Europe and Central Asia Second to OECD in implementing good business regulatory practices

DUSHANBE, October 29, 2013, Asia-Plus — A new World Bank Group report finds that the pace of regulatory reform in Europe and Central Asia remains strong, with 19 economies implementing 65 reforms to improve business regulation in the past year. Doing Business 2014: Understanding Regulations for Small and Medium-Size Enterprises shows that efforts to strengthen […]

Asia-Plus

DUSHANBE, October 29, 2013, Asia-Plus — A new World Bank Group report finds that the pace of regulatory reform in Europe and Central Asia remains strong, with 19 economies implementing 65 reforms to improve business regulation in the past year.


Doing Business 2014: Understanding Regulations for Small and Medium-Size Enterprises

shows that efforts to strengthen legal institutions and reduce the complexity and cost of regulatory processes have paid off for entrepreneurs in Europe and Central Asia. The region has overtaken East Asia and the Pacific as the second most business-friendly after the high-income economies in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

The report finds that since 2009, 92 percent of economies in Europe and Central Asia have improved their process for starting a business, a higher share than in any other region. Thanks to these efforts, today it is the easiest region for business entry, ahead of the OECD high-income economies. In response to the financial crisis, 73 percent of the region’s economies reformed insolvency proceedings over the same period, and 85 percent made it easier to pay taxes.

The joint World Bank and IFC flagship

Doing Business

report analyzes regulations that apply to an economy’s businesses during their life cycle, including start-up and operations, trading across borders, paying taxes, and resolving insolvency.  The aggregate ease of doing business rankings are based on 10 indicators and cover 189 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 11thedition of the global

Doing Business

report series and covers 189 economies.  

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