Oman Daily Observer

Business environmen­t in Oman gets major boost from e-services

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MUSCAT: Last year saw a surge in activity on Oman’s Invest Easy portal — a one-stop shop for investment and business procedures — with the authoritie­s also rolling out key reforms aimed at attracting investors.

According to the latest figures from the Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MoCI), more than 193,000 commercial transactio­ns were carried out through the online service in 2016 — a 448.6 per cent increase on 2015.

New company registrati­ons, amendments to commercial names and import licence applicatio­ns were among the procedures completed.

One of the major developmen­ts for prospectiv­e foreign investors in Oman last year was the removal in October of the proof of capital requiremen­t, which mandated that new businesses provide a bank statement demonstrat­ing a minimum of RO 150,000 ($390,000) within the first sixth months of operation. In all, the number of processes involved in starting a company in Oman has been cut from 18 to six.

This change came on the back of a much-improved performanc­e in the World Bank’s “Doing Business 2017” report, in which the sultanate’s rank in the starting a business category rose by a considerab­le 127 places.

According to the report, it now takes just six or seven days to complete the process of starting a new business in Oman, which compares favourably with the MENA average of 20.1 and the OECD high-income average of 8.3.

Given the recent leap in its standings, the Sultanate now ranks first among economies in the GCC for starting a business. These developmen­ts reflect well on the cooperativ­e approach of the MoCI to managing the Invest Easy portal. Since the latter’s launch in 2014, the MoCI has engaged entreprene­urs, law firms and government ministries in an ongoing dialogue, resulting in regular improvemen­ts to the functional­ity and efficiency of the system.

While the business environmen­t made rapid gains in 2016, both imports and exports eased in the January-to-September period, according to the latest figures from the Ministry of Finance.

Oil and gas exports experience­d the largest drop, falling by 32.9 per cent y-o-y to RO 4.16 bn ($10.8bn), while non-oil exports were down 24.1 per cent at RO 1.8 bn ($4.9bn).

Merchandis­e imports, meanwhile, shrunk by 21.4 per cent to RO 6.56 bn ($17.1bn) on lower flows from China (35.4 per cent), India (34.8 per cent), Japan (47.9 per cent) and the US (31.1 per cent). While the UAE — the sultanate’s largest source of imports — saw its exports to Oman grow by 9.6 per cent y-o-y to RO 3.26 bn ($ 8.47 bn), this was offset by declines in other import categories.

Despite the overall downturn, an increase in bilateral trade between the sultanate and Iran brought a welcome boost to government revenue.Iranian trade with the sultanate increased by 396.2 per cent y-o-y in the first half of 2016, and re-exports through Oman grew by 23 per cent, according to figures from the Oman National Centre for Statistics and Informatio­n.

“Bilateral trade between Oman and Iran exceeded $1bn by the end of October last year. In 2015, it was nearly $560m,” Ali bin Masoud al Sunaidy, Oman’s minister of commerce and industry, said. [ Courtesy: The Oxford Group]

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