The Free Market Foundation (FMF) annually publishes a South African edition of the Economic Freedom of the World Report produced by Canada’s Fraser Institute. Incorporated in the annual report, until last year, was information from the World Bank’s Doing Business report. The withdrawal of the Doing Business report, as described in the Fraser Institute’s News Release below, creates a "massive information void" for economists and governments worldwide in their research and analyses.
The FMF joins with the Fraser Institute in urging that the Doing Business report be resurrected. See the Fraser study attached recommending the resurrection of the report.
NEWS RELEASE
How to resurrect the venerable Doing Business report
July 27, 2022
For immediate release
TORONTO—When the World Bank cancelled its Doing Business report last year, it created a massive information void for economists and governments seeking to spur economic growth and reduce poverty, argues Simeon Djankov in a new study charting how to revive the report and released today by the Fraser Institute, an independent, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank
“Each year successful developed countries topped the rankings but, due partly to the report, many poorer countries were catching up and improving their business environment,” said Dr. Djankov, policy director of the Financial Markets Group at the London School of Economics and founder of the Doing Business report.
The Doing Business report, established in 2003, measured the efficiency of government regulation in jurisdictions worldwide, analysing whether they created barriers to investment and prosperity.
Indeed, the report was the main information source of the global business environment, accounting for 65 per cent of media and public citations in the area. It helped guide policymakers in developing countries improve their business climate, leading to increased investment and growth.
The study recommends that a consortium of universities should revive the report, but with several key improvements including:
- revise assumptions about administrative and judicial procedures and documents to reflect the advance on electronic document transfer
- restore the labour regulation indictor
- develop an indicator on the positive function of government
- distinguish between law and practice and develop a parallel set of indicators on the practice of regulation
“It’s well worth the effort to resurrect the Doing Business report, reflect on what we know now and what answers remain elusive, and address these questions with existing scholarship or new research,” Djankov said.
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Simeon Djankov, Policy Director, Financial Markets Group, London School of Economics
(202) 733-7375, s.djankov@lse.ac.uk
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Mark Hasiuk, Senior Media Relations Specialist, Fraser Institute, (604) 688-0221 Ext. 517, mark.hasiuk@fraserinstitute.org
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The Fraser Institute is an independent Canadian public policy research and educational organization with offices in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, and Montreal and ties to a global network of think-tanks in 87 countries. Its mission is to improve the quality of life for Canadians, their families and future generations by studying, measuring and broadly communicating the effects of government policies, entrepreneurship and choice on their well-being. To protect the Institute’s independence, it does not accept grants from governments or contracts for research. Visit www.fraserinstitute.org
Doing Business 2.0
A Better Guide for Policy Makers
by Simeon Djankov
Read more here