PRESS RELEASE

Costa Rica, Jamaica and Mexico Record Most Business Reforms in Latin America and Caribbean

October 27, 2015


WASHINGTON, October 27, 2015 – Costa Rica, Jamaica and Mexico recorded the most reforms in Latin America and the Caribbean in the last five years, continuing to make big strides to improve their countries’ business climate, according to the World Bank Group’s latest annual ease of doing business measurement.

Released today, Doing Business 2016: Measuring Regulatory Quality and Efficiency finds that Costa Rica is the world’s top improver, i.e. an economy that implemented at least three reforms and moved up on the global rankings scale. For the second year in a row, Costa Rica implemented reforms in the areas of Paying Taxes and Getting Electricity, in addition to making Getting Credit easier. On Getting Electricity, the time for a Costa Rican entrepreneur to get connected to the electrical grid has decreased from 55 to 45 days over the past year – which is now less than in Sweden.

Jamaica is also among the global top 10 improvers as it implemented a regional high of four reforms for the second consecutive year. On Starting a Business, for instance, Jamaica decreased the time to incorporate a business from 15 to three days.  And Mexico, the best ranked economy in the region, implemented two reforms in the areas of Getting Credit and Paying Taxes during the past year. As a result, the country improved its global ranking to 38 amongst 189 economies worldwide.

“While the pace of reform activity has slowed in Latin America and the Caribbean, improvements are still being made. In 2004, only eight economies recorded reforms, compared to 15 in the past year,” Rita Ramalho, Manager of the Doing Business project. “There are many good examples in the region. Mexico, for instance, is among the world’s top five economies in Getting Credit, thanks to a credit bureau that covers the entire population and collects all the main relevant areas of information to assess credit-worthiness.”  

Several economies in the region also digitized procedures for trading across borders in the past year. Suriname implemented an automated system that allows the electronic submission of customs declarations and supporting documents for exports and imports. Brazil, Guatemala and Bahamas also introduced or improved systems allowing electronic submission and processing of trade-related documents for exports, imports or both.

In the past year, Caribbean economies continued to make remarkable progress in resolving insolvency, saving viable businesses through reorganization. The previous year, Trinidad and Tobago and St. Kitts and Nevis had modernized their insolvency frameworks. In 2014/15, Jamaica and St. Vincent and the Grenadines adopted new insolvency laws. 

Colombia has emerged as the country in Latin America and the Caribbean that has improved its business regulation the most since Doing Business started 12 year ago. Colombia has reduced from 70 to 11 the number of payments required to file taxes and it has improved access to credit by broadening the range of assets that can be used as collateral, for instance.

In the latest report, Mexico’s global ranking of 38 is followed in the region by Chile (48), Peru (50), and Colombia (54).

The report also points out that less than half of the 32 economies in the Latin America and the Caribbean region implemented reforms[1] during the past year. The region performs particularly poorly in the areas of Registering Property and Paying Taxes. In the latter area, for example, the average time it takes a local entrepreneur to prepare, file and pay taxes is 361 hours, compared to 177 hours in high-income Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) economies.  

This year’s Doing Business report completes a two-year effort to expand benchmarks that measure the quality of regulation, as well as efficiency of the business regulatory framework, in order to better capture ground realities. On the five indicators that saw changes in this report – Dealing with Construction Permits, Getting Electricity, Enforcing Contracts, Registering Property and Trading across Borders – Latin America and the Caribbean economies have room for improvement.  

On Dealing with Construction Permits, the new dataset finds that regional economies are behind the global average when it comes to good practices in construction regulation, quality controls, and safety mechanisms.

The full report and accompanying datasets are available at https://www.doingbusiness.org/

 

 

 

[1] Chile, which is
classified as an OECD high-income economy, is not included in the reform count
and regional averages. 

Media Contacts
In Washington
Indira Chand
Tel : +1 (202) 458-0434
+1 (703) 376-7491
ichand@worldbank.org
For TV/Broadcast
Mehreen Arshad Sheikh
Tel : +1 (202) 458-7336
msheikh1@worldbankgroup.org

PRESS RELEASE NO:
2016/140/DEC

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