Ease of doing business index
The Ease of Doing Business Index was an annual World Bank publication from 2003 to 2020 that ranked 190 economies based on the regulatory environment's conduciveness to starting and operating a local firm.[1] It aggregated scores across ten topics, including starting a business, dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts, and resolving insolvency, each weighted equally in the overall ranking.[2] A higher ranking indicated fewer regulatory burdens and greater efficiency in business procedures, with scores benchmarked against global best practices.[2] The index aimed to highlight reforms that simplify business regulations and promote economic growth, influencing policy changes in numerous countries by incentivizing competition for better rankings.[3] In the final 2020 edition, New Zealand topped the list, followed by Singapore and Hong Kong SAR, China, reflecting streamlined processes in areas like business startup and contract enforcement in these jurisdictions.[4] Economies such as Saudi Arabia and India showed notable improvements over prior years, often through targeted regulatory reforms.[5] Publication ceased in September 2021 after internal investigations revealed data irregularities in the 2018 and 2020 reports, including unauthorized alterations that affected rankings for countries like China, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.[6][7] These issues, combined with methodological vulnerabilities that allowed gaming by governments, undermined the index's reliability, leading the World Bank to discontinue it entirely rather than revise.[8][9] Despite its flaws, the index provided empirical benchmarks on regulatory impacts, though critics noted it overlooked broader factors like corruption and macroeconomic stability.[10]Overview
Definition and Core Purpose
The Ease of Doing Business Index was an annual World Bank publication from 2003 to 2020 that ranked 190 economies on the strength of regulations affecting the lifecycle of a domestic small or medium-sized firm, from incorporation to closure.[5] It measured formal legal and regulatory requirements rather than informal constraints or macroeconomic conditions, focusing on ten topics including starting a business, obtaining electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts, resolving insolvency, and employing workers (added in later years).[11] Economies received percentile rankings for each topic based on distance to the frontier—a score reflecting how close their regulations approximated the best-performing jurisdiction—and the aggregate ease of doing business score was the simple average of these, with final rankings sorted by scores and ties broken by enforcing contracts performance.[12][13] The core purpose was to quantify and benchmark business regulations objectively to highlight reform opportunities, enabling governments to identify and implement changes that reduce regulatory burdens and enhance private enterprise efficiency.[14] By presenting comparable data across economies, the index aimed to foster competition among countries to improve their rankings, thereby incentivizing evidence-based policy adjustments that correlate with higher firm entry rates, investment, and productivity growth.[3] For instance, reforms tracked in the reports, such as simplifying business registration or streamlining tax compliance, were credited with facilitating over 31,000 regulatory changes worldwide by 2020, though causal impacts varied by context and required complementary institutional factors.[5] This approach privileged empirical benchmarking over subjective assessments, drawing on standardized case studies of hypothetical firms to simulate real-world regulatory interactions, which allowed for cross-country comparability while acknowledging that the index did not capture all determinants of business activity, such as corruption or labor market dynamics beyond formal rules.[15] The index's discontinuation in 2021 stemmed from data manipulation concerns in select indicators, but its foundational intent remained to promote regulatory environments that causally support entrepreneurship by minimizing time, cost, and procedural hurdles in verifiable compliance processes.[16]Evolution of Scope and Coverage
The inaugural Doing Business report, published by the World Bank in September 2003 (covering data as of mid-2003), evaluated business regulations across five core topics—starting a business, dealing with licenses, employing workers, enforcing contracts, and closing a business—in 133 economies, focusing primarily on procedural efficiency and time/cost burdens for small to medium-sized domestic firms in the largest business city.[17][18] This initial scope emphasized entry, operation, and exit barriers, using standardized hypothetical case studies to ensure comparability, but excluded macro-level factors like macroeconomic stability or informal sector dynamics.[19] Subsequent iterations broadened the scope by incorporating additional indicator sets to address gaps in regulatory assessment. The 2006 report added getting credit (measuring credit information systems and collateral laws) and protecting investors (evaluating shareholder rights and disclosure); paying taxes followed in 2008, quantifying compliance burdens; trading across borders entered in 2009, tracking import/export logistics; and getting electricity was introduced in 2010, assessing connection procedures and reliability.[5] By the 2013 report, the framework stabilized around 10 topics for the aggregate score (excluding employing workers from ranking starting in 2015 due to methodological concerns over labor protections' complexity), with further refinements like quality sub-indicators added in 2015–2016 for areas such as construction permits and enforcing contracts to capture not just speed but substantive regulatory outcomes.[20] These expansions shifted emphasis toward financial access, trade facilitation, infrastructure integration, and governance safeguards, reflecting empirical evidence that multifaceted reforms drive private sector growth, though critics noted potential overemphasis on formal procedures at the expense of enforcement variability.[16] Coverage expanded steadily to enhance global representativeness, growing from 133 economies in 2003 to 178 by 2007, 183 by 2011, 189 by 2013, and peaking at 190 by 2018, incorporating nearly all World Bank members plus select territories like West Bank and Gaza, with data weighted by population for multi-city cases (e.g., Bangladesh averaging Dhaka and Chittagong).[5][17] This included back-calculation of historical data for new entrants to enable trend analysis, alongside subnational extensions (e.g., 11 cities in select economies from 2015) for benchmarking reforms within countries. The 2020 report introduced contracting with the government as a 12th area (excluded from rankings), evaluating public procurement transparency, but the project's scope contracted after irregularities in data alterations for select economies (e.g., 2018–2020 revisions favoring China and Saudi Arabia) prompted a 2021 halt and shift to the Business Ready initiative, which aims for broader environmental factors beyond strict regulatory proceduralism.[21][16]Methodology
Indicators and Measurement Criteria
The Ease of Doing Business index assessed regulatory environments through ten principal topics, each targeting specific stages of a hypothetical small to medium-sized firm's lifecycle in the economy's largest business city. These topics were: Starting a Business, which measured procedures, time, costs, and minimum capital requirements for incorporating a limited liability company; Dealing with Construction Permits, evaluating steps, duration, expenses, and building quality control for obtaining approvals to construct a warehouse; Getting Electricity, quantifying procedures, time, cost, and reliability of supply for connecting to the electrical grid; Registering Property, assessing transfers of commercial real estate via procedures, time, and costs relative to property value; Getting Credit, examining legal rights of secured lenders, depth of credit information systems, and public credit registry/bureau coverage; Protecting Minority Investors, scoring disclosure, approval rights, and protections against related-party transactions in shareholder disputes; Paying Taxes, covering total tax and contribution rates, time for compliance, and post-filing processes for corporate income, value-added, and social security payments; Trading across Borders, measuring time and costs for documentary compliance and border procedures in exporting and importing a standardized cargo; Enforcing Contracts, evaluating time, cost, and quality of judicial resolution for a commercial sales dispute; and Resolving Insolvency, analyzing recovery rates, time, cost, and strength of insolvency framework for reorganizing or liquidating a distressed firm.[2] Measurement criteria emphasized quantifiable regulatory features over enforcement practices, using standardized case studies—such as a depot in an industrial zone with specific characteristics—to ensure cross-country comparability. For instance, indicators prioritized de jure rules from statutes, regulations, and secondary laws, benchmarked against global best practices, with qualitative indices (e.g., quality scores for construction safety or judicial efficiency) incorporated from 2015 onward to capture procedural robustness beyond mere speed or expense.[2][5] Each topic's sub-indicators aggregated metrics like number of procedures (fewer deemed better), time in calendar days (shorter better), monetary costs as percentages of income or value (lower better), and indices scaled 0-100 (higher better), with weights assigned based on empirical relevance to business outcomes.[2] Topic scores were derived as the "distance to frontier," a normalized measure from 0 (least efficient, matching the worst historical performance) to 100 (frontier, equaling the best observed practice globally, updated annually). This approach incentivized convergence toward optimal regulations rather than relative rankings alone, though it assumed uniform applicability of best practices across contexts.[2] The index excluded macro-level factors like macroeconomic stability or informal sector dynamics, focusing solely on formal regulatory hurdles.[5]Data Collection and Scoring Process
