Khaleej Times

New Zealand easiest to do business

- Andrew Mayeda

washington — New Zealand has overtaken Singapore as the best country in the world to do business, according to the World Bank.

Singapore slipped to second in the bank’s 2017 ‘Doing Business’ report after topping the ranking for a decade. Finland dropped out of the top 10, falling to 13th. Macedonia, which placed 92nd a decade ago, improved two spots from a year earlier to No 10.

The report ranks countries based on 11 sets of indicators such as the ease of starting a business, dealing with constructi­on permits, accessing electricit­y and obtaining credit. For the first time, the Washington­based developmen­t lender took gender factors into considerat­ion in assessing how easy it is to start a business, register property and enforce contracts.

The methods used to create the rankings have faced criticism. An independen­t panel appointed by World Bank president Jim Yong Kim found it used a narrow source of informatio­n and had the potential to be misinterpr­eted, according to a 2013 report. The rankings shouldn’t be used to apply a onesize-fits-all

New Zealand leads with the fewest number of procedures to start a business and the shortest time to fulfill them.

template for developmen­t, the panel found.

New Zealand, which has one of the fastest-growing economies in the developed world, leads the rankings with the fewest number of procedures to start a business and the shortest time to fulfill them, along with strong legal rights, the bank said.

Brunei Darussalam, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Belarus and Indonesia — AFP made the biggest strides in business-friendly reforms. The US dropped to the eighth spot from seventh, while Japan retained its 34th place and China rose to 78th from 84th. India’s ranking was unchanged at 130th.

Low scores

Sub-Saharan African nations continued to have the lowest average score on pro-business regulation­s, the bank said. Still, countries in that region are improving their scores at a rate almost three times faster than OECD high-income countries, it said.

“A growing body of literature shows that government action to create a sound, predictabl­e regulatory environmen­t is central to whether or not economies perform well and whether that performanc­e is sustainabl­e in the long run,” World Bank chief economist Paul Romer said in the report.

Somalia, a new addition to the rankings this year, was the worst performer, behind Eritrea, Libya, Venezuela and South Sudan. — Bloomberg

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