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Abstract
This paper provides an overview and discusses key findings of the 2002
Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey (BEEPS), implemented
jointly by the EBRD and the World Bank. (The first round of the BEEPS was
implemented in 1999.) Four important conclusions arise from the analysis.
First, qualitative measures of the business environment in the BEEPS appear to
provide reasonably accurate measures, both across various business environment
dimensions and countries and over time. These qualitative measures are
compared with both objective statistical measures, where possible, and
quantitative business environment measures from the BEEPS. Second, qualitative
measures of the business environment show that in virtually all transition
economies the business environment has improved significantly between 1999 and
2002. Third, the analysis of quantitative measures of the business environment
shows a strong association between business obstacles, added costs and
constraints on business, such as corruption, private security protection or
reliance on internal sources of finance. However, evidence suggests that the
nature of corruption in tax administration, which tends to be centralised, is
less costly to firms than is corruption in business regulation, which is
decentralised. Fourth, the analysis of firm investment and growth shows that
the quality of the business environment in 1999 (based on qualitative
measures) is significantly and positively associated with investment by firms
in the period 1999 to 2001. It also shows that state capture significantly
boosts the investment and real revenue growth rates of firms that engage in
this activity, but holds back the growth performance of other firms.
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