The Doing Business project collected data on business regulations primarily from four sources: the text of relevant laws and regulations, responses from local experts, input from national governments, and contributions from World Bank Group staff or designated third-party providers for specific datasets such as credit reporting systems.[12] Data gathering focused on standardized hypothetical case scenarios representing a small to medium-sized domestic firm operating in the economy's largest business city, with a second city included for economies exceeding 100 million inhabitants to account for potential regional variations.[22] Questionnaires tailored to each of the 10 topics—such as starting a business, enforcing contracts, and trading across borders—were distributed annually to solicit factual information on procedures, time requirements, costs, and quality benchmarks, with collection occurring between February and October each year ahead of the December report release.[2] Local respondents, typically numbering around seven per economy and topic and totaling over 15,000 pro bono contributors globally per cycle, included professionals such as lawyers, accountants, freight forwarders, and notaries selected for their expertise in the relevant regulatory areas.[22] These experts provided inputs on both de jure regulations and de facto implementation, with data validated through cross-checks against official laws, multiple independent responses (using medians to resolve discrepancies), teleconferences, in-country missions, and government consultations to ensure accuracy and transparency.[21] Unreliable or outlier responses were excluded, and World Bank teams conducted desk research and follow-ups to confirm consistency, emphasizing factual metrics over subjective perceptions.[12] Raw data from these sources were transformed into scores using the distance to frontier (DTF) measure, introduced in the 2015 report, which benchmarks an economy's performance against the global frontier of best practices observed across all sampled economies and years, scaled from 0 (lowest performance) to 100 (frontier).[23] For quantifiable sub-indicators, such as the number of procedures or time in days, scores were calculated via linear normalization—e.g., score = 100 × (worst observed value – economy's value) / (worst – best) – often applying logarithmic scaling for variables like time to reflect diminishing marginal impacts of reductions.[22] The overall ease of doing business score comprised the simple average of the DTF scores across the 10 topics, with equal weighting, enabling aggregation while preserving relative distances; rankings derived directly from these scores, from highest to lowest, to facilitate cross-economy comparisons.[12] This approach shifted from earlier absolute scoring to emphasize incremental reforms toward optimal regulatory efficiency.[24]Methodological Changes and Critiques
The Ease of Doing Business Index underwent several methodological evolutions since its inception in 2003, initially focusing on five core topics—starting a business, dealing with licenses, hiring and firing workers, enforcing contracts, and closing a business—before expanding to ten indicators by 2019 to capture a broader lifecycle of firm operations, including getting electricity (added in 2009), getting credit (refined over time), protecting minority investors (introduced in 2015), paying taxes, trading across borders, registering property, dealing with construction permits, enforcing contracts (added as a standalone in 2016), and resolving insolvency.[2] A pivotal shift occurred in the 2013 edition with the adoption of "distance to frontier" (DTF) scores, which measured each economy's performance relative to global best practices (scored at 100) rather than absolute rankings, aiming to better highlight reform progress and reduce volatility from peer comparisons; this change applied to overall and topic-level rankings.[25] Subsequent refinements included weighting adjustments, such as equalizing the weights of starting a business and construction permits in 2015, and incorporating more granular sub-indicators, like electronic filing options in paying taxes, in response to external reviews that identified gaps in capturing digital reforms.[16] Critiques of the methodology centered on its narrow scope and potential biases, with detractors arguing that the focus on a standardized hypothetical small-to-medium formal firm overlooked informal sector realities, macroeconomic factors, and critical regulations in areas like labor protections, environmental standards, and public health, potentially incentivizing deregulation that prioritized short-term business costs over long-term societal welfare.[26][27] The reliance on surveys of local experts and law firms for data collection introduced risks of subjectivity and inconsistency, as scoring depended on interpretive judgments rather than purely objective metrics, leading to accusations of oversimplification and failure to validate against actual firm experiences.[28] An independent evaluation by the World Bank's Internal Evaluation Group in 2022 noted that while the index spurred reforms, its indicators sometimes encouraged "cherry-picking" of easy regulatory tweaks without addressing deeper institutional barriers, and its aggregation method masked disparities within topics.[27] The index's credibility faced a decisive blow from data irregularities uncovered in an internal investigation, revealing improper alterations to underlying data and scoring for select economies—including China, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Azerbaijan—in the 2018 and 2020 reports, often to inflate rankings under pressure from World Bank management responsive to political influences from high-income member countries.[29] These manipulations, which involved overriding team assessments and benchmark changes without transparency, prompted the World Bank to discontinue the report entirely on September 16, 2021, citing irreparable damage to data integrity and the need to prioritize ethical standards over continued publication.[6] Critics, including prior external panels, had earlier highlighted vulnerabilities to such gaming, where countries lobbied for favorable interpretations, underscoring systemic flaws in the index's governance and verification processes despite its empirical intent.[16] In response, the World Bank shifted toward alternatives like Business Ready, which employs firm-level surveys and multiple data sources for greater robustness, though it abandons the ranking format.[30]Historical Development
Inception and Early Reports (2003-2010)
The Doing Business project originated at the World Bank in 2002, spearheaded by economists Simeon Djankov, Michael Klein, and Caralee McLiesh, who sought to quantify the regulatory burdens on private firms using verifiable data from laws and practices rather than subjective surveys.[31][32] This effort built on empirical research from the World Bank's 2002 World Development Report, which highlighted firm-level factors in economic growth and the need for cross-country comparisons of business environments.[33] The project's core aim was to identify obstacles to entrepreneurship, such as procedural delays and costs, by measuring specific regulatory processes in the largest business city of each economy, drawing from legal texts, regulatory codes, and inputs from local lawyers and officials.[19] The inaugural Doing Business report, released in 2003, assessed 133 economies across five indicator sets: starting a business, dealing with construction permits (then termed licenses), employing workers, enforcing contracts, and closing a business.[34] These metrics focused on quantifiable elements like the number of procedures required, time elapsed, and monetary costs involved, normalized against international benchmarks such as OECD averages for efficient practices.[35] No aggregate ease-of-doing-business score was computed initially; instead, the report provided disaggregated data to spotlight reform opportunities, with New Zealand, the United States, and Singapore emerging as leaders in streamlined processes based on comparative analysis.