GosKomInvest asks WB to review indicators of Doing Business report

DUSHANBE, September 18, 2008, Asia-Plus  — The Government of Tajikistan will take all efforts to improve Tajikistan’s place in the global rankings, head of the State Committee for Investments and State-run Property Management (GosKomInvest), Farrukh Hamraliyev, remarked at the presentation of Tajikistan’s indices in the Doing Business 2009 published by IFC and the World Bank […]

Victoria Naumova

DUSHANBE, September 18, 2008, Asia-Plus  — The Government of Tajikistan will take all efforts to improve Tajikistan’s place in the global rankings, head of the State Committee for Investments and State-run Property Management (GosKomInvest), Farrukh Hamraliyev, remarked at the presentation of Tajikistan’s indices in the Doing Business 2009 published by IFC and the World Bank in Dushanbe on September 17.  

According to him, the country has done enough for improvement of the business environment.  Tajikistan has adopted the laws on inspections, licensing, open joint-stock companies, mortgage, registration of real estate, diligence, and the code on economic legal procedure.  

Hamraliyev noted that indeed, Tajikistan had fallen several places in the global rankings.  However, some of ten indictors of business regulation, on the basis of which Doing Business 2009 ranks economies, have risen.  “Tajikistan, in particular, showed good results on the property registration; however, we hope the law on registration of real estate that will take effect in March 2009 will improve our positions,” the GosKomInvest head said.   

On the fact that Tajikistan fell three places in the global rankings, Hamraliyev said that “country competition has become high; thus 113 countries made 239 reforms to simplify business procedures.”

He also noted that that some indicators, in particular obtaining construction permits and starting a business, require review.    

According to him, the GosKomInvest asks the World Bank to send an independent expert group to consider those indicators more objectively.  

We will recall that Doing Business ranks economies based on 10 indicators of business regulation that track the time and cost to meet government requirements in starting and operating a business, trading across borders, paying taxes, and closing a business. The rankings do not reflect such areas as macroeconomic policy, quality of infrastructure, currency volatility, investor perceptions, or crime rates.  The Doing Business project is based on the efforts of more than 6,700 local experts—business consultants, lawyers, accountants, and government officials—and leading academics around the world who provided methodological support and review.   

Tajikistan fell three places to 159 out of the 181 economies measured by Doing Business.

According to press release issued by the World Bank, the report recognizes one positive reform over the last year, the Joint Stock Companies Act adopted by Parliament in May 2007.  The report also points out one negative change in Tajikistan’s business environment: administrative backlogs in obtaining location permits added 160 days to the overall time for dealing with construction permits.

The Joint Stock Companies Act enhanced investor protections by requiring that transactions between interested parties be approved by a shareholders meeting at which interested directors cannot vote. In addition, the transaction must be disclosed to the board of directors. The new law allows minority shareholders to sue directors on behalf of the company.

“Sustained commitment to reform is essential to achieving higher rankings on international benchmarks like Doing Business,” said Chiara Bronchi, World Bank Country Manager for Tajikistan. “Successful implementation of the government’s reform agenda requires both new legislation and new procedures on-the-ground. For example, the Tax Committee, GosKomInvest, and other government agencies are designing both legislative and procedural solutions to establish a one-stop shop with the aim to simplify and speed up business registration.”

Azerbaijan, the world’s top country in reforming business regulations, rose from 97 to 33 in the global rankings on the ease of doing business. Kyrgyzstan was the world’s fourth top reformer, jumping from 99 to 68 in the global rankings. Kazakhstan also showed a large improvement, moving from 80 up to 70 in the global rankings. Uzbekistan’s establishment of new credit registries helped it improve from 145 to 138.

Singapore leads the global rankings on the overall regulatory ease of doing business for a third consecutive year. New Zealand is runner-up, and the United States third. Top-ranked countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia are Georgia (15), Estonia (22), Lithuania (28), Latvia (29), Azerbaijan (33), and Slovakia (36).

Join us on social media!

Article translations:

Related Article

Оби зулол
Оби зулол

Most Read

Акика Алиф

Recent Articles

In Tajikistan, a unique surgery was performed for the first time on a child with an extremely rare pathology

Tajik and Russian surgeons successfully performed the most complex reconstruction of the bladder and abdominal wall for a child with recurrent exstrophy.

The ministry of health states that hantavirus does not threaten Tajikistan

Cases of infection with this virus were detected on board the cruise liner Hondius near the Canary Islands.

Tajikistan lags behind other Central Asian countries in number of chain hotels – study

The Republic remains a niche market with a limited number of quality hotels.

Climate risks threaten food security in Central Asia – FAO

Land degradation reduces agricultural productivity. The loss of biodiversity weakens the ecosystems that farmers, livestock breeders, and rural communities depend on.

Potential or illusion? Why the world overlooks Tajikistan’s mineral wealth

The republic may indeed possess significant reserves of rare metals, but there is a catch...

The case of ousted Kyrgyz security boss classified and moves to court

The former head of the GKNB is charged with violent seizure of power and abuse of official position.

Trump states that Iran’s nuclear program is a higher priority than U.S. citizens’ economic issues

Fluctuations in energy prices led to record inflation in the United States in April, the highest in the past three years.

Foot-and-mouth disease, plague, and flu: Central Asia threatened by transboundary animal diseases

FAO urges Central Asian countries to strengthen coordination and epidemiological surveillance.

Tajikistan approves the second phase of the Electric Transport Development Program; $95 million will be allocated for its implementation.

At this stage, the authorities are focusing on charging infrastructure, services for electric vehicles, and the expansion of the electric bus fleet.

Tajikistan and Kazakhstan to sign roadmap for cooperation in the agrarian sector

The parties are interested in expanding investment cooperation and establishing joint ventures.