Local News>Jamaica marginally
worse at courting investors
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Financial Gleaner
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Jamaica has slipped one place in overall rankings for the ease of
doing business, and has made no progress in reforming or rolling back
heavy corporate taxes in the past year to remain one of the most heavily
taxed countries on the globe, according to the latest World Bank-IFC report
released on Wednesday.
Jamaica is No 63 of 181 economies ranked by the World Bank in the 'Doing
Business 2009' review, down from No 62.
But, to put a more positive spin on the ranking, there are 118 worse
places in the world for doing business. Still only eight of them are outclassed
by Jamaica in the sub-ranking that assesses tax-friendliness.
And, when matched against countries in the region only, of the 32 Latin
American and Caribbean or LAC economies, Jamaica is at No 9; St Lucia
is No 1 and Venezuela is at the very bottom. Trinidad is ranked 15 regionally,
but 80 on the world scale.
The World Bank-IFC survey of business environment worldwide, is meant,
the bank said, to provide countries with a guide to where reforms are
needed. It also highlights the fastest reformers.
Singapore remains at No 1 in the rankings, while Azerbaijan (see related
story on Page 28) got kudos for top reforms.
Heavy Shipping Costs
Dragging Jamaica down in the current survey is the 51.3 per cent of taxes
businesses pay on average - that's more than 51 cents of every dollar
earned - to the treasury and designated state agencies with which they
interface 72 times per year; heavy shipping costs of US$1,750 per export
container and the US$1,420 charge per container of imports; the two months
required to register property and transaction fees that double those of
other groupings; and enforcement of contracts (see insert for rankings).
Export costs have remained steady in the past three years, but imports
are more costly, up by US$70 per container in a year.
Additionally, shipping cargo from Jamaica is significantly more expensive
than elsewhere - by more than US$500 relative to regional countries, and
close to US$700 more than rich nations bundled under the Organisation
of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in relation to exports;
while import costs are higher by US$160 and US$280, respectively.
This at a time when the Port Authority of Jamaica is attempting to position
Kingston as a top transhipment hub in the region, against ports like Dominican
Republic.
In fact, Jamaica has fallen four places in the sub-ranking for commercial
trade across borders to slot 100, even though its procedures and turnaround
time on imports and exports basically track with other countries in the
region.
Well Ahead Of Trinindad
The gap opens up most starkly when the cost of doing business through
the ports is factored.
But it's not all bad for the country. Jamaica holds court with ten other
nations as one of the most friendly jurisdictions to start a business,
retaining its slot at position 11, well ahead of neighbouring trade partner
Trinidad, both of which are locked in a race to roll out their capitals
as low tax havens or offshore financial centres.
Jamaica is also basically on par with OECD countries on the number of
procedures required to start a business, six, whereas regionally it's
just under 10.
And for businesses that fail, investors in Jamaica recover just under
65 cents of every dollar pumped into the business, comparable to the near
69 cents for rich countries, and more than double the 27 cents in the
region.
The island of 2.7 million with income per capita of US$3,710, outpaces
all others in laws designed to buffer access to credit - scoring eight
out of a possible 10, compared to the LAC at 5.6 points and the OECD,
6.8 points.
But as for the availability of credit information through bureaus or
registries, Jamaica's score is zero. Plans for a credit bureau are in
train but have not materialised.
Transparency
Its stocks fall even further in the critical area of transparency, which
falls under the heading of 'protecting investors' which cover, said the
Doing Business analysts, three dimensions: transparency of transactions
or disclosures; liability for self-dealing; and ability of shareholders
to sue or hold directors and officers for misconduct.
On the disclosure index, Jamaica scores four out of a possible 10, but
the world is no better, with OECD countries averaging 5.9 points and LAC
4.1.
The three are all bundled at or around five points for investor protection,
but Jamaica pulls ahead in the director liability index at eight points
compared to five for the two regions.
business@gleanerjm.com
The Financial Gleaner
The Financial Gleaner
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