[35] Subsequent early reports iteratively refined and expanded coverage. The 2004 edition formalized economy-wide rankings by aggregating performance across the indicators, positioning the United States, Singapore, Switzerland, Canada, and the Netherlands as the top performers, while introducing case studies on regulatory simplification in countries like Mexico and Slovakia.[35] By 2005, the framework added protecting investors and getting credit, reaching seven topics and 145 economies, with data collection emphasizing transparency through public disclosure of assumptions and sources to mitigate biases in expert opinions.[36] This period saw methodological emphasis on de jure regulations—those codified in law—supplemented by de facto enforcement insights, though critiques emerged regarding the exclusion of informal practices and potential overemphasis on formal procedures in developing contexts.[37] From 2006 to 2010, the report evolved to include trading across borders (2006), paying taxes (2008), and registering property (2006), culminating in ten indicators by the 2010 edition, which benchmarked 183 economies and documented over 1,000 reforms worldwide, such as India's reduction in business startup procedures from 11 to 1 in Mumbai.[36] Annual updates standardized scoring by weighting indicators equally in the overall rank until later adjustments, while maintaining a focus on subnational variations in select countries like India and Brazil to underscore localized bottlenecks.[38] These early iterations prioritized causal links between regulatory ease and firm entry rates, evidenced by correlations with World Bank enterprise surveys showing higher rankings associated with increased business registrations, though causal inference remained tentative absent randomized controls.[19]Expansion and Refinements (2011-2017)
In 2011, the Doing Business project refined its employing workers indicators by updating the minimum wage ratio calculation, adding an annual leave threshold, and adjusting redundancy costs, while excluding these from the aggregate ease of doing business ranking due to methodological concerns over their correlation with overall scores (5.7% correlation rate).[25] The report covered 183 economies, introducing the distance to frontier score as a supplementary measure to benchmark each economy's performance against global best practices across indicators, rather than raw aggregates, enabling more nuanced assessment of regulatory gaps.[39] This innovation addressed limitations in prior simple averaging by normalizing scores to a 0-100 scale, where 100 represents the frontier of best observed performance.[25] By 2012, rankings shifted to rely primarily on the distance to frontier measure, replacing absolute scores to better capture reform momentum and relative improvements.[40] Methodological tweaks included amending getting credit scoring for collateral and credit information systems, removing electricity connection procedures from dealing with construction permits to focus on core permitting, and introducing a total tax rate threshold in paying taxes to mitigate distortions from outlier economies (7% correlation rate).[25] Coverage remained at 183 economies, with the report emphasizing longitudinal tracking of regulatory changes since 2005 across 174 of them.[39] Further refinements in 2013 updated paying taxes rankings with an adjusted total tax rate threshold (8.6% correlation rate), aiming to enhance comparability.[25] In 2014, trading across borders excluded preferential treatment documents to standardize export-import assessments, paying taxes omitted fuel taxes from the total rate, and online procedures were valued at half a day to reflect efficiency gains (8.6% correlation rate).[25] These changes maintained focus on 10 core ranking topics—starting a business, dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts, and resolving insolvency—while expanding analytical depth without altering the foundational structure.[41] The 2015 updates marked a broader expansion, incorporating distance to frontier scores into the main framework, adding second-city data collection for large economies like China and India to capture subnational variations, and revising getting credit (strengthening movable collateral options), protecting minority investors (disclosure and approval requirements), resolving insolvency (recovery rates), and labor market regulation indicators (4% correlation rate).[25] In 2016, five indicator sets were expanded with quality sub-indices, such as for construction permits and electricity connections; trading across borders revised its case study for border compliance; and protecting minority investors fine-tuned governance metrics (5.3% correlation rate).[25] By 2017, paying taxes expanded to include post-filing processes like audits, refunds, and appeals, providing a fuller lifecycle view of tax compliance; additionally, a gender dimension was added to starting a business, registering property, and enforcing contracts to highlight disparities in legal treatment (7.1% correlation rate).[25] [41] These refinements, applied across approximately 190 economies, improved the index's granularity and policy relevance without introducing new core topics, sustaining its role in identifying actionable regulatory bottlenecks.[42]Final Years and Emerging Issues (2018-2020)
The Doing Business 2019 report, released on October 31, 2018, documented a record 314 regulatory reforms across 128 economies implemented between June 2, 2017, and May 1, 2018.[43] It maintained the established methodology without significant alterations, emphasizing training for reform and the role of regulations in enhancing business activity.[44] The report highlighted improvements in areas such as starting a business and enforcing contracts, with economies like New Zealand and Singapore retaining top positions in overall ease of doing business rankings.[1] The subsequent Doing Business 2020 report, published on October 24, 2019, recorded 294 business regulatory reforms from May 2018 to May 2019, focusing on case studies in starting a business, getting credit, paying taxes, and other indicators.[45] It updated indicators as of May 1, 2019, and noted that 22 reforms were adopted in the top 20 performing economies, underscoring persistent global efforts to streamline regulations despite varying implementation quality.[5] Rankings remained stable for leading performers, with New Zealand at first place, followed closely by Singapore and Hong Kong.[1] Emerging issues culminated in June 2020 when internal reports revealed data irregularities in the Doing Business 2018 and 2020 reports, prompting World Bank management to pause the production of the 2021 edition.[6] An investigation confirmed improper alterations to data for specific countries, including China, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Azerbaijan, which artificially improved their scores in certain indicators.[29] These manipulations, attributed to undue influence from senior leadership, undermined the report's integrity and raised questions about political pressures overriding empirical rigor in data handling.[6] The revelations highlighted vulnerabilities in the index's objectivity, particularly in high-stakes geopolitical contexts, foreshadowing the project's eventual termination.[46]Report Structure and Content
Annual Report Format
The annual Doing Business reports maintained a standardized format across editions from 2003 to 2020, structured to benchmark regulatory environments in 190 economies through quantitative indicators spanning 10 core topics, such as starting a business, getting credit, and enforcing contracts, plus supplementary areas like employing workers.[5] [44] Each report opened with a foreword and acknowledgments, crediting contributors including legal experts and survey respondents—over 43,800 professionals in the 2019 edition—followed by an executive summary or overview detailing global reform trends, such as the 314 regulatory changes implemented by 128 economies in 2017/18.[44] [5] A dedicated "About Doing Business" section outlined the methodology, emphasizing standardized case studies for small to medium-sized domestic firms operating in the largest business city (or population-weighted averages for 11 economies like India), with data collected via expert consultations and public surveys up to May 1 of the reporting year.[44] This led into thematic chapters analyzing regulatory impacts, such as effects on entrepreneurship or public procurement, supported by empirical evidence like correlations between streamlined processes and reduced business startup times (e.g., New Zealand's 0.5 days versus global averages exceeding 20 days).[5] Rankings and scores formed the centerpiece, presenting an aggregate ease of doing business score (0-100, based on distance to frontier benchmarks) and ordinal ranks (1-190), with top performers like New Zealand (86.8 in 2020) and Singapore (86.2) exemplifying high scores across topics through metrics on procedures, time, cost, and quality indices.[5] [44] Reform summaries cataloged annual progress, noting specifics like 58 economies eliminating paid-in minimum capital requirements in 2018/19 or 63 introducing online tax systems, often marked with symbols for improvements (✔) or regressions (✘).[5] Country tables provided granular profiles, including topic-specific data (e.g., Uzbekistan's 181 hours for paying taxes in 2019) alongside economic indicators like GNI per capita.[44] Appendices covered data notes on outlier handling, score calculations (simple averages of normalized topic scores), and references, ensuring reproducibility while excluding labor regulations from aggregates due to their qualitative variances.[5] This format facilitated cross-economy comparisons, with online supplements offering interactive data exploration.[44]Key Topics and Case Studies
