Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

Good to see things are improving, even if slowly.

DOING BUSINESS HAS BECOME EASIER IN PAKISTAN AND INDIA](http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=3&article_id=79556)

ISLAMABAD, – SPA – Doing business became easier in Pakistan and India in 2005-2006, according to a new regional report released Tuesday by the World Bank and its private sector arm, International Finance Corporation or IFC, entitled Doing Business in South Asia 2007.
The report covers eight countries in the World Bank s South Asia region and examines 12 major cities in India, six in Pakistan, and four in Bangladesh.
According to the report, within India, Hyderabad has the most business-friendly regulations while Karachi is at the top in Pakistan, while Dhaka ranks best in Bangladesh.
Five reforms in India and two in Pakistan reduced the time, cost, and hassle for businesses to comply with legal and administrative requirements.
No other South Asian economies improved business regulations in 2005-2006, ranking the region last in the pace of global reforms , the report added.
**It compares business regulations in the region with 175 economies around the world. The top-ranked countries are the Maldives (53) and Pakistan (74), followed by Bangladesh (88), Sri Lanka (89), Nepal (100), India (134), Bhutan (138), and Afghanistan (162). **


Doing Business in South Asia 2007 is the third report in a series of South Asia regional reports based on the methodology of the annual global Doing Business report.
Doing Business tracks a set of regulatory indicators related to business start-up, operation, trade, payment of taxes, and closure by measuring the time and cost associated with various government requirements. It does not track variables such as macroeconomic policy, quality of infrastructure, currency volatility, investor perceptions, or crime rates.
The report finds that entrepreneurs in South Asia face large regulatory obstacles to doing business. For example, it takes 18 months of salary, on average in the region, to dismiss a redundant worker. More than a year (425 days) is needed to register property in Bangladesh. Taxes are high: a standard company in India pays 81% of commercial profits in taxes, while in Pakistan, it takes 560 hours per year to comply with all tax regulations.

Good practices exist within Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan. The report team finds that if each city in these countries mimicked the best practices followed in other cities within the country, the country ranking and ease of doing business would improve drastically.
In Pakistan, implementing each city s best practice would result in a 22-place jump in the global Doing Business rankings, from 74th to 52nd place.

In 2005-2006, the pace of reform was slower in South Asia than in any other region, with only India and Pakistan starting to improve their business environment. Countries are competing for investment, enterprises, and the jobs that come with them. Some improvements are underway in the region, but the pace of reform must increase if South Asia wants to keep up with the rest of the world, said Simon Bell, World Bank Manager for Financial and Private Sector Development in South Asia.
As a region, South Asia performs comparatively well in business start-up and protecting investors. It lags far behind, however, on the ease of employing workers, enforcing contracts, and trading across borders. For example, resolving commercial disputes through the courts is more time-consuming in South Asia than in any other region.
On average it takes almost three years (969 days). The report finds that complex and costly business regulations push workers into the underground economy. In India, over 8 million workers have formal jobs in the private sector in a country of over 1 billion people and a workforce of 458 million. Sri Lanka has over 4 million workers in formal private sector jobs out of a workforce of about 7 million. In Bangladesh, 7 million workers have formal jobs in the private sector. In northern European countries, where it is easy to do business and people benefit from social protection, less than 8% of all economic activity occurs in the underground economy.

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

ehsan bhai, the man on the street knows better, what do u know about Pakistan sitting in UK..waghaira waghaira

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

^ lol let me add to that.. you are probably from an army family under mush's payroll, and did you know that TI declared Pakistan as the most corrupt nation on the moon!

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

spock waisay our friend is missing in action, maybe ISI picked him up :(

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

:hehe: yeah

And isn’t ehsan bhai an ex general? :smiley:

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

Reporting for duty! :soldier: :nahnah:

As u will be expecting… your wrong, i’m right! :tamatarr:

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

:D

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

[quote]
It compares business regulations in the region with 175 economies around the world. The top-ranked countries are the Maldives (53) and Pakistan (74), followed by Bangladesh (88), Sri Lanka (89), Nepal (100), India (134), Bhutan (138), and Afghanistan (162).

[/quote]

It's heart warming to see that we are leader in the South Asia region in allowing people to do business, and thus encouraging more and more foreign investment as well.

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

This is the link from the World Bank to the whole report.

