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India hits a century in World Bank’s ease of doing business rankings
India jumps 30 spots to 100 in World Bank’s ease of doing business ranking for 2018, driven by banking reforms, power supplies and protection of minority investors
Asit Ranjan Mishra
View image on Twitter
https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/925371481437044737
Narendra Modi
✔@narendramodi
Historic jump in ‘Ease of Doing Business’ rankings is the outcome of the all-round & multi-sectoral reform push of Team India.
8:08 PM - Oct 31, 2017
Out of the 10 parameters, India got its highest ranking in “protecting minority investors” parameter by rising to the fourth position globally from 13th last year as the country’s corporate law and securities regulations were recognized to be highly advanced. Its worst performance came in “dealing with construction permits” despite improving its ranking to 181 from 185th position last year.
On the “distance to frontier” metric, which measures the absolute improvement in the performance of a country against the relative performance measures by the ranking, India scored 60.76 against 56.05 last year, indicating that “the country is continuing its steady shift towards best practice in business regulation”.
While the report this year takes note of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code to ensure time-bound settlement of insolvency, the implementation of the goods and services tax (GST) is not part of the review process as it came after the 1 June deadline for the World Bank survey.
World Bank country director in India Junaid Ahmad said effective implementation of both the reform measures may improve India’s ranking significantly over the coming years.
The significant jump this year is a result of the Indian government’s efforts over the past few years after having embarked on a strong reform agenda, said Annette Dixon, the World Bank’s vice president for the South Asia region. “It indicates India’s endeavour to further strengthen its position as a preferred place to do business globally,” she added.
The World Bank praised India’s effort to ease “paying taxes" regulations, a parameter on which it improved its ranking to 119 from 172 a year ago. It cited payments to the Employees’ Provident Fund being made electronically and introduction of administrative measures that make it easier to comply with corporate and income tax regulations.
Despite a drop in ranking in “getting electricity connections” to 29 from 26 last year, the World Bank said the time to obtain an electricity connection in Delhi had dropped to 45 days from 138 days four years ago, almost 20 days less than the average time taken in developed countries.
The World Bank said while there has been substantial progress, India still lags in areas such as starting a business (156), enforcing contracts (164) and dealing with construction permits (181). “The time taken to enforce contract is longer today at 1,445 days than it was 15 years ago (1,420 days). In starting a business, India has reduced the time needed to register a new business to 30 days now, from 127 days 15 years ago. However, the number of procedures is still cumbersome for local entrepreneurs who still need to go through 12 procedures to start a business in Mubai, which is considerably more than in high-income economies, where it takes five procedures on average,” it said.
The complete list of countries in World Bank Doing Business 2018 rankings can be accessed here.
http://www.livemint.com/Companies/i...h-spot-in-World-Banks-ease-of-doing-busi.html
India jumps 30 spots to 100 in World Bank’s ease of doing business ranking for 2018, driven by banking reforms, power supplies and protection of minority investors
Asit Ranjan Mishra
View image on Twitter
https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/925371481437044737
Narendra Modi
✔@narendramodi
Historic jump in ‘Ease of Doing Business’ rankings is the outcome of the all-round & multi-sectoral reform push of Team India.
8:08 PM - Oct 31, 2017
Out of the 10 parameters, India got its highest ranking in “protecting minority investors” parameter by rising to the fourth position globally from 13th last year as the country’s corporate law and securities regulations were recognized to be highly advanced. Its worst performance came in “dealing with construction permits” despite improving its ranking to 181 from 185th position last year.
On the “distance to frontier” metric, which measures the absolute improvement in the performance of a country against the relative performance measures by the ranking, India scored 60.76 against 56.05 last year, indicating that “the country is continuing its steady shift towards best practice in business regulation”.
While the report this year takes note of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code to ensure time-bound settlement of insolvency, the implementation of the goods and services tax (GST) is not part of the review process as it came after the 1 June deadline for the World Bank survey.
World Bank country director in India Junaid Ahmad said effective implementation of both the reform measures may improve India’s ranking significantly over the coming years.
The significant jump this year is a result of the Indian government’s efforts over the past few years after having embarked on a strong reform agenda, said Annette Dixon, the World Bank’s vice president for the South Asia region. “It indicates India’s endeavour to further strengthen its position as a preferred place to do business globally,” she added.
The World Bank praised India’s effort to ease “paying taxes" regulations, a parameter on which it improved its ranking to 119 from 172 a year ago. It cited payments to the Employees’ Provident Fund being made electronically and introduction of administrative measures that make it easier to comply with corporate and income tax regulations.
Despite a drop in ranking in “getting electricity connections” to 29 from 26 last year, the World Bank said the time to obtain an electricity connection in Delhi had dropped to 45 days from 138 days four years ago, almost 20 days less than the average time taken in developed countries.
The World Bank said while there has been substantial progress, India still lags in areas such as starting a business (156), enforcing contracts (164) and dealing with construction permits (181). “The time taken to enforce contract is longer today at 1,445 days than it was 15 years ago (1,420 days). In starting a business, India has reduced the time needed to register a new business to 30 days now, from 127 days 15 years ago. However, the number of procedures is still cumbersome for local entrepreneurs who still need to go through 12 procedures to start a business in Mubai, which is considerably more than in high-income economies, where it takes five procedures on average,” it said.
The complete list of countries in World Bank Doing Business 2018 rankings can be accessed here.
http://www.livemint.com/Companies/i...h-spot-in-World-Banks-ease-of-doing-busi.html