The annual Doing Business reports frequently featured key topics that extended beyond the core regulatory indicators, examining thematic issues such as regulatory transparency, gender disparities in business environments, and the impact of insolvency frameworks on entrepreneurship.[47] For instance, the 2017 edition emphasized equal opportunity, analyzing how regulations differentially affect women-owned businesses across 185 economies, finding that 155 jurisdictions imposed gender-specific restrictions like requiring spousal consent for registration.[48] Similarly, reports highlighted innovations in digital government services, such as electronic filing systems that reduced compliance times, as seen in analyses of tax administration reforms where electronic platforms cut processing delays by up to 90% in select economies.[5] Case studies in the reports provided in-depth examinations of reform implementation, often focusing on economies that achieved substantial ranking improvements through targeted changes. In Malaysia, a 2007-2010 business registration overhaul integrated online portals and one-stop shops, slashing incorporation time from 30 days to 1 day and boosting new firm registrations by 20% annually, as documented in World Bank analyses of streamlined procedures.[49] Ireland's case illustrated post-2008 reforms, where the Companies Registration Office digitized filings and eliminated paper requirements, reducing startup costs by 25% and enhancing compliance rates, contributing to a climb from 10th to 4th in global rankings by 2015.[50] These examples underscored common reform patterns, including public-private partnerships and benchmarking against top performers, which the reports credited with fostering investment inflows averaging 1-2% of GDP in reformed economies.[51] Later editions incorporated cross-indicator case studies to track multi-faceted reforms; the 2020 report detailed efforts in starting a business, credit access, and tax payments, citing economies like Slovenia and Thailand where insolvency law updates—such as introducing reorganization options—improved recovery rates from 20% to over 50% for distressed firms.[5] In the United Arab Emirates, judicial training programs modeled in case studies enhanced contract enforcement, cutting dispute resolution from 589 days to 300 days by 2019 through specialized commercial courts.[51] Such studies emphasized causal links between procedural simplifications and economic metrics, including a 15% rise in private sector credit-to-GDP ratios post-reform, though reports noted variability due to enforcement quality.[44] These features aimed to guide policymakers by distilling replicable strategies from empirical reform outcomes.Innovations in Later Editions
The later editions of the Doing Business reports, particularly from 2011 onward, incorporated the distance to frontier (DTF) score as a core innovation to better capture absolute regulatory performance rather than purely relative rankings. Introduced as a supplementary measure in earlier years, the DTF score was fully integrated into the ease of doing business ranking starting with the 2014 edition, benchmarking each economy's performance against a "frontier" of best practices observed across all indicators and historical data since 2005, normalized on a 0-100 scale where 100 represents the frontier.[23] This allowed for more meaningful longitudinal comparisons of reform progress, as an economy's score could improve through internal enhancements without depending on peers' stagnation or regression.[52] Subsequent reports expanded the indicator set to address previously under-measured aspects of business regulation. The 2016 edition added the Protecting Minority Investors topic, evaluating disclosure requirements, director liability, shareholder rights in governance, and controls on related-party transactions across eight sub-indicators, filling a gap in corporate governance assessment that earlier editions largely omitted.[3] Methodological refinements continued, such as updates to the Enforcing Contracts indicator in 2015 to emphasize court automation and alternative dispute resolution, and expansions in Getting Credit to include movable collateral registries by 2017, reflecting empirical evidence that broader asset coverage enhances private credit access.[53] Later editions also innovated in content presentation by integrating thematic analyses and supplementary datasets. The 2011 report pioneered a retrospective measure tracking regulatory changes since 2005 across 174 economies, quantifying cumulative reform impacts for the first time.[39] By 2018, reports began measuring non-scored features of labor market regulation—such as hiring practices, working hours, and parental leave—while excluding them from the aggregate score to avoid disincentivizing flexible policies, based on evidence that rigid labor rules correlate with lower employment in formal sectors.[54] These editions increasingly featured detailed reform narratives and subnational benchmarks, drawing from expanded data collection in over 190 economies by 2020, to illustrate causal pathways from regulatory simplification to investment inflows.[5]Policy Influence
Regulatory Reforms Driven by Rankings
The Ease of Doing Business rankings incentivized governments worldwide to implement regulatory reforms by fostering inter-country competition to ascend in the global standings, often through targeted simplifications in business procedures such as starting enterprises, obtaining permits, and resolving disputes. Between 2003 and 2019, the World Bank documented over 3,500 such reforms inspired by the project's indicators across its measured topics, including reductions in procedural steps and time delays for key business activities.[11] From 2010 to 2020, 2,960 positive regulatory changes were recorded in 184 economies, with many explicitly linked to efforts to enhance scores in areas like enforcing contracts and trading across borders.[19] Numerous nations established dedicated regulatory reform committees oriented toward the Doing Business metrics to diagnose bottlenecks and enact changes, amplifying the rankings' policy impact. Over 70 countries formed these bodies, culminating in 3,847 reforms aligned with the indicators, as governments benchmarked performance against peers and adopted best practices from top-ranked economies.[8] The competitive dynamic extended to international aid and investment attraction, where higher rankings signaled commitment to pro-business environments, prompting bureaucratic prioritization of measurable improvements.[55] In India, the rankings directly spurred a series of reforms starting in 2014, elevating the country from 142nd to 63rd place by 2019 through measures like single-window clearances for business registration and insolvency resolutions, earning it a spot among the top 10 global improvers that year.[56] Rwanda similarly leveraged the index for transformative changes, surging from 143rd in 2008 to 67th by 2010 via innovations such as online company registration and integrated one-stop service centers, positioning it as Africa's second-most improved economy over the subsequent decade.[57] [58] Georgia exemplified sustained reform momentum, achieving 6th place globally in 2018 and 7th in 2019 after early post-2003 overhauls that eliminated 84% of licensing requirements and streamlined construction permitting, with ongoing updates like electronic court payments further aligning with indicator criteria.[59] [60] In the Middle East, Bahrain enacted nine reforms in the 2019-2020 cycle—covering nearly all measured areas—to bolster its ranking, while Saudi Arabia pursued parallel deregulations under Vision 2030, including credit access enhancements that contributed to regional gains.[5] These cases illustrate how rankings translated into concrete actions, though substantive depth varied, with some reforms prioritizing procedural metrics over broader institutional strengthening.[61]Adoption in National and International Policy
