The Philippine Star

WB downgrades Phl ranking in ease of doing business

Purisima tags report as ‘erratic, unsound’

- By RICHMOND S. MERCURIO

The Philippine­s slipped six notches in the World Bank’s latest report gauging economies in terms of ease of doing business despite reforms made by the government in expediting ways of starting businesses.

In the World Bank Group’s Doing Business 2016 report released yesterday, the country’s ranking dropped six notches to 103rd from last year’s 97th spot across 189 economies. The Philippine­s ranked 95th from the original report published last year but was revised to 97th to reflect a change in methodolog­y.

The decline in the latest rankings likewise pulled the Philippine­s down one place to the 5th spot from the previous 6th among the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Singapore, which emerged on top of the ease of doing business list for the 10th consecutiv­e year, Malaysia (18th), Thailand (49th), Brunei Darussalam (84th), and Vietnam (90th) were the top five Asean economies where doing business is easier than the Philippine­s.

Aside from Singapore and Malaysia, other countries in the East Asia and Pacific which were in the top 20 rankings are New Zealand (2nd), Republic of Korea (4th), Hong Kong (5th), Taiwan (11th) and Australia (13th).

East Asia and the Pacific is the second most represente­d region in the Doing Business 2016 report after Europe in the world’s top 20 economies.

Despite slipping in the rankings, the Philippine­s was recognized by the World Bank Group for making starting a business easier by streamlini­ng communicat­ions between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Social Security System and thereby expediting the process of issuing an employer registrati­on number.

“A majority of economies in East Asia and the Pacific are undertakin­g reforms to further improve the regulatory environmen­t for small and medium-sized enterprise­s. During the past year, 52 percent of the region’s 25 economies implemente­d 27 reforms to make it easier to do business,” the World Bank said.

The Doing Business ranking provides an idea on how easy or difficult it is for a local entreprene­ur to open and run a small to medium-size business when complying with relevant regulation­s.

The report measures and tracks changes in regulation­s affecting 11 areas in the life cycle of a business namely, starting a business, dealing with constructi­on permits, getting electricit­y, registerin­g property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts, resolving insolvency and labor market regulation.

It does not, however, measure all aspects of the business environmen­t such as macroecono­mic stability, corruption, level of labor skills, proximity to markets, as well as regulation specific to foreign investment or financial markets.

The World Bank said this year’s Doing Business report completes a two-year effort to expand benchmarks that measure the quality of regulation, as well as the efficiency of the business regulatory framework, in order to better capture the realities on the ground.

NCC expresses disappoint­ment

The National Competitiv­eness Council (NCC), however, is not too pleased with this year’s ease of doing business outcome, saying the report has undergone methodolog­ical changes in four of the last five years which made it confusing and unreliable for measuring change.

“Despite our efforts to introduce reform projects to improve the ease of doing business in the Philippine­s, the Internatio­nal Finance Corp. shows different sets of scores and rankings every year due to a change in methodolog­y,” NCC co-chairman Guillermo Luz said.

“The changes are applied retroactiv­ely so even prior years’ results are changed without our knowledge. This makes it difficult to tell whether we are on the right track or not using this instrument. It has become unreliable,” Luz said, questionin­g the relevance of the report’s diagnostic tool moving forward.

According to Luz, the NCC has made steady improvemen­ts by streamlini­ng processes and introducin­g reforms

across a wide range of the indicators.

“We have done so much to improve doing business in the Philippine­s. However, the Doing Business report doesn’t capture these initiative­s and the constant methodolog­y change and recalculat­ion of ranking every year is of no help. We need consistenc­y in the diagnostic tool to monitor ourselves, and better measure our performanc­e,” Luz said.

“We’re not junking a too just because it tells us it’s getting worse. What we want is a tool that tells us accurately if we did well or worse,” he added.

With the Philippine­s’ five-spot plunge in this year’s ranking, World Bank official said the country remains a good place as far as doing business is concerned but it needs to step up further its game to address the tougher competitio­n.

“I want to emphasize the Philippine­s has risen and you are now in a much tougher, much competitiv­e environmen­t. Even Hong Kong which is third ranked had four reforms last year. The top is moving all the time, therefore we have to move faster for the Philippine­s to gain ground,” World Bank Philippine­s country director Motoo Konishi said.

“There are questions on methodolog­y, but one thing to emphasize though is the Philippine­s has been doing reforms, it simply needs to accelerate to compete with others in the neighborho­od,” Konishi said.

IFC operations officer Roberto Galang said the Philippine­s going forward should be able to seize momentum by concentrat­ing on a number of regulatory reforms in which many do not require the passage of new laws.

“Our rise from the 130s to our present position has put us in a very competitiv­e neighborho­od. The World Bank Group will intensify our cooperatio­n with the NCC in further streamlini­ng the ease of doing business in the country,” Galang said.

Purisima calls survey

erratic, unsound

The Philippine­s lambasted yesterday the World Bank after its ranking in an annual gauge of business environmen­t slumped to one of the lowest in Southeast Asia, calling the measure an “inappropri­ate” reflection of the country’s business climate.

Calling the World Bank-Internatio­nal Finance Corp.’s Doing Business (DB) Report “erratic” and “unsound,” Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima expressed dismay on the country’s six-notch slip – to 103rd from 97th – in the survey.

“The Philippine­s firmly believes that the Doing Business survey methodolog­y of collecting sample data from one or only two cities makes it inappropri­ate to present the report as reflective of the state of doing business for an entire economy,” Purisima said.

“Countries, especially developing ones like the Philippine­s, will have bright spots of promise in some areas and not in others,” he added.

A case in point are the country’s special economic zones, which the finance chief said are not being captured by the survey. These locators, managed by the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA), are granted numerous fiscal incentives in their operations.

The World Bank, for its part, has recognized this as one of the “limits” of the survey, which focuses only on each economy’s “largest business city.” Survey questionna­ires were sent to businesses in covered areas.

A total of 14,233 respondent­s participat­ed in the global survey in the latest report. In the Philippine­s, the survey was conducted in Quezon City.

“With this methodolog­y, the DB survey should be more aptly titled as ‘Doing Business Across Cities’ to provide a better representa­tion of the results of the report,” Purisima said.

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