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business environment reform at the sub-national level using doing business Mierta Capaul Capetown, May 9, 2007. Why would a country request a sub-national doing business study? . It captures regional differences in regulations or enforcement
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business environment reform at the sub-national levelusing doing business Mierta CapaulCapetown, May 9, 2007
Why would a country request a sub-national doing business study? • It captures regional differences in regulations or enforcement • It includes rules and regulations at all levels of government • It fosters competition among cities and provinces • It pinpoints bottlenecks and provides information on good practices within the same country that can easily be replicated • It gives specific locations an opportunity to tell their story • It provides a tool for locations to compete globally • It measure progress over time through repeated benchmarking • It combines media appeal of doing business with active participation of subnational governments in the reform process
getting started • Committment from the government • Local partner • Local champion • Support with logistics • Contacts with provincial and municipal governments • Co-financing • Other donor (DFID, USAID) • Client (example, Mexico) • IFC BEE Facilities
basic inputs • Choice of DB indicators • Criteria based on areas of state/ municipal jurisdiction • Selection of cities • Population • Political and economic diversity • Selection of respondents • Coordinating firm with country wide correspondent network • Translation of questionnaires into local language • Training • Participation of sub-national governments • High level commitment – focal point • Providers of information to questionnaires • Confidential consultation and “right of reply” period
key milestones • Kick off mission • Project presentation to provincial/municipal officials • Meetings with private sector • Right of reply • Confidential consultation with each city/province • Feedback on preliminary results • Information regarding ongoing reforms • Dissemination conference • High level public and private sector champions and academia • Media strategy
how Rio de Janeiro compares internationally how Brazilian states compare internationally
Starting a business Registering property Enforcing contracts Aguascalientes √ √ √ Querétaro √ √ √ Yucatán √ √ √ Guanajuato √ √ Nuevo León √ √ San Luis Potosí √ √ Chihuahua √ Coahuila √ Mexico City √ Puebla √ 9 of the 12 states benchmarked in 2005 and Mexico City reformed in at least one doing business indicator
-OECD -Europe & Central Asia -South Asia -Middle East & North Africa -East Asia & Pacific -Sub-saharan Africa -Latin America & Caribbean 2006 Mexico: starting a business indicator… cutting time 2005 2005 2005 2006 2006 2006 2006 2006
doing business goes sub-national • Mexico (12 states, December 2005) • Brazil (12 states, August 2006) • Mexico (31 states, November 2006) • Bangladesh, India, Pakistan (January 2007) • Ukraine (8 regions, May 2007) • Nigeria (11 states, May 2007) • China (15 states, June 2007) • Russia (9 oblasts, September 2007) • Colombia (12 departments, November 2007) • Morocco (8 states, August 2007) • Egypt (3 governorates, October 2007) • Philippines (20 states, 2008) • Southern Europe and Central Asia (2008) • Madagascar (2008) • Turkey (2008) • Malaysia (2008) • Tanzania (2008)?
does sub-national doing business work in Africa? Opportunities • Large countries – e.g. South Africa: slow growth, large unemployment • Centralized countries - weak governments • Decentralization – e.g. Nigeria, or recently, Madagascar • OHADA 16 countries in West Africa with same legal framework (like OECS) • Regulatory reform powerful at subnational or regional level if done in conjunction with central reforms • Sub-national DB good entry point to look at larger issues (e.g. land)