The Ease of Doing Business index served as a key benchmark for national governments seeking to streamline regulations and attract investment, prompting over 3,500 reforms worldwide since 2003 in areas including business startup procedures, construction permits, and tax payments.[11] Countries often explicitly referenced the index in reform agendas, using its rankings to measure progress and foster competition among economies. For instance, Georgia implemented sweeping deregulatory measures following the 2003 Rose Revolution, eliminating 84 percent of licensing requirements by 2005, which propelled it to 8th globally in the 2013 index and 7th by 2019.[60][62] Rwanda drew direct inspiration from the index for its business environment overhaul starting in the mid-2000s, revamping property registration processes to reduce time and costs, resulting in a 76-position jump to 67th place by 2010 and sustained top-improver status in subsequent years.[63][57] India's government, from 2014 onward, prioritized regulatory simplification aligned with index metrics, enacting changes in areas like insolvency resolution and electricity access that elevated its ranking from 142nd in 2014 to 63rd by 2020.[64] Saudi Arabia integrated the index into its Vision 2030 economic diversification strategy, completing eight reforms between October 2018 and May 2019—covering credit access, minority shareholder protections, and cross-border trade—that made it the top global improver in the 2020 report.[5] At the international level, the index informed policy through multilateral institutions' advisory and lending frameworks, where World Bank and IMF programs often conditioned aid on business regulation improvements to lower operational costs and support macroeconomic stability.[65] It encouraged cross-country benchmarking in global forums, influencing harmonized standards for foreign direct investment and trade facilitation, though adoption varied by emphasizing empirical regulatory efficiency over broader social considerations.[19] The index's emphasis on quantifiable metrics thus extended beyond national borders, shaping donor priorities and bilateral agreements focused on private sector growth.[55]Empirical Links to Economic Outcomes
Empirical analyses of the Ease of Doing Business (EODB) index have yielded mixed evidence on its links to economic outcomes, with some studies identifying positive associations between regulatory reforms captured by the index and indicators such as GDP growth and foreign direct investment (FDI), while others highlight limitations in establishing causality or even short-term negative effects. A panel data study across 172 countries from 2006 to 2010 found that each business regulatory reform, as measured by changes in EODB indicators, was associated with a 0.15 percentage point increase in the annual GDP growth rate, with robust results supporting the role of such reforms in fostering growth through reduced bureaucratic hurdles.[66] Similarly, an Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) review of over 1,900 scholarly articles indicated that 85% of rigorous studies linked EODB-related reforms—particularly in areas like starting a business and trading across borders—to positive outcomes, including increased firm entry, trade flows, and job creation, though aggregate score improvements showed weaker systematic ties to GDP or employment.[27] Links to FDI inflows have also been documented, with research showing that enhancements in EODB rankings correlate with higher FDI, as improved regulatory environments signal lower risks and transaction costs to investors; for example, procedural simplifications in credit access and contract enforcement were associated with greater capital inflows in emerging markets.[67] However, causality remains contested due to endogeneity—wealthier economies may enact reforms more readily—and omitted variables like governance or infrastructure, which the index does not fully capture.[27] Vector autoregression analyses addressing these issues revealed that EODB score improvements often coincide with temporary GDP declines, with little evidence of sustained positive boosts, suggesting that ranking-driven changes may prioritize optics over substantive economic liberalization.[68] Subgroup analyses further indicate heterogeneous effects, with some indicators (e.g., enforcing contracts) positively impacting growth in middle-income countries but negatively in low-income ones, underscoring the need for context-specific reforms rather than uniform index targeting.[69]Controversies
Data Manipulation Allegations
In June 2020, internal World Bank staff raised concerns about irregularities in the data underlying the Doing Business 2018 and Doing Business 2020 reports, prompting management to pause production of the subsequent edition.[6] These issues involved unauthorized alterations to country scores and rankings, which violated the project's data integrity protocols designed to ensure objective, verifiable inputs from legal and regulatory sources.[70] The World Bank publicly acknowledged "a number of irregularities" in August 2020, including improper changes that affected final scores without proper documentation or peer review.[70] An independent investigation commissioned by the World Bank's ethics committee and conducted by the law firm WilmerHale, with findings released on September 15, 2021, confirmed specific data manipulations. In the Doing Business 2018 report, irregularities centered on China, where senior officials allegedly directed the team to adjust data points across multiple indicators—such as substituting higher-scoring subnational data from Beijing and Shanghai for the national average in "Starting a Business," awarding additional reform points for a collateral law in "Getting Credit," and reducing compliance time in "Paying Taxes." These changes boosted China's overall score by nearly one point, improving its ranking from 85th to 78th, amid external pressures related to the Bank's capital increase campaign and China's influence.[29] The probe implicated involvement from high-level figures, including then-CEO Kristalina Georgieva and Simeon Djankov (senior director for the report), who reportedly oversaw the adjustments while emphasizing "multilateral engagement."[29] For the Doing Business 2020 report, confirmed irregularities affected Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Azerbaijan. In Saudi Arabia's case, data was altered to add a point to the "Legal Rights" index by reinterpreting debt enforcement rules and shortening VAT compliance time, elevating it to the top reformer spot ahead of Jordan.[29] UAE saw a similar VAT time adjustment with no ranking impact, while Azerbaijan's score was deliberately reduced by freezing three reforms and retroactively changing the "Protecting Minority Investors" methodology, excluding it from the top improvers list—actions traced to Djankov's directives and regional staff concerns over data credibility.[29] The investigation identified a pattern of senior management overriding standard procedures, often to align rankings with geopolitical or institutional priorities, though it found no evidence of direct Board or presidential involvement beyond the 2018 China case.[29] These revelations eroded trust in the index's methodology, which relied on subjective interpretations of reforms prone to external influence, and highlighted vulnerabilities in the Bank's internal governance for high-stakes publications.[6] While the probe cleared some staff of intentional misconduct, it underscored how political pressures from influential member states could compromise empirical rigor, prompting calls for greater transparency in data handling.[29]Specific Irregularities in 2018 and 2020
In the Doing Business 2018 report, irregularities primarily involved alterations to China's data across multiple indicators, including Starting a Business, Getting Credit (Legal Rights), and Paying Taxes.[29] These changes reduced compliance times, awarded additional reform points for aspects such as secured transactions law, and integrated methodological adjustments, ultimately improving China's overall score by nearly one point and elevating its ranking from 85 to 78 compared to the prior year.[29] The process unfolded between May and October 2017, triggered by concerns raised by Chinese officials, followed by directives from the offices of World Bank President Jim Yong Kim and CEO Kristalina Georgieva in October 2017 to unlock and modify the data; rank-and-file staff reported instructions originating from senior leadership, with final approval by Simeon Djankov, the report's overseer.[29][71] For the Doing Business 2020 report, irregularities affected Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Azerbaijan, focusing on indicator scores and reform recognitions that influenced rankings, particularly the "Top Improvers" list.[29] In Saudi Arabia's case, a point was added to the Legal Rights index (increasing it from 3 to 4) and VAT compliance time was reduced, enabling it to surpass Jordan and secure a Top Improver designation; the UAE received a parallel VAT adjustment, though it had no material ranking effect.[29] Azerbaijan's data saw three reforms frozen and alterations to the Protecting Minority Investors methodology, lowering its score by nearly two points and disqualifying it from Top Improver status.[29] These modifications occurred during August–September 2019 reviews, directed by Simeon Djankov, with input from Middle East and North Africa (MENA) vice presidency officials for the Saudi Arabia and UAE changes.[29] The irregularities in both reports were first flagged internally in June 2020, prompting an independent investigation that confirmed undue alterations deviating from standard protocols.[72][70]Investigations and Internal Responses
