India’s Star Rises in the World Bank’s Doing Business 2018 Survey

The World Bank has conducted its “Ease of Doing Business” survey for fifteen years, providing a comparative view of business regulation around the world over an extended period of time. The survey is aimed at providing a comparative basis to help policy makers address issues that impact entrepreneurial activity. The rankings resulting from the survey are an important indication of how business-friendly countries are and how successful they can be in attracting the entrepreneurial capital to succeed in an increasingly competitive global environment. The survey ranks 190 countries. The top thirty can be considered an elite in terms of providing a regulatory environment amenable to business. A top 50 ranking is good. A ranking above 100 indicates that a country’s business community is crippled by bureaucracy and rent-seeking agents. A poor ranking is particularly debilitating for a small country that does not have the market scale and diversity to attract capital that large countries like Brazil, China and India have.

There were several important revelations from the 2018 survey published this week.

  • India improved its ranking from 130th to 100th, which is a significant improvement. This confirms a recent trend and lends credence to the government’s very ambitious objective of improving the country’s ranking to 50 during the current Modi Administration.
  • India’s improvement highlights Brazil’s sorry performance. Brazil and India have long been competing for the position of lowest ranked of the major emerging market economies. Brazil fell two points in the latest ranking, to 125th and now has a secure hold on the bottom rung.
  • Indonesia, the third of the large emerging markets economies with consistently poor scores over the history of the survey, has been steadily improving its performance for the past six years, and reached 72nd in 2018, which compares to 129th in 2012.
  • Asia, by and large, provides good business regulation and is improving. In addition to India and Indonesia, Vietnam is showing steady improvements and now has a ranking of 68, compared to 99 in 2014. China also is gradually improving. Taiwan, Malaysia, Thailand and South Korea are all elite in terms of business regulation.
  • The Philippines provide somewhat of a glaring exception in Asia. Though the country has improved significantly from the very low ranking of 2011, it has significantly deteriorated over the past four years, and it obtained a ranking of 113th in the 2018 survey. Given how competitive the Asian region is and the improving trends, the Philippines appear to be at a growing disadvantage.
  • In Europe, the remarkable trend is the surge of Russia and much of Eastern Europe. At a 2018 ranking of 35th, Russia is approaching the “elite” countries in terms of the quality of business regulation. Russia has improved every year since 2012, when it ranked at 123rd. Poland’s ranking at 27th secures an “elite” standing. Moreover, the improvements in Eastern Europe are much more profound. Georgia, Macedonia, Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia all rank in the top twenty, ahead of most Western European countries, including Germany, and are well ahead of the Mediterranean countries, France, Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey.
  • South Africa appears to be on a ruinous path. Its ranking has fallen steadily for nine years, taking the country from elite status to 82nd.
  • Latin America is also on a steady decline, losing competitiveness to the other regions of the world. Mexico is the only bright spot, just because it has maintained its decent ranking around the 50th level. Chile, Peru and Colombia have all seen consistent and worrisome declines in recent years. Argentina and Brazil are secure in their abysmal rankings, near the bottom for economies of this relative importance. Not to mention, Venezuela which is essentially closed for business. With a wave of business-friendly governments now rising to power in Latin America, it will be interesting to see if these negative trends can be reverted in upcoming surveys.

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