Doing Business 2008 Report
September 27, 2007 | posted by Mobolaji Aluko (Archives)


 

 

 


 http://www.doingbusiness.org/ExploreEconomies/?economyid=143

\"Doing

The Doing Business project...

provides objective measures of business regulations and their enforcement across 178 countries. The team works closely with thousands of professionals around the world.
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Explore Economies

This page shows summary 2007 Doing Business data for the selected economy. The first table lists the overall "Ease of Doing Business" rank (out of 178 economies) and the rankings by each topic. The rest of the tables summarize the key indicators for each topic and benchmark against regional and high-income economy (OECD) averages.

Economic data

Compare economies by income per capita, the informal sector, and population. (Excel, 43KB)

Nigeria

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Region:
Sub-Saharan Africa
Income category:
Low income
Population:
144,719,953
GNI per capita (US$):
640.00
Ease of... 2007 rank 2006 rank Change in rank
Doing Business 108 .. ..
Starting a Business 80 77 -3
Dealing with Licenses 161 170 +9
Employing Workers 30 30 0
Registering Property 173 172 -1
Getting Credit 84 80 -4
Protecting Investors 51 49 -2
Paying Taxes 107 105 -2
Trading Across Borders 138 135 -3
Enforcing Contracts 93 92 -1
Closing a Business 89 86 -3
Note: Doing Business 2007 rankings for fiscal 2006 are being recalculated to reflect changes to the methodology and the addition of three new countries.

Starting a Business (2007)

The challenges of launching a business are shown below. Included are: the number of steps entrepreneurs can expect to go through to launch, the time it takes on average, and the cost and minimum capital required as a percentage of gross national income (GNI) per capita.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Procedures (number) 9 10.8 6.0
Duration (days) 34 56.3 14.9
Cost (% GNI per capita) 56.6 148.1 5.1
Min. Capital (% GNI per capita) 0.0 188.8 32.5
Details | Compare All Economies

Dealing with Licenses (2007)

Shown below are the procedures, time, and costs to build a warehouse, including obtaining necessary licenses and permits, completing required notifications and inspections, and obtaining utility connections.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Procedures (number) 18 18.1 14.0
Duration (days) 350 262.5 153.3
Cost (% of income per capita) 1,016.0 2,549.2 62.2
Details | Compare All Economies

Employing Workers (2007)

The difficulties that employers face in hiring and firing workers are shown below. Each index assigns values between 0 and 100, with higher values representing more rigid regulations. The Rigidity of Employment Index is an average of the three indices.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Difficulty of Hiring Index 0 41.7 25.2
Rigidity of Hours Index 0 43.9 39.2
Difficulty of Firing Index 20 42.2 27.9
Rigidity of Employment Index 7 42.6 30.8
Nonwage labor cost (% of salary) 9 12.3 20.7
Firing costs (weeks of wages) 50 68.3 25.7
Details | Compare All Economies

Registering Property (2007)

The ease with which businesses can secure rights to property is shown below. Included are the number of steps, time, and cost involved in registering property.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Procedures (number) 14 7.0 4.9
Duration (days) 82 104.6 28.0
Cost (% of property value) 22.2 11.1 4.6
Details | Compare All Economies

Getting Credit (2007)

Measures on credit information sharing and the legal rights of borrowers and lenders are shown below. The Legal Rights Index ranges from 0-10, with higher scores indicating that those laws are better designed to expand access to credit. The Credit Information Index measures the scope, access and quality of credit information available through public registries or private bureaus. It ranges from 0-6, with higher values indicating that more credit information is available from a public registry or private bureau.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Legal Rights Index 7 4.0 6.4
Credit Information Index 0 1.3 4.8
Public registry coverage (% adults) 0.0 2.1 8.6
Private bureau coverage (% adults) 0.0 4.5 59.3
Details | Compare All Economies

Protecting Investors (2007)

The indicators below describe three dimensions of investor protection: transparency of transactions (Extent of Disclosure Index), liability for self-dealing (Extent of Director Liability Index), shareholders’ ability to sue officers and directors for misconduct (Ease of Shareholder Suits Index) and Strength of Investor Protection Index. The indexes vary between 0 and 10, with higher values indicating greater disclosure, greater liability of directors, greater powers of shareholders to challenge the transaction, and better investor protection.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Disclosure Index 5 4.7 6.4
Director Liability Index 7 3.1 5.1
Shareholder Suits Index 5 5.0 6.5
Investor Protection Index 5.7 4.3 6.0
Details | Compare All Economies

Paying Taxes (2007)

The data below shows the tax that a medium-size company must pay or withhold in a given year, as well as measures of the administrative burden in paying taxes. These measures include the number of payments an entrepreneur must make; the number of hours spent preparing, filing, and paying; and the percentage of their profits they must pay in taxes.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Payments (number) 35 38.7 15.1
Time (hours) 1,120 321.2 183.3
Profit tax (%) 19.4 21.4 20.0
Labor tax and contributions (%) 9.7 13.3 22.8
Other taxes (%) 0.7 33.3 3.4
Total tax rate (% profit) 29.9 68.0 46.2
Details | Compare All Economies

Trading Across Borders (2007)

The costs and procedures involved in importing and exporting a standardized shipment of goods are detailed under this topic. Every official procedure involved is recorded - starting from the final contractual agreement between the two parties, and ending with the delivery of the goods.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Documents for export (number) 10 8.1 4.5
Time for export (days) 26 35.6 9.8
Cost to export (US$ per container) 1,026 1,660.1 905.0
Documents for import (number) 9 9.0 5.0
Time for import (days) 46 43.7 10.4
Cost to import (US$ per container) 1,047 1,985.9 986.1
Details | Compare All Economies

