Thursday 25 January 2018

Doing Business in the Caribbean 2018: El Salvador Stands Out

Doing Business 2018: Reforming to Create Jobs is the 15th in the long-standing series of co-publications by the World Bank and International Financial Corporation (IFC). This annual report on the ease in doing business series now includes data for 190 nations, from June 2016 to June 2017.

For the last 4 years, I have reviewed these reports and, like previous articles, I will commence by examining the global ranking of Caribbean states in “Doing Business 2018”. With the exception of Puerto Rico, the states examined are members of the Association of Caribbean States (ACS).

Data for these states is presented in the two tables below. Last year’s data is included for your convenience, but it should be noted that differences may simply indicate the change in the methodology used to prepare the current report, not necessarily indicating a tangible improvement or deterioration of performance.

Table 1: Ratings of Caribbean Islands
ACS Caribbean Island States
2017
2018
Caribbean Islands
111
113
Caribbean SIDS
110
109
Puerto Rico (US)
55
64
Independent Caribbean SIDS
115
112
Jamaica
67
70
Trinidad
96
102
Bahamas, The
121
119
Barbados
117
132
OECS
116
117
St. Lucia
87
91
Dominica
101
98
Antigua & Barbuda
113
107
St. Vincent & the Grenadines
125
129
St. Kitts & Nevis
134
134
Grenada
138
142
Large Caribbean Island States
142
140
Dominican Republic
103
99
Haiti
181
181
Table 1 conveys information on 13 Caribbean Islands, divided into two groups: 11 Small Island Developing States (SIDS) and 2 large island-states: namely the Dominican Republic and Haiti. The SIDS group is further sub-divided into three groups.

Puerto Rico, being the only SIDS that is not politically independent, is a group unto itself. The 6 smallest islands are members of the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS); and, the remaining 4 states comprise the last group.

Table 2 conveys information on 12 ACS Latin American (LatAm) states. Like the Caribbean Islands, these LatAm states are divided into two groups – Central, and South American States. The former comprises 8 states and the latter 4 states.

It should also be noted that this table includes three CARIFORUM member-states: Belize, in the Central American group, as well as Guyana and Suriname in the South American group. With the exception of Puerto Rico, all Caribbean islands in table 1 are CARIFORUM states.

Doing Business Regional Profile 2018: Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) lists 32 states. The regional average rank is 110. With the exception of Puerto Rico, 24 of these are ACS members. The remaining 17 states are all located in South America.

But, 12 of the top 15 LAC performers are ACS member states: better than “Doing Business 2017”, “Doing Business 2016”, and “Doing Business 2015”. Again, this is mostly due to the superior rankings of the Central American sub-group, though this number does include 6 Caribbean Island ACS members. 

Table 2: Ratings of ACS Latin American States
ACS Latin American States
2017
2018
Latin American States
102
105
Central American States
85
86
Mexico
47
49
Costa Rica
62
61
El Salvador
95
73
Panama
70
79
Guatemala
88
97
Honduras
105
115
Belize
112
121
Nicaragua
127
131
South American States
127
132
Colombia
53
59
Guyana
124
126
Suriname
158
165
Venezuela
187
188
The top 15 performers, from highest to lowest, are: Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Costa Rica, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, El Salvador, Panama, St. Lucia, Uruguay, Guatemala, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Trinidad and Tobago, Antigua and Barbuda. Only Peru, Puerto Rico, and Uruguay are not ACS members.

6 LatAm ACS member-states are in the top 15: Colombia being the sole South American member, of its group of 4. Mexico, Costa Rica, Panama, Guatemala and El Salvador comprise the remaining 5, of the 8 member Central American group.

The Dominican Republic is the only large Caribbean-Island state present. Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago are 2 of the 4 larger ACS SIDS that are top performers. Puerto Rico is the other larger SIDS. St. Lucia, Dominica, Antigua and Barbuda are 3 of the 6 OECS members that are top performers.

The superior ranking of the LatAm sub-group is specifically due to performance of Mexico, Colombia and Costa Rica: Mexico with rank of 49 being best performer in the Central America group and Colombia, ranked 59, best of the South America group. The former being ranked higher than the latter.

Honduras, Belize, and Nicaragua were the only 3 states of the Central American group below the LAC regional average: Belize being a CARIFORUM member. Conversely, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and Trinidad were the only 3 islands with ranks above the LAC average.

Regrettably, ACS also comprises 9 of the 10 lowest ranked economies in LAC. In ascending order from the lowest, these are: Venezuela, Haiti, Suriname, Bolivia, Grenada, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Barbados, Nicaragua, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Guyana: Bolivia being the sole non-ACS member.

