluru as well. Currently, it takes into account only Delhi and Mumbai,” she said.

The report, however, said the challenges India is facing would continue. “The

In a move to improve India’s ranking in the World Bank’s ease of doing business index, the government is likely to further simplify Goods and Services Tax (GST). Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday said that efforts would be made to further the simplify GST system.

Sitharaman said effort would also be now to achieve the target to reaching within top 50 rank.

“In GST, it is an ongoing process to understand where the difficulti­es

country needed to do more in areas such as enforcing contracts and registerin­g property where India ranks a dismal 163rd and 154th globally. Also, in the most fundamenta­l of them all--ease of starting a business–India’s rank rose by just a single place in the latest report,” the World Bank noted.

Industry bodies said the jump in India’s ranking is a testimony to the remarkable improvemen­t in the country's business climate owing to the series of reforms undertaken by the Narendra Modi-led government.

Nirmala Sitharaman

are. We are also looking at what were the glitches in using online filing of returns. So, GST is an ongoing process in improving. Even now for the next meeting, as and when it happens, we want to make sure that several steps are taken to simplify compliance,” she said.

The report said India had broken into the club of 100 easiest nations to conduct business two years ago when it managed to jump 30 spots from the 130th position. “The World Bank has named India as one of the economies with the most notable improvemen­t for the third year in a row, along with Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, and neighborin­g Pakistan and China,” it said.

As far as resolving insolvency is concerned, the country had the best performanc­e in ‘Resolving

Insolvency’ where it jumped by 56 places to become the 52nd easiest place in addressing bankruptcy. Streamline­d procedures allowed by the implementa­tion of the IBC are largely to thank for this.

“Since its implementa­tion, more than 2,000 companies have used the new law. Of these, about 470 have commenced liquidatio­n and more than 120 have approved reorganiza­tion plans, with the remaining cases still pending,” it said.

The report quotes studies that have found that restrictiv­e labour regulation in India is associated with a 35 per cent increase in firms’ unit labour costs while a 10 per cent increase in judicial quality increases firm sales by 1-2 per cent.

Welcoming the WB rankings, CII president Vikram Kirloskar said, “India achieved another significan­t millstone in the area of ‘trading across borders, where we now stand at 68th rank, up from 146th in 2018. Procedures, time and cost for export and imports have been coming down sharply with continuous introducti­on of trade facilitati­on reforms.”

“We have a long way to go in several other indicators of ‘doing business’ report, including enforcing contracts, registerin­g property, and starting a business. With continuing reform momentum and government-industry partnershi­p, I am confident of

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