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Doing Business In Russia Hardly Getting Easier - World Bank

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  • Doing Business In Russia Hardly Getting Easier - World Bank

    DOING BUSINESS IN RUSSIA HARDLY GETTING EASIER - WORLD BANK

    Interfax News Agency
    Russia & CIS Business and Financial Newswire
    September 6, 2006 Wednesday 5:50 PM MSK

    Russia has hardly improved in the past year as far as the conditions
    for doing business are concerned, the World Bank and International
    Financial Corporation (IFC) said in their latest report on Doing
    Business 2007: How to Reform.

    This is the fourth in a series of annual reports investigating the
    regulations that enhance business activity and those that constrain it.

    Doing Business presents quantitative indicators on business regulations
    and the protection of property rights that can be compared across
    175 economies - from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe - and over time.

    Russia ranked 96th - one place below Bosnia & Herzegovina but one
    above Ethiopia - according to an assessment of business conditions
    conducted between January 2005 and April 2006.

    Russian ranked 79th in last year's survey of 155 countries, but
    another 20 countries were included for the first time this year. The
    method for calculating four of the indicators was also adjusted,
    and Russia's ranking among this year's 175 countries would have been
    97th last year, Simeon Dyankov, one of the report's main authors,
    told a press conference.

    In other words, Russia moved up just one place this year.

    Dyankov said the pace of reforms conducive to business had slowed in
    the last two years, although there had been some improvements.

    The unified social tax has been lowered and Russia has scrapped the tax
    on securities transactions, the duty on the use of the words "Russia"
    and "Russian Federation" and the tax on timber. Russia ranks 98th as
    far as tax payments are concerned, Dyankov said.

    It is also easier to start a business up. The requirement to register
    a company stamp had been abolished, and the number of hoops had
    been reduced from eight to seven. It now takes 28 days to register a
    business, compared with 33 in the past, and the cost of registering
    a business in per capita terms had gone down from 5% to 2.7%. This
    catapulted Russia to 33rd out of the 175 countries for starting
    up businesses.

    The law on joint stock companies has been amended to give better
    protection to minority shareholders, who now have the right to
    challenge management decisions in court, for example.

    "This is potentially a very important change but it will not be
    possible to assess its full impact until the next survey," Dyankov
    said.

    If these changes are put into practice, shareholder protection in
    Russia will be comparable with that of Britain and the United States,
    and Russia's ranking will go up, Dyankov said.

    The report said that export and import operations and licensing are
    the areas most in need of reform in Russia. Russia is ranked 143rd
    and 163rd respectively here.

    It costs $2,240 to dispatch one standard container from Moscow to
    Frankfurt, and that does not include transport costs, but just $335
    to send one from China to Frankfurt. It can take 39 days to complete
    the paperwork and other procedures necessary to ship a container from
    Russia, but 18 days from China.

    Russia ranks among the top ten countries in terms of the high cost
    of licenses and the length of time it takes to obtain them. It takes
    as many as 22 procedures and 531 days and the equivalent of 275.3%
    of per capita income to get a construction license in Russia, compared
    with 18 windows, 69 days and 16% in the United States.

    The report also said that Russia needed to make is easier to obtain
    credits. Russia is near the bottom in 159th place in this respect.

    Russia had the best terms for doing business among the BRIC countries
    (Brazil, Russia, India and China) last year, but this year's
    front-runner is China, up from 108th to 93rd in the overall rankings.

    China also ranked among the top ten countries in terms of the
    implementation of reforms.

    Georgia was the leader in terms of reforms, rising from 112th to 37th
    in the overall rankings. Of all the CIS countries, only Armenia,
    in 34th place, provides more business freedom. Russia also lags
    behind Kazakhstan, which rose to 63rd from 82nd, and Kyrgyzstan,
    up from 104th to 90th.

    Belarus was 129th, Ukraine 128th, Tajikistan 133rd and Uzbekistan
    147th.

    Singapore topped the overall ranking this year, up from 2nd last year,
    while New Zealand fell from 1st to 2nd and the United States remained
    in 3rd place.

    The Democratic Republic of Congo was again last.
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