Report: Asia-Pacific Business Environment Improves 7.3%
Issued by the APEC Policy Support Unit
Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, 16 August 2018
Doing business in APEC member economies continues to get easier, according to a new report, helping to open up trade and growth opportunities in the
Asia-Pacific against the backdrop of rising uncertainty.
An analysis of business conditions in APEC economies by the APEC Policy Support Unit reveals a 7.3 per cent improvement over the last two years, boosted by their ambitious ease of doing business
initiative being taken forward by economic officials in Port Moresby.
The initiative is focused on five priority areas: 1) Getting credit; 2) starting a business; 3) dealing with
construction permits; 4) enforcing contracts; and 5) trading across borders.
“APEC region officials’ efforts to raise the quality of their regulations are steadily making it cheaper and more
efficient to do business in the Asia-Pacific,” explained Carlos Kuriyama, a Senior Analyst with the APEC Policy Support Unit and report co-author.
“Getting credit is the area where APEC has had the biggest business environment breakthrough, driven by stronger legal
rights and credit information systems,” Kuriyama noted. “The average availability of credit information in the region
increased from about 74 per cent to over 77 per cent of adults.”
Starting a new business meanwhile improved 11.8 per cent, taking nearly three fewer days and with all but one APEC
economy eliminating minimum capital requirements.
Other measures employed in select instances which contributed to this trend included halting the need for a company seal
to register a business as well as the introduction of an e-platform to expedite business permit applications.
Progress in trading across borders was marked by a 6.5 per cent reduction in the average time it takes businesses in
APEC economies to export, from 70 to just over 65 hours. Dealing with construction permits took one less day to obtain.
“The move in the APEC region towards smarter, more modernized regulations is timely as digital development creates new
avenues for businesses to engage in cross-border trade, including small and micro enterprises with limited resources,”
said Kuriyama.
APEC economies are targeting a 10 per cent improvement in the region’s business environment by the end of 2019, based on
2015 levels in the five APEC Ease of Doing Business initiative priority areas. The initiative is inspired by the World Bank’s Doing Business program.
The exchange of good regulatory practices and implementation guidance, drawing upon experiences and recommendations
garnered from public-private sector engagement in APEC, is at the center of the initiative’s work.
“Collaboration across APEC economies to improve their ease of doing business has achieved good results so far,” said
Kuriyama. “The area with the most room for improvement is in enforcing contracts, with gains mostly stemming from higher
quality of judicial processes.”
“Sustained reform and capacity building activities in APEC that focus on qualitative aspects of regulation like
sustainability are critical to ensuring the momentum of business development and trade in the region at this challenging
juncture,” Kuriyama concluded.
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