The World Bank launched the World Development Report 2005 in
Washington Tuesday, highlighting opportunities for governments to
improve their investment climates.
Accelerating growth and poverty reduction requires governments
to reduce the policy risks, costs, and barriers to competition
facing firms of all types -- from farmers and micro-entrepreneurs
to local manufacturing companies and multinationals -- concludes
the report.
The report, A Better Investment Climate for Everyone, draws on
surveys of over 30,000 firms in 53 developing countries. It
highlights opportunities for governments to improve their
investment climates by expanding the opportunities and incentives
for firms of all types to invest productively, create jobs, and
expand.
Policy-related risks dominate the concerns of firms in
developing countries, the report said. And uncertainty about the
content and implementation of government policies is the top-rated
concern, with other significant risks including macroeconomic
instability, arbitrary regulation, and weak protection of property
rights. The report said that the policy-related costs shouldered by
firms can also be substantial, and make many potential investment
opportunities unprofitable.
Unreliable electricity supply and other infrastructure, crime,
and corruption can impose costs that are more than double those of
regulation. Together with weak contract enforcement and onerous
regulation, these costs can amount to over 25 percent of sales, it
said.
It also said that barriers to competition are also pervasive and
dull incentives for firms to innovate and increase their
productivity -- the key to sustainable growth.
High risks and costs restrict competition, but governments also
limit competition through policy barriers to market entry and exit,
and through inadequate efforts to curb anticompetitive behavior by
firms, it added.
While many investment climate improvements require changes to
laws and policies, the report highlights four deeper challenges
that governments need to address to improve their investment
climates:
-- Restraining corruption and other forms of rent-seeking;
-- Building the credibility of government policies;
-- Fostering public support for policy improvements;
-- Ensuring policy responses are adapted to local
conditions.
The report calls on the international community to strengthen
efforts to help developing countries improve their investment
climates, saying the growth and poverty reduction unleashed by
investment climate improvements in a country can easily dwarf the
impact of international aid flows.
(Xinhua News Agency September 29, 2004)
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