In June 2020, internal concerns about data irregularities in the Doing Business 2018 and 2020 reports were raised within the World Bank, prompting management to pause preparation of the subsequent edition.[6] An initial internal audit by the World Bank's Internal Audit and Inspection Unit confirmed instances of data manipulation and reported undue pressure on team members from senior leadership and external stakeholders.[73] [29] The Bank commissioned an independent external investigation to examine the facts and circumstances, with findings reported to the Board of Executive Directors on September 15, 2021.[72] [29] The probe identified a pattern of irregularities, including unauthorized data alterations in 2018 to elevate China's ranking—such as integrating Hong Kong SAR data into indicators for starting a business, getting credit, and paying taxes—attributed to directives from then-President Jim Yong Kim's aides and CEO Kristalina Georgieva amid geopolitical pressures during a capital campaign.[29] For 2020, changes benefited Saudi Arabia's inclusion on the "Top Improvers" list through adjusted legal rights and VAT compliance metrics, alongside modifications for the UAE and Azerbaijan, linked to influence from senior official Simeon Djankov and regional vice presidencies motivated by client interests and methodological skepticism.[29] In response, World Bank management referred ethical lapses involving former Board officials and staff to its internal accountability mechanisms, including the Integrity Vice Presidency.[6] Additional reviews, such as a December 2020 Development Economics verification, scrutinized the methodology and data processes, leading to recommendations for formalizing safeguards against unauthorized changes, requiring senior approval for alterations, insulating the team from external pressures, and mandating post-publication data audits.[74] [29] These measures underscored systemic vulnerabilities to government interference and internal conflicts, ultimately contributing to the full discontinuation of the report to restore credibility.[6] [75]Discontinuation
2021 Cancellation Announcement
On September 16, 2021, the World Bank Group announced the immediate discontinuation of its annual Doing Business report, which had ranked economies on the ease of conducting business since 2003.[6] The decision was made by World Bank Group management following internal reports of data irregularities in the 2018 and 2020 reports, initially flagged in June 2020.[6] The announcement cited the need to address these irregularities through prior reviews, audits, and an independent external investigation, whose findings were delivered to the Board of Executive Directors on September 15, 2021.[72][29] Ethical lapses were highlighted, including undue pressure on staff by former senior officials to alter data in ways that improved rankings for certain countries, such as China and Saudi Arabia.[6] Despite the halt, the World Bank emphasized its ongoing dedication to fostering private sector-led growth and regulatory reforms, pledging to create a "new and rigorous" methodology for evaluating business climates, distinct from the prior index's aggregation approach.[6] No further editions were to be produced, marking the end of a flagship publication that had influenced policy in over 190 economies.[6]Underlying Causes and Audits
In June 2020, internal reporting at the World Bank identified data irregularities in the Doing Business 2018 and 2020 reports, prompting management to pause production of the subsequent edition and initiate reviews.[6] These irregularities involved unauthorized alterations to country scores, particularly affecting China in 2018—where indicators such as legal rights, starting a business, and paying taxes were adjusted by incorporating data from Hong Kong SAR, improving its ranking from 85th to 78th—and Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Azerbaijan in 2020, including changes to Saudi Arabia's legal rights index score from 3 to 4 and VAT compliance times, alongside freezing Azerbaijan's reforms and altering its methodology, which lowered its score by nearly 2 points.[29] An internal audit and subsequent external investigation by the law firm WilmerHale, detailed in a September 15, 2021, report to the Bank's Board of Executive Directors, confirmed these manipulations stemmed from pressure exerted by senior leadership, including then-CEO Kristalina Georgieva and aides to President Jim Yong Kim, to favor specific countries amid geopolitical incentives.[29] For China, alterations followed lobbying by Chinese officials during the Bank's capital increase campaign, aiming to secure Beijing's financial support; for Saudi Arabia, changes rewarded engagement in reimbursable advisory services projects, while Azerbaijan's adjustments reflected internal skepticism about reform authenticity to preserve credibility elsewhere.[29][76] A parallel external panel review, released in September 2021, highlighted deeper systemic vulnerabilities exacerbating these issues, including governance failures like conflicts of interest from advisory services, a lack of codified data integrity policies, and a toxic team culture that enabled undue influence.[16] Methodologically, the panel criticized the report's reliance on de jure rules over de facto firm experiences, arbitrary indicator weighting without empirical justification, and opacity in data collection—such as non-disclosure of raw data, questionnaires, and contributor selection—which facilitated selective alterations and reduced replicability.[16] These audits collectively revealed how high-stakes rankings incentivized political interference, undermining the index's objectivity and prompting its full discontinuation on September 16, 2021.[6][16]Immediate Aftermath and Stakeholder Reactions
The World Bank's announcement on September 16, 2021, to discontinue the Doing Business report elicited a spectrum of responses from stakeholders, reflecting the index's polarizing influence on global policy debates. Civil society organizations, including the Oakland Institute, immediately celebrated the decision as a "landmark victory," contending that the report had long incentivized deregulatory reforms that facilitated land grabs, environmental degradation, and inequality in developing economies by prioritizing investor-friendly metrics over social protections.[77] Similarly, UNCTAD economists critiqued the report's underlying methodology for its politicization, reliance on non-expert inputs, and susceptibility to undue influence from governments seeking favorable rankings, as evidenced by historical complaints from countries like Chile over abrupt score declines tied to political shifts.[78][79] Within the development community, an external review released on September 20, 2021, amplified concerns by identifying systemic flaws beyond the 2018 and 2020 data irregularities, such as opaque data handling and conflicts of interest from the Bank's advisory services to governments, which reviewers argued compromised the report's integrity and recommended halting such consulting to restore trust.[80] World Bank leadership responded by committing to a successor initiative focused on greater transparency and empirical rigor, with Chief Economist Carmen Reinhart stating in November 2021 that "credibility is one thing that is difficult to establish and easy to lose," underscoring the need for public disclosure of survey data to avoid past pitfalls.[81] Business-oriented stakeholders expressed apprehension over the abrupt loss of a widely used benchmarking tool that had spurred over 3,500 regulatory reforms since 2003, though immediate public statements from chambers of commerce or multinational firms were limited; indirect sentiment emerged in calls for swift replacement to maintain incentives for pro-growth policies.[6] Governments, particularly those that had leveraged high rankings for investment promotion, faced uncertainty, with no unified outcry but notable silence from nations implicated in influence-peddling allegations, such as Saudi Arabia and China, where data alterations had allegedly boosted scores under senior leadership pressure.[29] Overall, the discontinuation highlighted entrenched divides, with skeptics viewing it as overdue accountability for methodological biases and proponents decrying the void in quantifiable business climate assessments.Reception and Legacy
Positive Assessments of Impact
The Ease of Doing Business index motivated regulatory reforms in over 3,500 instances across measured areas such as starting a business, enforcing contracts, and paying taxes from its inception in 2003 through 2019, according to World Bank assessments, by benchmarking performance and fostering inter-country competition.[44] Proponents, including World Bank evaluators, argue this catalytic role enhanced business climates, with governments citing rankings to prioritize streamlining procedures that reduced time and costs for entrepreneurs.[3] Empirical analyses have linked higher index scores to increased foreign direct investment (FDI), with one study estimating that a one-rank improvement correlates with $42–43 million in additional annual FDI inflows, attributing this to improved perceptions of regulatory predictability.[82] In specific cases, the index influenced targeted policy shifts yielding measurable gains; Georgia, for instance, implemented sweeping deregulations post-2005, eliminating 84% of licensing requirements and simplifying business registration to one day, propelling its ranking from 112th in 2005 to 7th globally by 2019 and boosting FDI as a share of GDP from under 5% to over 10% in subsequent years.[60][62] Similar patterns emerged in top reformers like Rwanda, where reforms inspired by the index halved the time to start a business and doubled FDI inflows between 2006 and 2015, per World Bank data.[83] Academic research further supports associations between index-tracked reforms, such as contract enforcement improvements, and heightened inward FDI, though causality remains debated amid confounding factors like macroeconomic stability.[84] Supporters, including policy analysts at institutions like the Wharton School, highlight the index's indirect influence via domestic bureaucratic incentives and international benchmarking, which pressured laggard economies to adopt pro-entrepreneurial measures, potentially contributing to job creation and productivity gains in reform-adopting nations.[55] World Bank reports claim these dynamics supported broader economic outcomes, with reforms in areas like property registration linked to expanded private sector activity, though independent evaluations note that while reform volume increased, direct growth impacts varied by context.[85][86]Critical Perspectives and Limitations
