NZ Ranked World’s Easiest Place to Start a Business
World Bank and IFC Rank New Zealand World’s
Easiest Place to Start a Business
SYDNEY, October 23, 2012 — New Zealand is the world’s easiest place to start a business globally, the World Bank Group’s Doing Business 2013 report states, launched today. According to the report, it takes just one day and one procedure to register a private company in New Zealand. New Zealand is ranked overall the third most business friendly country out of 185 economies globally.
Included in New Zealand’s strong performance were positive reforms which improved access to credit information by allowing credit bureaus to collect positive information on individuals.
The report, Doing Business 2013: Smarter
Regulations for Small and Medium-Size Enterprises, marks
the 10th edition of the Doing Business series.
Over the past decade, these reports have recorded nearly
2,000 regulatory reforms implemented by 180 economies. The
reforms have yielded major benefits for local entrepreneurs
across the globe. For example:
•Since 2005, the
average time to start a business has fallen from 50 days to
30—and in low-income economies the average has been
reduced by half.
•In the past eight years, the
average time to transfer property fell by 35 days, from 90
to 55, and the average cost by 1.2 percentage points—from
7.1 percent of the property value to 5.9
percent.
•In the past eight years, improvements to
simplify tax compliance have reduced the time required
annually to comply with the three major taxes measured
(profit, labor, and consumption taxes) by 54 hours on
average.
“Over the years, governments have made
important strides to improve their business regulatory
environment and to narrow the gap with global best
practices,” said Augusto Lopez-Claros, Director, Global
Indicators and Analysis, World Bank Group. “While the
reforms we measure provide only a partial picture of an
economy’s business climate, they are crucial for key
economic outcomes such as faster job growth and new business
creation.”
In the past year alone, 108 economies implemented 201 regulatory reforms that made it easier for local entrepreneurs to do business, the report found. Eastern Europe and Central Asia had the largest share of economies implementing regulatory reforms—with 88 percent reforming in at least one of the areas measured by Doing Business. European economies in fiscal distress are working to improve business regulation as part of an effort to establish a stronger foundation for long-term growth, the report found.
Singapore topped the global ranking on the ease of doing business for the seventh consecutive year. Joining it on the list of the top 10 economies with the most business-friendly regulation were Hong Kong SAR, China; New Zealand; the United States; Denmark; Norway; the United Kingdom; the Republic of Korea; Georgia; and Australia.
Topping the list of economies that registered the biggest improvements in the ease of doing business over the last year were Poland, Sri Lanka, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Burundi, Costa Rica, Mongolia, Greece, Serbia, and Kazakhstan.
About the Doing Business report
series
Doing Business analyzes
regulations that apply to an economy’s businesses during
their life cycle, including start-up and operations, trading
across borders, paying taxes, and protecting investors. The
aggregate ease of doing business rankings are based on 10
indicators and cover 185 economies. Doing Business
does not measure all aspects of the business environment
that matter to firms and investors. For example, it does not
measure the quality of fiscal management, other aspects of
macroeconomic stability, the level of skills in the labor
force, or the resilience of financial systems. Its findings
have stimulated policy debates worldwide and enabled a
growing body of research on how firm-level regulation
relates to economic outcomes across economies. This year’s
report marks the 10th edition of the global Doing
Business report series. For more information about the
Doing Business report series, please visit www.doingbusiness.org. Join us on Facebook.
About the World
Bank Group
The World Bank Group is one of the
world’s largest sources of funding and knowledge for
developing countries. It comprises five closely associated
institutions: the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (IBRD) and the International Development
Association (IDA), which together form the World Bank; the
International Finance Corporation (IFC); the Multilateral
Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA); and the International
Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID). Each
institution plays a distinct role in the mission to fight
poverty and improve living standards for people in the
developing world. For more information, please visit
www.worldbank.org, www.miga.org, and
www.ifc.org.