Also, the LatAm group is the group with the greatest discrepancy of ranks within ACS states: Colombia being highest at 59 and Venezuela the lowest at 188. The remaining 2 – Guyana and Suriname – being CARIFORUM members – are also in the bottom 10 along with Venezuela.

Therefore, ACS not only has the most capable states to effect reform, but it also has the most deserving of states. Therefore, it seems to be the body most suitable to facilitate this reform in the shortest order. But, indifference to reform continues to further deteriorate performance.

According to Doing Business 2018, “Latin America and the Caribbean and the OECD high-income group had the smallest shares of economies implementing business regulation reforms”. But, states of the Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) are already highly ranked.

LAC does not have reason to emulate such behaviour and this is no less true for Caribbean states, even though they are typically higher ranked. In this regard, El Salvador stands as a glaring example of what can be achieved where the political will exists to implement business regulation reform.

According to Doing Business 2018, El Salvador is among “the 10 economies showing the most notable improvement in performance on the Doing Business indicators…”.  Where global ranks of practically all Caribbean States fell, El Salvador’s rose from 95 to 73.

In the Caribbean context, last year El Salvador had the 11th highest rank among its peers in Doing Business 2017. But this year, it has advanced 3 places to 7th overall: overtaking Guatemala, Saint Lucia, and Panama in the process.


El Salvador shines brilliantly. Can the other ACS members, including CARIFORUM members, follow suit? Can the region collaborate to bring about well-needed reform and a better future? We can, and we must, but we need to be proactive and stop procrastinating.


Paul Hay is a Jamaican national, founder of PAUL HAY Capital Projects: a consultancy, based in Kingston Jamaica, with a vision of providing strategic planning and implementation services to organizations for non-residential facilities in the Caribbean.



Business in the Caribbean 2014: CARIFORUM needs Reform, part 2

Business in the Caribbean 2014: CARIFORUM needs Reform

Singapore: Example to the Caribbean in Doing Business 

Doing Business in the Caribbean 2017: Central America Leads By Example

Doing Business 2017: Equal Opportunity for All is the 14th in the long-standing series of co-publications by the World Bank and International Financial Corporation (IFC). This annual report on the ease in doing business, now in 190 nations, covers the period from June 2015 to June 2016.

For the past 3 years, I have reviewed such reports and, with the exception of last year, published two articles from each: first examining the global ranking of Caribbean states, followed by an itemized breakdown of their performance. This article reviews “Doing Business 2017”.

Last year Doing Business 2016: Measuring Regulatory Quality and Efficiency used a new methodology for its analysis and also additional data not previously measured. So, comparison with the previous year was difficult, to say the least, and proved too much to allow writing a second article.

Like the last, the current report has also made changes which make an itemized breakdown difficult, if not impossible. So, this article will again be limited to the review of global rankings of Caribbean States; and again, the states referred to will be members of the Association of Caribbean States (ACS).

The two tables below present data for these states. Last year’s data is included as a convenience, but it is stressed that differences may simply indicate the change in the methodology used in preparing the report, which negatively impacted only the ranking of the Caribbean Islands.

ACS Caribbean Island States
Population (Millions)
Income (US $)
2016
2017
Caribbean Islands
29.9
6,455
104
111
Caribbean SIDS
8.9
13,687
98
110
Puerto Rico (US)
3.5
19,150
57
55





Independent Caribbean SIDS
5.4
10,107
102
115
Jamaica
2.7
5,010
64
67
Trinidad
1.4
18,600
88
96
Bahamas, The
0.4
21,310
106
121
Barbados
0.3
14,800
119
117
OECS
0.7
9,370
107
116
St. Lucia
0.2
7,390
77
87
Dominica
0.1
6,760
91
101
Antigua & Barbuda
0.1
13,390
104
113
St. Vincent & the Grenadines
0.1
6,670
111
125
St. Kitts & Nevis
0.1
15,560
124
134
Grenada
0.1
8,430
135
138





Large Caribbean Island States
21.2
3,450
137
142
Dominican Republic
10.5
6,130
93
103
Haiti
10.7
820
182
181
Table 1: Ratings of Caribbean Islands

Table 1 conveys information on 13 Caribbean Islands, divided into two groups: 11 Small Island Developing States (SIDS) and 2 large island-states: namely the Dominican Republic and Haiti. The SIDS group is further sub-divided into three groups.

