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India ranks 75th in world's best nations for biz: Forbes

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India ranks 75th in world's best nations for biz: Forbes

New York: India has slipped 11 positions to be ranked 75th in a list of world's best countries for business, compiled by US publication Forbes, as the country lost ground in areas like trade freedom, technology, corporate tax rate and corruption.

The list has been topped for the second year in a row by Denmark, while India has moved down from its 64th position in Forbes' annual list, which ranks 127 nations on the basis of business climate in a country for entrepreneurs, investors and workers.

The US has moved up two position to be ranked second on the list. Besides, Canada and Singapore have moved up four spots each to number three and four respectively. Other countries in the top 10 this year include New Zealand, UK, Sweden, Australia, Hong Kong and Norway.

Three countries -- New Zealand, Australia and Norway -- are new to the top-ten this year, while three others -- Finland, Ireland and Switzerland -- have fallen out of this league.

"Sliding the most this year was Ireland (No. 14, down 12), which even saw plans for a Guinness mega-brewery shelved by parent Diageo as exports slowed," Forbes said, adding Uruguay, Armenia, Paraguay and Latvia also moved down considerably.

China has moved ahead of India to 63rd position in this year's list, up from its 79th spot last year, primarily due to improvements in areas like innovation and investor protection.

The Communist nation has been ranked at top position across the world in terms of investor protection, although it is ranked among the lowest at 122nd in terms of personal freedom.

About India, the report said the country declined on the rankings on four metrics -- trade freedom, technology, corporate tax rate and corruption.

In terms of trade freedom, India was ranked among the lowest at 125th position, while it was down to 118th on corporate tax rate front. In technology and corruption, the country slipped to 64th and 71st positions respectively.

Besides, India is ranked at the 107th spot in terms of monetary freedom, 90th on red tape basis and 54th on personal freedom front. The rankings are, however, better at 30th each on the basis of investor protection and innovation and 44th on intellectual property rights.

In terms of GDP growth, India ranks 14th among these 127 countries with a growth rate of 7.3 per cent, while China is fourth with 9.8 per cent growth. Azerbaijan has topped this tally with a 15.6 per cent growth rate.
 
forbes lists out many things like it does not include all of countries in it's billionaire's list
i mean its possible for india to do that but forbes isnt much of a reliable source
 
forbes lists out many things like it does not include all of countries in it's billionaire's list
i mean its possible for india to do that but forbes isnt much of a reliable source

But you gotta refer something.
 
According to World Bank's ease of doing buiness index '09 report ranks :

India = 122
China = 83
Pakistan = 77
 
According to World Bank's ease of doing buiness index '09 report ranks :

India = 122
China = 83
Pakistan = 77

As per the report Afganistan is the no1 insouth asia for starting a business...hmmmm.....intresting


tx
 
According to World Bank's ease of doing buiness index '09 report ranks :

India = 122
China = 83
Pakistan = 77

S90, how do they calculate this? Is it a average of the other columns like "getting credit" , "paying taxes", etc?
 
S90, how do they calculate this? Is it a average of the other columns like "getting credit" , "paying taxes", etc?

A nation's ranking on the index is based on the average of 10 subindices:

*Starting a business - Procedures, time, cost and minimum capital to open a new business
*Dealing with licenses - Procedures, time and cost of business inspections and licensing (construction industry)
*Hiring and firing workers - Difficulty of hiring index, rigidity of hours of index, difficulty of firing index, hiring cost and firing cost
*Registering property - Procedures, time and cost to register commercial real estate
*Getting credit - Strength of legal rights index, depth of credit information index
*Protecting investors - Indices on the extent of disclosure, extent of director liability and ease of shareholder suits
*Paying taxes - Number of taxes paid, hours per year spent preparing tax returns and total tax payable as share of gross profit
*Trading across borders - Number of documents, number of signatures and time necessary to export and import
*Enforcing contracts - Procedures, time and cost to enforce a debt contract
*Closing a business - Time and cost to close down a business, and recovery rate
 
And yet india doing better than most nations on the list. just imagine if it became easier...
 
Washington, March 20: India is down by eleven places to the seventy fifth in the Forbes 'Best Countries For Business' list with Denmark and the United States rated the top two nations "better equipped to bounce back".


IMFIndia's ranking among the world's 127 economies slipped as it lost ground in areas like trade freedom (125), technology (64), corporate tax rate (118) and corruption (71), according to the list compiled by the US magazine.

India retained its place in areas like monetary freedom (107), property rights (44), innovation (30), red tape (90), investor protection (30) and personal freedom (54).

Canada is rated third after the US followed by Singapore (4), New Zealand (5), UK (6), Sweden (7), Australia (8), Hong Kong (9) and Norway (10).

Forbes noted that New Delhi has reduced controls on foreign trade and investment with higher limits on foreign direct investment permitted in a few key sectors, such as telecommunications.

However, tariff spikes in sensitive categories, including agriculture and incremental progress on economic reforms still hinder foreign access to India's vast and growing market.

"Privatisation of government-owned industries remains stalled and continues to generate political debate; populist pressure from within the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government had restrained needed initiatives," it said.

The economy has posted an average growth rate of more than seven percent in the decade since 1997, reducing poverty by about 10 percentage points. India achieved 8.5 percent GDP growth in 2006, 9.0 percent in 2007 and 7.3 percent in 2008, significantly expanding manufactures through late 2008, Forbes noted.

India is also capitalising on its large numbers of well-educated people skilled in the English language to become a major exporter of software services and software workers, it said. Strong growth combined with easy consumer credit, a real estate boom, and fast-rising commodity prices fuelled inflation concerns from mid-2006 to August 2008.

Rising tax revenues from better tax administration and economic expansion helped New Delhi make progress in reducing its fiscal deficit for three straight years before sky-rocketing global commodity prices more than doubled the cost of government energy and fertilizer subsidies, Forbes said.

The ballooning subsidies, amidst slowing growth, brought the return of a large fiscal deficit in 2008, Forbes said suggesting, "In the long run, the huge and growing population is the fundamental social, economic and environmental problem."
 
And the point being what?

Com'on blain U thanked the guy who replied to my mail ....U shuld have understood that....THis reprt says that Afganistan got no 1 ranking to start the business in SA...do U think this is true...this shows that how far off from reality are those guys who made this report.....their parameters is so way off from the reality


tx
 
forbes lists out many things like it does not include all of countries in it's billionaire's list
i mean its possible for india to do that but forbes isnt much of a reliable source

:what:


You must be joking, if you not consider Forbes to be reliable. I dare you to Show me any other magazine in it's calibur that is reliable.
 
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