By Sudeep
Reddy
The Wall
Street Journal
The annual
Doing Business report by the World Bank and International Finance Corp.
measures 185 nations by their regulatory burdens in 10 areas — such as starting
a business, getting electricity and enforcing contracts — affecting small- and
medium-sized businesses. Despite frequent complaints in the U.S. about
regulation, the world’s largest economy remains near the top of the list this
year — at No. 4, just behind Singapore, Hong Kong and New Zealand. (The world’s
second-largest economy, China ,
remains No. 91 — also right where it was last year.)
“Part of
the solution to high debt is the recovery of economic growth, and there is
broad recognition that creating a friendlier environment for entrepreneurs is
central to this goal,” the report said.
The World Bank also credited other struggling euro-zone economies – Italy , Portugal
and Spain
– for their steps to ease the path for businesses.
Eastern
Europe and Central Asia had the largest share
of economies implementing regulatory overhauls. That put the region ahead of East Asia and the Pacific as the world’s second-most
business-friendly group. (High-income economies are generally the most
business-friendly.) Poland improved
the most of all nations by making it easier to register property, pay taxes,
enforce contracts and resolve insolvencies, the bank found.
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