What Matters to African Firms? : The Relevance of Perceptions Data / Gelb, Alan

Can perceptions data help us understand investment climate constraints facing the private sector? Or do firms simply complain about everything? In this paper, the authors provide a picture of how firms' views on constraints differ across countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. Using the World Bank...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Main Authors:Gelb, Alan, 1947-
Outros Autores:Turner, Ginger
Shah, Manju Kedia, 1961-
Ramachandran, Vijaya, 19XX-
Formato: Online-Resource
Idioma:English
Publicado em:Washington, D.C : The World Bank, 2008
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Acesso em linha:URL des Erstveröffentlichers
Descrição
Resumo:Can perceptions data help us understand investment climate constraints facing the private sector? Or do firms simply complain about everything? In this paper, the authors provide a picture of how firms' views on constraints differ across countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. Using the World Bank's Enterprise Surveys database, they find that reported constraints reflect country characteristics and vary systematically by level of income-the most elemental constraints to doing business (power, access to finance, ability to plan ahead) appear to be most binding at low levels of income. As countries develop and these elemental constraints are relaxed, governance-related constraints become more problematic. As countries move further up the income scale and the state becomes more capable, labor regulation is perceived to be more of a problem-business is just one among several important constituencies. The authors also consider whether firm-level characteristics-such as size, ownership, exporter status, and firms' own experience-affect firms' views on the severity of constraints. They find that, net of country and sector fixed effects and firm characteristics, firms' views do reflect their experience as evidenced by responses to other questions in surveys. The results suggest that there are both country-level and firm-level variations in the investment climate. Turning to the concept of "binding constraints," the Enterprise Surveys do not generally suggest one single binding constraint facing firms in difficult business climates. However, there do appear to be groups of constraints that matter more at different income levels, with a few elemental constraints being especially important at low levels and a few regulatory constraints at high levels, but a difficult range of governance-related constraints at intermediate levels.
Descrição do item:Weitere Ausgabe: Gelb, Alan ---> What: Matters to African Firms?
Descrição Física:1 Online-Ressource (36 Seiten)