It’s very encouraging for Pakistan, and shows this government’s economic policies are producing results that are more favorable than most in the region.

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

Pakistan is one of the most business friendly nations in the region, as per world bank rankings.

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\06\03\story_3-6-2006_pg5_1

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

It’s pretty impressive that overseas Pakistani’s are pumping such huge amounts of money into Pakistan as never seen before in our history. It just shows how much confidence they have in this government’s pro-investment policies, unlike when previous govts were in power scaring away Overseas Pakistani’s who wanted to invest in their homeland.

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

http://prweb.com/releases/State_of_Pakistans/Competitiveness_Report/prweb511037.htm

First Ever Pakistan’s Competitiveness Report Launched

The first State of Pakistan’s Competitiveness Report was launched today by the Prime Minister of Pakistan, Mr. Shaukat Aziz at the PM secretariat. The report is prepared by the Competitiveness Support Fund , a joint initiative of the Ministry of Finance, Government of Pakistan and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). the first State of Pakistan’s Competitiveness Report is an important step to focus the energies of the nation around the common goal of making Pakistan a stronger economy. It also makes a historic contribution to the country and announces to the international business community that Pakistan intends to become a competitive and high-growth country The World Economic Forum recognized the economic achievements of the Government of Pakistan in the latest Global Competitiveness Report.Pakistan ranked 66th on the Business Competitiveness Index which shows the market efficiency and 91st out of 125 countries, on the Global Competitiveness Index that includes governance, health and education in the 2006-2007 Global Competitiveness Report. Not only did Pakistan score well on the Business Competitiveness Index, it also increased its rank by several places among the 125 nations on the Global Competitiveness Index. Prime Minister, in his speech, noted that “the first State of Pakistan’s Competitiveness Report is an important step to focus the energies of the nation around the common goal of making Pakistan a stronger economy. It also makes a historic contribution to the country and announces to the international business community that Pakistan intends to become a competitive and high-growth country”. “Competitiveness is the cornerstone of Pakistan’s growth strategy”, said the prime minister. Speaking on the occasion, Prime Minister said that competitiveness is the cornerstone of economic growth which generates more employment and reduces poverty. Prime Minister said that all arms of the government and the private sector will have to be involved to improve Pakistan’s ranking in the global competitiveness index. The Prime Minister in his speech said the CSF would work in partnership with the World Economic Forum (WEF) and The US Competitiveness Council and the Lisbon Agenda of the European Union. He said during his recent visit to Davos he held useful meetings with the world leaders, including Mr. Klaus Schwab, Chairman of the World Economic Forum as well as Prof. Michael Porter of the Harvard Business School about the ways and means to improve competitiveness.

Prof. Michael Porter, Harvard’s expert on competitiveness and engineer of one of the Business Competitiveness Index, commented on the country’s achievements in his video message at the launching ceremony of the report by saying, “Pakistan also shows impressive movement in some of the most dynamic indicators on the Business Competitiveness Index which bodes well for future economic growth. I commend the Prime Minister and his team for their steady stewardship of the Pakistan economy over recent years. Their efforts to catalyze pro-poor economic growth set an example for other dynamic, high- growth economies across the world.” Dr. Klaus Schwab, Founder and Chairman, World Economic Forum also in his video message from Davos said, “The World Economic Forum has for over a generation published the Global Competitiveness Report that has benchmarked the evolution of competitiveness in many countries. The World Economic Forum has included Pakistan in its Competitiveness Report for some years now. During this time, the Government of Pakistan has achieved impressive rates of economic growth and impressive reductions in poverty, despite conflicts on its borders, natural disasters and energy price increases.” However, it has not been until January of 2007 that there has been an in depth analysis of Pakistan’s competitiveness conducted in the country. Pakistan now has its own State of Competitiveness in Pakistan report that can benchmark the progress of the country in achieving goals. The results validate the government efforts to improve public sector management. The biggest gains came in areas that have been the focus of recent Government reforms. Interest rate spreads the major indicator of financial sector efficiency, improved markedly. Indicators such as public trust in Government officials and capacity for innovation improved notably. Dr. Salman Shah noted that the Competitiveness Support Fund seeks to finance practical initiatives to reposition Pakistan’s economy regionally and globally and set it on a more competitive footing. The result will be higher productivity, increased innovation, and an economy that is integrated into global value chains and can compete internationally. Mission Director USAID Pakistan, Jonathan Addleton, reiterated on the occasion USAID’s long-term support for competitiveness and economic growth activities in Pakistan. Mr. Arthur Bayhan, CEO of the Competitiveness Support Fund , in his presentation briefed the audience about the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Report on Pakistan and other countries. In particular, he highlighted the importance of the provincial and local leaders to be part of the competitiveness dialogue. The Competitiveness Support Fund is working directly with each region in addressing the key competitiveness issues at the regional level. “The challenge of building competitiveness goes beyond what can be accomplished by the Government’s economic team alone and requires the active support and participation of the regional and local leaders, academia and private sector leaders,” noted Bayhan. Mr. Bayhan in his presentation about the salient features of Competitiveness Support Fund (CSF) said Pakistan has been consistently improving in terms of competitiveness and dynamism. He said “in Pakistan, the government is the agent and catalyst for change and driving the private sector.” He said that the private sector of Pakistan needs to work more on developing the medium and long-term strategies as one of the many steps to improve its competitiveness. He urged also all the government agencies and non-governmental organization to update the data and submit it to international sources. The Report will serve as an important benchmark against which to measure change in the future. The event was attended by cabinet members, corporate and business leaders, legislators, senior civil servants and intellectuals from academia and research institutes. The event was also witnessed by a large number of national and international media representatives as well.

