NEW
DELHI, SEPTEMBER 14:
Gujarat
took the top honours in a list that ranked states on the ease of doing
business. The government on Monday released the results of the ranking through
a report on ‘Assessment of State Implementation of Business Reforms’.
Andhra
Pradesh, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh feature in the top five in
the report compiled by the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion with
technical assistance from the World Bank, consultancy firm KPMG, and CII and
FICCI. Interestingly, of the five top States, four are ruled by the BJP, and
one (Andhra Pradesh) by the Telugu Desam Party, an ally.
“The
assessment, which is the first of its kind, has been conducted to take stock of
reforms implemented by States in the period January 1 to June 30, 2015, based
on the 98-point action plan for business reforms agreed between the DIPP and
States last December,” Additional Secretary Shatrughna Singh said releasing the
report on Monday.
The
report would give potential investors an idea of the environment prevailing in
different States and is also aimed at helping the states identify areas they
need to improve in.
The
exercise is part of the Centre’s efforts to improve the country’s ranking in
the World Bank’s ‘Ease of Doing Business’ report, where it was placed a poor
142 among 189 countries in 2015.
“These
rankings were based on States’ performance in the identified areas only over
six months,” pointed out Onno Ruhl, Country Director, World Bank. Next year,
when the rankings would be based on a full year’s performance, they may change,
he added.
(This article was
published on September 14, 2015)
September 14, 2015:
Is it
the World Bank or the Department of Industrial Policy & Promotion (DIPP)
that played a central role in bringing out the report `Assessment of State
implementation of business reports’ and the ranking of states?
The
DIPP, a week before the release of the report, had attempted to distance itself
from it by claiming it was mainly a World Bank project. The idea, as some
officials admitted off-the-record, was to avoid criticism that could be heaped
on the Centre by States (especially those ruled by non-BJP parties) that fare
badly in the report.
However,
when the report was released, it turned out that the international agency had
just provided ‘technical assistance’ to KPMG (hired by the DIPP) to analyse the
data collected by it.
Reading the above, it does remind you of Modi's 56" chest boast.
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