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Washington, D.C., November 4, 2010;In the
past year, governments in 117 economies
carried out 216 regulatory reforms aimed at
making it easier to start and operate a
business, strengthening transparency and
property rights, and improving the
efficiency of commercial dispute resolution
and bankruptcy procedures.
This is a finding of Doing Business 2011:
Making a Difference for Entrepreneurs, the
eighth in a series of annual reports
published by IFC and the World Bank. The
report ranks 183 economies on key aspects of
business regulation for domestic firms.
Globally, doing business remains easiest in
the high-income economies of the
Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and
Development and most difficult in
Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. But
developing economies are increasingly
active.In the past year, 66 percent reformed
business regulation, up from 34 percent six
years earlier.
In the past five years, about 85
percent of the world’s economies have made
it easier for local entrepreneurs to
operate, through 1,511 improvements to
business regulation. Doing Business 2011
pioneers a new measure showing how much
business regulation has changed in 174
economies since 2005. China and India are
among the top 40 most-improved economies.
Among the top 30 most-improved economies, a
third are from Sub-Saharan Africa.
Worldwide, more than half the regulatory
changes recorded in the past year eased
business start-up, trade, and the payment of
taxes. Many of the improvements involve new
technologies. New technology underpins
regulatory best practice around the world,
said Janamitra Devan, Vice President for
Financial and Private Sector Development for
the World Bank Group. Technology makes
compliance easier, less costly, and more
transparent.
For the fifth year running, Singapore leads
in the ease of doing business, followed by
Hong Kong SAR China, New Zealand, the United
Kingdom, and the United States. Among the
top 25 economies, 18 made things even easier
over the past year.
Governments worldwide have been
consistently taking steps to empower local
entrepreneurs, said Neil Gregory, Acting
Director, Global Indicators and Analysis,
World Bank Group. The economies most
affected by the financial crisis especially
in Eastern Europe have been targeting
regulatory reforms over the past year to
make it easier for small and medium-size
enterprises to recover and to create jobs.
Kazakhstan improved business regulation for
local entrepreneurs the most in the past
year. This year’s list of the 10
most-improved economies also includes three
in Sub-Saharan Africa Rwanda (a consistent
reformer of business regulation),Cape Verde,
and Zambia as well as Peru, Vietnam,
Tajikistan, Hungary, Grenada, and Brunei
Darussalam.
About the Doing Business report series
Doing Business analyzes regulations
that apply to an economy businesses during
their life cycle, including start-up and
operations, trading across borders,paying
taxes, and closing a business. Doing
Business does not measure all aspects of the
business environment that matter to firms
and investors. For example, it does not
measure security, macroeconomic stability,
corruption, skill level, or the strength of
financial systems. Its findings have
stimulated policy debates in more than 80
economies and enabled a growing body of
research on how firm-level regulation
relates to economic outcomes across
economies. For more information about the
Doing Business report series, and for region
specific press releases, please
visit:
www.doingbusiness.org
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