Re: Improvement in doing business in Pakistan during 2005/6

I am a graduate of Computer Science and i with couple of other friends started our own software house a year ago... Just to get you a little idea of how the things work in Pakistan.. Definitely there is lot of money...

i have seen architecture yea i mean architectures winning software bids... and after winning bids they r looking out to hire few software engg to do the jobs. You can very well imagine the quality of that software and life of that software.. I have seen University Portal software bid been awarded to non-software company... which doesn't have even 1 software engineer.. which doesn't even know how to make the software bid proposal... Definitely there are lot of things going on and you can earn a lot only if you have contacts... and means...

There are two sectors which has progressed in the last 7 years, one is Banking sector and the other is Telecom sector... Banking sector has progressed not on the wealth but on the showoff of the people... Our saving has dropped below 10% from 15%... and which is not a good sign. Secondly Telecom sector has expanded but not for bznessmen.. we still have to pay US $ 400 for a single 256Kb dedicated line.. and you can very well imagine how the new software house will go under the burden of Cost of necessities before growing. The real estate value is all time high.. You see people have made a lot of money by pushing the real estate price but in the end it hurts the bzness..

You all european and americans know how real estate is a dead investment... Similarly you know in american and euopre, govt have these Office Towers in Silicon valley for the new startups and as soon as they grow over a certain limit like 8 people they are kicked out of these places and a new company is given a chance to open office in that space with free utilities provided. We have opposite here.. the govt. created an IT Tower with lot of publicity and it has the highest rent rate in Lahore.. impressive policy.

The lot of investment being done here is practically dead investment... like in stocks or real estate... it doesn't provide jobs to the technical people. Secondly i mentioned that telecom sector was one of the biggest gainers in last few years but still we have no mobile phone company preparing mobiles in Pakistan.. Why.? i just read recently that Sony Ericsson is opening a huge plan in India.. Similarly Intel is building one of the most advanced processor Fabrication plant in China... (even there is lot of bickering over it in America)... i remember that during the NS era lot of companies were coming into existance.. but now the reality is that even the textile Mills owner are taking their money out from the factories and investing in real estate.. and the loss is to the Pakistan...

We don't have any industry for talented peoples... Automobile sector has stopped investing after the relaxation of the auto imports. Sad isn;t it... even the first Pakistan car manufacturing plant has closed it production after 18 months and 600 cars produced...

I repeat once again, investing in stock and real estate is not the index for the progress of the country... rather its the index of the height of the corruption in country... We are moving our talented people away from work cuz they are not getting reward for their talent... Just imagine the height of the trouble for new bzness that recently quite a few times i had to ask my australian batch mate to download me the entire site and rar it and send it to me cuz he is having a 1Mb connection at his dorm whereas we are hardly getting 10 Kb on DSL... and he pays 1/4th then wot we pay to the ISP...

I really wish you people have experienced this frustration of doing bzness in Pakistan then you would have realised that its like rubbing salt on the wounds of an honest person..