Enforcing Contracts (2007)

The ease or difficulty of enforcing commercial contracts in is measured below. This is determined by following the evolution of a payment dispute and tracking the time, cost, and number of procedures involved from the moment a plaintiff files the lawsuit until actual payment.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Procedures (number) 39 39.4 31.3
Duration (days) 457 643.0 443.3
Cost (% of claim) 32.0 48.7 17.7
Details | Compare All Economies

Closing a Business (2007)

The time and cost required to resolve bankruptcies is shown below. The data identifies weaknesses in existing bankruptcy law and the main procedural and administrative bottlenecks in the bankruptcy process. The recovery rate, expressed in terms of how many cents on the dollar claimants recover from the insolvent firm, is also shown.
Indicator Nigeria Region OECD
Time (years) 2.0 3.4 1.3
Cost (% of income per capita) 22 20.0 7.5
Recovery rate (cents on the dollar) 27 17.1 74.1
Compare All Economies
 

 
 

Top Reformers in 2006/07

This year Egypt tops the list of reformers that are making it easier to do business. Egypt\'s reforms went deep with reforms in 5 of the 10 areas studied by Doing Business, and it greatly improved its position in the global rankings as a result. Besides Egypt, the other top 10 reformers are, in order, Croatia, Ghana, FYR Macedonia, Georgia, Colombia, Saudi Arabia, Kenya, China, and Bulgaria.
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Here is a brief summary of some of the key reforms that took place:

Egypt, the top reformer in the region and worldwide, greatly improved its position in the global rankings on the ease of doing business. Its reforms went deep. Egypt cut the minimum capital required to start a business, from 50,000 Egyptian pounds to just 1,000 and halved the time and cost of start-up. It reduced fees for registering property from 3 percent of the property value to a low, fixed amount. It eased the bureaucracy that builders face in getting construction permits. It launched new one-stop shops for traders at Egyptian ports, cutting the time to import by seven days and the time to export by five. And it established a new private credit bureau that will soon be making it easier for borrowers to get credit.

Croatia reformed in four of the 10 areas studied by Doing Business. Two years ago, registering property in Croatia took 956 days. Now it takes 174. Company start-up also became faster, with procedures consolidated at a “one-stop shop” and pension and health services registration now online. Credit became easier to access: a new credit bureau was launched, and a unified registry now records charges against movable property in one place. In its first two months, €1.4 billion in credit was registered. In addition, amendments to the country’s insolvency law introduced professional requirements for bankruptcy trustees and shorter timelines.

Ghana, a top 10 reformer for the second year running, continues to increase the efficiency of its public services. It cut bottlenecks in property registration, reducing delays from six months to one. Greater efficiency at the company registry and the environment agency cut the time for business start-up to 42 days. Changes in the port authority’s operations sped up imports. New civil procedure rules and mandatory arbitration and mediation reduced the time it takes to enforce contracts.

FYR Macedonia eliminated the minimum capital requirement for business start-up, sped up the process for getting construction permits, lowered the corporate income tax rate to 12 percent (with another cut to 10 percent planned for 2008), and simplified tax payment procedures. Its ranking on the ease of doing business rose from 96 to 75.

Georgia reformed in six areas. It strengthened investor protections, including through amendments to its securities law that eliminate loopholes that had allowed corporate insiders to expropriate minority investors. It adopted a new insolvency law that shortens timelines for reorganization of a distressed company or disposition of a debtor’s assets. Georgia sped up approvals for construction permits and simplified procedures for registering property. It made starting a business easier by eliminating the paid-in capital requirement. In addition, the country’s private credit bureau added payment information from retailers, utilities, and trade creditors to the data it collects and distributes.

Colombia, the region’s top reformer, has made great strides in easing trade. By extending port operating hours and adopting more selective customs inspections, it reduced the time for port and terminal handling activities by three days. The country strengthened investor protections by increasing disclosure requirements for related-party transactions. It introduced an electronic tax filing system, cutting the average time businesses must spend on tax compliance each year by 188 hours, or 41 percent. And it is progressively reducing the corporate income tax rate, from 35 to 34 percent in 2007 and 33 percent in 2008.

Saudi Arabia, the runner-up reformer in the region, eliminated the minimum capital requirement of 1,057 percent of income per capita and reduced the days needed for company start-up from 39 to 15. It launched a commercial credit bureau whose reports include the credit exposure of companies. It also sped up trade, reducing the number of documents required for importing and cutting the time needed for handling at ports and terminals by two days for both imports and exports.

Kenya, the region’s other top 10 reformer, launched an ambitious licensing reform program. So far the program has eliminated 110 business licenses and simplified eight others. The changes have streamlined business start-up and cut both the time and cost of getting building permits. The program will eventually eliminate or simplify at least 900 more of the country’s 1,300 licenses. Property registration is also faster now, thanks to the introduction of competition among land valuers. And the country’s private credit bureau now collects a wider range of data.

In China, a new property law put private property rights on equal footing with state property rights. The law also expanded the range of assets that can be used as collateral to include inventory and accounts receivable. The new bankruptcy law gives secured creditors priority to the proceeds from their collateral. Construction also became easier, with electronic processing of building permits reducing delays by two weeks.

Bulgaria eased the tax burden on businesses and made it easier to pay taxes online. Bulgaria also introduced private bailiffs to improve efficiency in enforcing judgments. And it made building inspections less burdensome.

Download a complete list of reforms by country in PDF.










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