Critics have argued that the Ease of Doing Business Index (EDBI) primarily assessed de jure regulatory frameworks through stylized, hypothetical case studies—such as a standardized warehouse construction or export of one container—rather than de facto implementation or actual firm experiences, leading to discrepancies between scores and real-world business conditions.[27] For instance, correlations between EDBI sub-indicators and enterprise survey data on firm perceptions were low, ranging from 10% for electricity connections to 23% for construction permits.[27] Data collection often relied on local experts like lawyers in one or two major cities, introducing sample selection bias that overlooked rural or smaller urban areas with poorer infrastructure and enforcement.[87] The index omitted critical determinants of business climates, including enforcement quality, corruption prevalence, informal sector dynamics, and macroeconomic factors like political stability or infrastructure adequacy, which often represent binding constraints in developing economies.[3] In contexts with high informality or state capture, such as Afghanistan or Jordan, EDBI reforms showed limited relevance to actual obstacles faced by small and medium enterprises.[27] While inefficient regulations correlated with higher rent-seeking, the index did not directly measure bribery or judicial impartiality, potentially overstating ease in systems prioritizing procedural speed over substantive justice, as seen in critiques of the Enforcing Contracts indicator's emphasis on time and cost at the expense of fairness.[88][16] Empirical validity of the EDBI's link to broader outcomes has been contested, with only 13% of supporting studies employing rigorous causal methods, and results sensitive to model specifications; aggregate scores correlated moderately with other governance metrics like the World Economic Forum's regulatory quality index (77%) but failed to consistently predict foreign direct investment, productivity, or job creation.[27] Frequent methodological revisions, such as those to Trading Across Borders in 2015, caused ranking volatility—111 countries experienced swings exceeding 40 places over 15 years—undermining longitudinal comparability and policy analysis.[8] The index's narrow procedural focus and ranking format encouraged superficial reforms targeted at score improvements, such as easing paperwork without addressing institutional weaknesses, while embedding a conceptual bias toward deregulation that neglected social or environmental policy objectives.[27][87] This neoliberal orientation, akin to Washington Consensus priorities, simplified complex systems into efficiency metrics, distorting national agendas—for example, India's pursuit of a top-50 ranking prioritized compliance tweaks over infrastructure gaps—and amplified gaming incentives beyond data irregularities.[88][8] Internal World Bank evaluations acknowledged these substantive limitations, noting the indicators' misalignment with SME realities in diverse contexts like fragile states or informal-heavy economies.[27]Long-Term Value and Empirical Evaluations
The Ease of Doing Business Index demonstrated long-term value primarily through its role in catalyzing targeted regulatory reforms, with empirical evidence indicating measurable improvements in specific business processes across numerous economies. Between fiscal years 2010 and 2020, the index informed 2,960 positive national regulatory changes in 184 economies, particularly in areas such as starting a business, obtaining credit, and trading across borders, often via dedicated government coordination mechanisms.[27] Associated World Bank Group projects, totaling $15.5 billion in commitments, achieved success rates of 85% for lending interventions and 78% for advisory services, with reforms frequently spilling over into broader policy enhancements, as seen in cases like Morocco's 33 reforms elevating its ranking from 128th to 53rd and Rwanda's 51 reforms improving its position from 67th to 38th.[27] Structured literature reviews of 103 studies found strong evidence linking index-measured reforms in credit information and trade facilitation to outcomes like increased firm formalization, competition, and export volumes, underscoring the index's utility in identifying de jure barriers amenable to quantifiable fixes.[27] However, empirical assessments of the index's broader economic impact reveal limited causal linkages to aggregate growth metrics. Dynamic panel analyses in African contexts have identified positive and statistically significant effects of ease-of-doing-business improvements on GDP growth, with regulatory reforms serving as a conduit for enhanced private sector activity in lower-income settings.[89] In contrast, vector autoregression models applied to distance-to-frontier scores across global samples report no positive GDP per capita effects following score improvements, instead documenting a robust temporary negative impact, potentially reflecting resource diversion toward ranking optimization rather than productivity-enhancing changes.[68] The World Bank's Independent Evaluation Group corroborated this ambivalence, noting positive correlations in isolated indicators (e.g., lower entry costs with SME expansion) but no systematic econometric ties to GDP, employment, foreign direct investment, or trade volumes, hampered by high sensitivity to model specifications and unaddressed confounders like enforcement gaps.[27] Retrospective evaluations highlight the index's enduring contribution to global discourse on regulatory quality, despite methodological constraints that privileged formal compliance costs over de facto implementation, corruption, or infrastructure deficits.[27] By benchmarking 10 standardized topics against global best practices, it compelled governments to prioritize efficiency in processes like construction permitting and tax payments, yielding sustained gains in those domains even post-discontinuation, as evidenced by persistent reform momentum in high performers like Georgia and New Zealand.[27] Yet, the emphasis on aggregate rankings fostered gaming behaviors, with limited validity in capturing holistic business climates, as correlations with enterprise surveys and logistics indices ranged only 10-45%.[27] Overall, while not a panacea for growth, the index's empirical legacy affirms its value in promoting evidence-based deregulation in narrow but critical regulatory domains, informing successors like Business Ready with refined metrics less prone to manipulation.[27]Successors and Alternatives
Business Ready (B-READY) Initiative
The Business Ready (B-READY) initiative, introduced by the World Bank in 2024, evaluates the business and investment climate by measuring regulatory frameworks, public services, and operational efficiencies to support private sector development. It covers 10 core topics aligned with a firm's life cycle—business entry, location, utility services, labor, financial services, international trade, taxation, dispute resolution, market competition, and business insolvency—while integrating cross-cutting elements such as digital technology adoption, environmental sustainability, and gender considerations. The framework organizes assessments into three pillars: regulatory framework (de jure legal provisions), public services (de facto service delivery), and operational efficiency (practical time and cost metrics).[30][90] Data collection combines expert consultations on laws and procedures with firm-level surveys from the World Bank's Enterprise Surveys, involving thousands of specialists and businesses for a balanced de jure and de facto perspective. Scores range from 0 to 100 per topic and pillar, preserving cardinal differences for cross-country comparability without emphasizing overall rankings; for instance, the 2024 report's pillar averages across 50 covered economies were 65.52 for regulatory frameworks, 49.73 for public services, and 63.95 for operational efficiency. The inaugural B-READY 2024 report launched the project's three-year rollout phase (2024–2026), initially assessing 50 economies with annual methodological refinements and plans to expand to around 180 economies.[30][90][91] B-READY prioritizes transparency through public datasets, replicable protocols, and avoidance of aggregated indices that could incentivize data manipulation, drawing on 21 specialized questionnaires to capture comprehensive firm experiences. High performers in the 2024 edition included Singapore (87.33 in operational efficiency), Estonia (73.31 in public services), and Hungary (78.23 in regulatory frameworks), highlighting variances in strengths across pillars. The initiative aims to guide reforms that enhance business operations while considering impacts on workers, consumers, and economies, with resources like methodology handbooks available for verification and policy application.[30][90][92]Comparisons with Original Index