Puerto Rico, being the only SIDS that is not politically independent, is a group unto itself. The 6 smallest islands belong to the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS); and, the remaining 4 states comprise the last group.

Table 2 conveys information on 12 ACS Latin American (LatAm) states. Like the Caribbean Islands, these LatAm states are divided into two groups – Central, and South American States. The former comprises 8 states and the latter 4 states.

ACS Latin American States
Population (Millions)
Income (US $)
2016
2017
Latin American States
250.8
8,850
102
102
Central American States
169.7
8,480
86
85
Mexico
127.0
9,710
38
47
Costa Rica
4.8
10,210
58
62
Panama
3.9
12,050
69
70
Guatemala
16.3
3,590
81
88
El Salvador
6.1
3,940
86
95
Honduras
8.1
2,270
110
105
Belize
0.4
4,420
120
112
Nicaragua
6.1
1,940
125
127





South American States
81.1
9,640
133
127
Colombia
48.2
7,130
54
53
Guyana
0.8
4,090
137
124
Suriname
0.5
9,300
156
158
Venezuela
31.1
12,080
186
187
Table 2: Ratings of ACS Latin American States

It should also be noted that this table includes three CARIFORUM member-states: Belize, in the Central American group, as well as Guyana and Suriname in the South American group. With the exception of Puerto Rico, all Caribbean islands in table 1 are CARIFORUM states.

Doing Business Regional Profile 2017: Latin America and the Caribbean lists 32 LAC states. With the exception of Puerto Rico, 24 of these are ACS members. The 17 remaining LAC states are all located in South America. Average rating for the Caribbean Island ACS members is below the LAC average of 107.

But, 9 of the top 12 LAC performers are ACS member states, just like “Doing Business 2015”, but less than the top 10 in “Doing Business 2016”. Again, this is mostly due to the superior rankings of the Central American sub-group, though this number does include 3 Caribbean Island ACS members.

Currently, the top 12 ranked LAC performers, from highest to lowest, are: Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Puerto Rico, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Panama, Saint Lucia, Guatemala, Uruguay, El Salvador, Trinidad and Tobago. Of these, Peru, Puerto Rico, and Uruguay are the only states that are not ACS members.

Six LatAm ACS member-states are in the top 12: Colombia being the sole South American member, of its group of 4. Mexico, Costa Rica, Panama, Guatemala and El Salvador comprise the remaining 5, of the 8 member Central American group.

No large Caribbean-Island state is present. Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago are 2 of the 4 larger ACS SIDS that are top performers. Puerto Rico is also among the top performers. But, Saint Lucia is the sole member of the 6 OECS members that is a top performer.

The superior ranking of the LatAm sub-group is specifically due to performance of Mexico, and Colombia: Mexico with rank of 47 being best performer in the Central America group and Colombia, ranked 53, best of the South America group. The former being ranked higher than the latter.

Only 2 of the 8 Central American group members were below the LAC average. One which was below average – Belize - is a CARIFORUM member. Otherwise, only Puerto Rico, and Jamaica ranked above the Central America group average of 85.

Regrettably, ACS still comprises 7 of the 8 lowest ranked economies in LAC. In ascending order from the lowest, these are: Venezuela, Haiti, Suriname, Bolivia, Grenada, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Nicaragua, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Bolivia is the sole non-ACS member.

The South American group has the largest discrepancy in ranks: Colombia is at the top with 53 and Venezuela the last at 187: the remaining 2 – Guyana and Suriname – being CARIFORUM members: Suriname and Venezuela being in the bottom 8.

The Association of Caribbean States not only has the most capable states to effect reform, but it also has the most deserving of states. Therefore, it seems to be the body most suitable to facilitate this reform in the shortest order. Indifference to reform should not be allowed to further deteriorate performance.

Central America is leading by example. Can other ACS members, including CARIFORUM members, follow suit? Can we all collaborate to bring about well-needed reform and a better future? We can, and we must, but we need to actively effect change now and stop procrastinating.


Paul Hay is a Jamaican national, founder of PAUL HAY Capital Projects: a consultancy, based in Kingston Jamaica, with a vision of providing strategic planning and implementation services to organizations for non-residential facilities in the Caribbean.


Related articles:

Doing Business in the Caribbean 2018: El Salvador Shines

Doing Business in the Caribbean 2016: Central America shows the way

Greater Caribbean Business in 2015

Business in the Caribbean 2014: CARIFORUM needs Reform, part 2

Business in the Caribbean 2014: CARIFORUM needs Reform

Singapore: Example to the Caribbean in Doing Business