10 September 2008
NZ still one of the world’s best places for business
Minister for Small Business Clayton Cosgrove welcomed today’s release of the World Bank’s Doing Business 2009 survey
showing that New Zealand has retained its second place ranking for ease of doing business.
Mr Cosgrove said New Zealand’s regulatory environment has consistently ranked either No 1 or No 2 by the World Bank
since the survey began. He said for New Zealand to retain its second-place spot in the face of an increasingly
competitive global business environment is a fantastic result.
“This survey recognises the government’s ongoing drive to improve the regulatory environment,” Mr Cosgrove said. “We
have worked hard to minimise the amount of time business people spend on paperwork so they can focus on their
businesses. Today’s number two ranking is an endorsement that our approach is working, and that this country is one of
the most business friendly in the world.”
The World Bank’s Doing Business survey is an annual cross-economy study that measures government regulations and their
effect on business across 178 economies. The Survey uses 10 key indicators to measure and compare ease or difficulty of
operating a business. Economies receive a ranking for each key indicator; and an overall ‘Ease of Doing Business’
ranking.
Mr Cosgrove said a highlight from today’s announcement is New Zealand’s jump from third to first place for the Starting
A Business Indicator. “The average number of days to start a business in the OECD is 13.4 days while in New Zealand it
takes approximately one hour. This is thanks to the cooperation between the Companies Office and Inland Revenue which
means new businesses can be given their GST number at the same time as incorporating their company online - a major time
saver for small businesses.”
“It is also worth noting that comparative to our Australian neighbours, businesses here pay a lot less in tax as a
percentage of their profits. In Australia the total tax rate as a percentage of profits is 50.3% whereas in New Zealand
businesses pay 35.6%. This is also below the OECD average of 45.3%.”
Mr Cosgrove said the government recognises it must continue its programme of improvements to retain New Zealand’s
internationally competitive business environment.
“Recent initiatives such as changes to the tax regime announced in Budget 2008 will have a positive effect on future
survey results,” Mr Cosgrove said. “The Standard Business Reporting project we are currently developing will
revolutionise government and business interactions, by allowing businesses to file information only once with
government, in one place, therefore reducing the compliance burden and saving time.”
Mr Cosgrove said today's findings by the World Bank is one of several independent studies showing ongoing improvement
for New Zealand's business environment. These include the latest Business New Zealand-KPMG Compliance Cost Survey of
business people that shows compliance costs have fallen by a third since 2005 for firms employing five or fewer staff.
ENDS