The Business Ready (B-READY) index, introduced by the World Bank in 2024 as the primary successor to the Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) index, differs in scope by initially covering 50 developing and emerging economies, with plans for expansion, compared to the EoDB's annual assessment of 190 countries.[91] B-READY evaluates business environments across three pillars—regulatory framework, public services, and operational efficiency—encompassing 10 topics such as business entry, utilities, labor, and dispute resolution, but with expanded sub-indicators that incorporate practical implementation alongside legal provisions, whereas EoDB primarily emphasized de jure regulations, time, and costs for standardized small-to-medium enterprises in capital cities.[90] This shift aims to address EoDB's vulnerabilities to data manipulation, as revealed in the 2021 internal audit, by prioritizing verifiable primary data over potentially subjective expert inputs.[93]| Aspect | Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) | Business Ready (B-READY) |
|---|---|---|
| Countries Covered | 190 (annual, global) | 50 initially (expanding; focused on developing/emerging) |
| Core Focus | Regulatory ease for small firms (time/cost metrics) | Balanced: regulations, services, efficiency; firm benefits |
| Data Sources | Expert polls, law analysis, limited firm surveys | Primary firm surveys (2,500+ respondents), admin data, experts |
| Transparency | Partial methodology; data irregularities noted | Full public methodology and raw data |
| Scoring Approach | Aggregate score (0-100); distance to frontier | Pillar scores (0-100); equal weighting, verified inputs |
Ongoing Debates on Business Climate Metrics
Critics of business climate metrics argue that successors to the discontinued Ease of Doing Business index, such as the World Bank's Business Ready (B-READY) initiative launched in 2024, represent superficial changes rather than substantive improvements in methodology or scope. B-READY eschews a single aggregate ranking in favor of separate scores across regulatory framework, public services, and operational efficiency, aiming to reduce oversimplification and enhance transparency through broader data collection from firms rather than hypothetical scenarios. However, analyses contend this fragmentation obscures comparative insights without addressing core flaws, such as potential incentives for countries to prioritize measurable regulatory tweaks over holistic reforms.[93][96] A persistent debate concerns the empirical link between metric improvements and economic outcomes, with evidence challenging causal claims of growth enhancement. A 2023 econometric study examining panel data from 2006–2018 found that advancements in Doing Business scores correlated with temporary negative or negligible effects on GDP per capita, attributing this to short-term disruptions from reforms or selection biases in high performers, rather than sustained productivity gains. Such findings underscore skepticism toward rankings' policy prescriptions, as metrics may reward procedural efficiencies that fail to account for enforcement quality, corruption, or macroeconomic stability—factors often downplayed in favor of quantifiable regulatory hurdles.[68] Methodological reliability remains contested, particularly regarding data integrity and susceptibility to gaming. The original index's 2021 cancellation stemmed from verified irregularities, including undue alterations to favor select countries like China and Saudi Arabia in 2018–2020 reports, eroding trust in World Bank oversight. B-READY's shift to firm-level surveys seeks to mitigate hypothetical biases but invites new concerns over sample representativeness and respondent incentives, with critics noting that international organizations like the World Bank exhibit institutional pressures to align metrics with geopolitical priorities, potentially undermining objectivity.[6][8] Broader ideological critiques highlight how these metrics often embed a deregulatory bias, emphasizing business costs while marginalizing labor rights, environmental safeguards, and social equity. Trade union assessments of B-READY's labor module, released in early 2025, argue it inadequately weighs protections against arbitrary dismissal or collective bargaining, framing them as obstacles rather than stabilizers for long-term investment. Proponents counter that overly prescriptive indices distort first-principles incentives for entrepreneurship, yet empirical reviews of alternatives like the Heritage Foundation's Index of Economic Freedom reveal similar tensions, where broader inclusion of rule-of-law proxies yields divergent rankings but comparable policy advocacy for market liberalization.[97][98]Historical Rankings
Methodology for Aggregate Scores
The aggregate ease of doing business score, also known as the distance to frontier (DTF) score, benchmarks an economy's regulatory performance against global best practices across 10 topics, each equally weighted in the calculation. Introduced in the 2016 edition of the World Bank's Doing Business report, this score replaces earlier raw-score averaging by normalizing performances to a 0-100 scale, where 100 represents the frontier (the best observed performance in the sample of economies studied) and 0 the worst.[99] The aggregate score is computed as the unweighted arithmetic mean of the 10 topic-level DTF scores, ensuring no single topic dominates the overall assessment despite varying numbers of component indicators per topic.[2] For each of the approximately 41 sub-indicators (varying slightly by report year), the DTF is calculated as:\text{DTF} = \left( \frac{\text{Economy score} - \text{Worst score}}{\text{Frontier score} - \text{Worst score}} \right) \times 100
where the economy score reflects quantifiable regulatory features, such as time (days), cost (percentage of income per capita), or procedures (number required), sourced from expert consultations, official regulations, and standardized case studies assuming a small- to medium-sized domestic firm in the economy's largest business city. Topic-level scores aggregate these by simple averaging the DTFs of their indicators—for instance, the "starting a business" topic averages scores from pre- and post-registration procedures, time, cost, and minimum capital requirements. This normalization preserves absolute differences in performance, allowing cross-year and cross-economy comparisons independent of sample composition shifts.[5] The 10 topics cover the full lifecycle of a commercial operation: starting a business, dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts, and resolving insolvency. Equal weighting across topics reflects the methodology's intent to capture a balanced regulatory environment, though it has drawn criticism for not adjusting for economic context or sector-specific relevance. Aggregate scores determine rankings by descending order, with ties resolved by alphabetical order of economy names; for example, in the 2020 report covering 190 economies, New Zealand achieved the highest score of 86.8, ranking first.[13] Prior to 2016, aggregates used percentile ranks or simple averages of raw metrics without frontier normalization, leading to less stable year-over-year comparisons as sample sizes grew from 130 economies in 2004 to 190 by 2020.[2]
Top and Notable Performers
New Zealand secured the top position in the Ease of Doing Business rankings in multiple years, including the final 2020 edition, attributed to its efficient processes for starting businesses, obtaining credit, and enforcing contracts.[1] Singapore consistently ranked second or higher across editions from 2006 to 2020, excelling in trade facilitation and contract enforcement due to minimal regulatory hurdles.[1] Hong Kong SAR, China, maintained a position in the top three throughout much of the index's history, supported by robust property registration systems and investor protections.[1] Denmark frequently placed in the top five, particularly strong in protecting minority investors and resolving insolvency, reflecting a business-friendly legal environment.[1] Other notable consistent performers in the top ten included South Korea, the United States, the United Kingdom, Norway, and Sweden, which benefited from transparent tax systems and streamlined permitting.[1] Georgia emerged as a standout improver, climbing to seventh in 2020 from lower ranks earlier, driven by reforms in business startup and electricity access.[1] The 2020 top ten rankings were as follows:| Rank | Economy |
|---|---|
| 1 | New Zealand |
| 2 | Singapore |
| 3 | Hong Kong SAR, China |
| 4 | Denmark |
| 5 | Korea, Rep. |
| 6 | United States |
| 7 | Georgia |
| 8 | United Kingdom |
| 9 | Norway |
| 10 | Sweden |