Rwanda Led All Nations in Business Reforms, World Bank Says
By Sandrine Rastello
Sept. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Rwanda, the African nation torn apart by genocide in 1994, made more business-friendly changes to its regulations in the past year than any other government, a World Bank report showed.
The sub-Saharan country vaulted to the 67th from the 143rd rank in the banks 2010 Doing Business Report, ahead of India, Italy and Turkey. The index ranks 183 participants by their rules for setting up, running and closing a business.
The reforms in Rwanda didnt happen overnight -- Rwanda started reforming in 2001, said Sylvia Solf, the reports main author, in an interview last week. Small, landlocked nations such as Rwanda have no choice, they dont have the big markets, so they have to reform.
Singapore topped the list, followed by New Zealand, Hong Kong, the U.S. and the U.K.
The report, which helps private investors decide where to direct funds, showed some emerging economies losing ground, with China sinking to 89th from 86th place and Brazil slipping to 129th from 127th.
While countries such as China and India have a lot of advantages and have implemented reforms, there is still of lot of bureaucracy, Solf said.
Rwanda, a country with about the same land mass as Maryland, improved regulations that eased access to credit, simplified business formation, strengthened minority-shareholder protections and sped up trade and property registration, according the report. It became the first sub-Saharan country to make the most improvements.
Egypt, Moldova
Egypt, Liberia, Moldova, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan were other countries that gained ground, the report showed.
Iraq fell to 153rd from 150th place, while Afghanistan improved to 160th from 168th.
The number of new regulations aimed at making it easier to do business rose globally by 20 percent to 287, a record, in the year through May, even as the worst global recession since World War II set in, according to the report. Most of them were aimed at cutting red tape.
While the ranking doesnt take into account market rules or the strength of financial systems, the measures do include court and bankruptcy procedures that can influence how well firms cope with the crisis and are able to seize opportunities when recovery begins, the report said.
The financial crisis of the past two years may also encourage governments to ease procedures for businesses, according to Solf.
Crisis Reforms
Historically, sometimes the financial crises have triggered reforms in areas that are covered in the report, insolvency regimes, insolvency systems, commercial courts, she said.
The report rates countries on rules that affect starting a business, dealing with construction permits, employing workers, registering property, getting credit, protecting investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and closing a business. It focuses on small- to medium-size companies.
At the same time, the report leaves out criteria such as macroeconomic stability, corruption and regulations specific to foreign investment.
The report tweaked methodology for its Employing Workers Indicator, one of the criteria in the ranking that has been criticized by some U.S. policy makers for encouraging countries to reduce worker protection.
For instance, the calculation of the redundancy cost was adjusted so that having severance payments or unemployment protections below a certain threshold does not mean a better score for an economy, the report showed.
To contact the reporter on this story: Sandrine Rastello in Paris at srastello@bloomberg.net
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