Productivity and the Investment Climate: What Matters Most?

The authors explore the links between the investment climate and firm-level productivity and attempt to identify which dimensions of the investment climate matter most for productivity. Their analysis is based on data collected in a recent investment climate survey of garment and food processing firms in five countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The authors use the first principal components of a series of indicators to summarize broad aspects of the investment climate and identify those most important in determining productivity. Their results indicate that competitive pressure is the most critical factor in the investment climate, accounting for more variation in firm-level productivity than infrastructure provision or issues related to government rent seeking and bureaucratic burden. This suggests that to improve productivity, increase output, and reduce poverty, policymakers should focus reform efforts on removing barriers to entry and creating open, highly competitive markets.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bastos, Fabiano, Nasir, John
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2004-06
Subjects:BARRIERS TO ENTRY, BRIBERY, BUREAUCRACY, BUSINESS CLIMATE, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, CAPACITY UTILIZATION, CENTRALLY PLANNED ECONOMIES, CLOSED ECONOMIES, COMMODITIES, COMPETITIVE MARKETS, COMPETITIVE PRESSURE, COMPETITIVENESS, CORRUPTION, CRIME, CUSTOMS, DIRECT INVESTMENT, DOMESTIC COMPETITION, DOMESTIC COMPETITORS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC RESEARCH, ECONOMIC RESOURCES, ELASTICITIES, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS, EXCHANGE RATE, EXCHANGE RATES, EXPORTS, FOREIGN COMPETITION, FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT, FOREIGN INVESTMENT, FOREIGN INVESTORS, FOREIGN OWNERSHIP, FOREIGN TRADE, GDP, GLOBAL ECONOMY, GOOD INVESTMENT CLIMATE, GOVERNANCE ISSUES, GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS, INFLATION, INTEREST RATES, INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION, INVESTMENT CLIMATE, INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES, LABOR INPUTS, LABOR REGULATIONS, LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS, MARKET COMPETITION, MARKET POWER, MEASUREMENT ERROR, NET INFLOWS, OIL, OPEN ECONOMIES, POLICY ENVIRONMENT, POLICY REFORMS, POVERTY ALLEVIATION, PRICE TAKERS, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTION FUNCTION, PRODUCTIVE ASSETS, PRODUCTIVITY, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC OFFICIALS, PUBLIC SERVICES, REAL EXCHANGE RATES, REGULATORY POLICY, REGULATORY REGIME, REMOVING BARRIERS, RENT SEEKING, TAX RATES, TELECOMMUNICATIONS, TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY, TRADABLE GOODS, TRANSITION COUNTRIES, TRANSITION ECONOMIES, TRANSITION ECONOMY, VALUE OF OUTPUT, WAGE RATES, WORLD ECONOMY, WORLD MARKET, WORLD PRICES INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT, INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY, GARMENT INDUSTRY, FOOD PROCESSING INDUSTRY, INFRASTRUCTURAL INVESTMENTS, GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES, OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/06/4991083/productivity-investment-climate-matters-most
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14174
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spelling dig-okr-10986141742024-08-08T17:32:58Z Productivity and the Investment Climate: What Matters Most? Bastos, Fabiano Nasir, John BARRIERS TO ENTRY BRIBERY BUREAUCRACY BUSINESS CLIMATE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT CAPACITY UTILIZATION CENTRALLY PLANNED ECONOMIES CLOSED ECONOMIES COMMODITIES COMPETITIVE MARKETS COMPETITIVE PRESSURE COMPETITIVENESS CORRUPTION CRIME CUSTOMS DIRECT INVESTMENT DOMESTIC COMPETITION DOMESTIC COMPETITORS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RESEARCH ECONOMIC RESOURCES ELASTICITIES EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXPORTS FOREIGN COMPETITION FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS FOREIGN OWNERSHIP FOREIGN TRADE GDP GLOBAL ECONOMY GOOD INVESTMENT CLIMATE GOVERNANCE ISSUES GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS INFLATION INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES LABOR INPUTS LABOR REGULATIONS LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS MARKET COMPETITION MARKET POWER MEASUREMENT ERROR NET INFLOWS OIL OPEN ECONOMIES POLICY ENVIRONMENT POLICY REFORMS POVERTY ALLEVIATION PRICE TAKERS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCERS PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVE ASSETS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC OFFICIALS PUBLIC SERVICES REAL EXCHANGE RATES REGULATORY POLICY REGULATORY REGIME REMOVING BARRIERS RENT SEEKING TAX RATES TELECOMMUNICATIONS TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADABLE GOODS TRANSITION COUNTRIES TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSITION ECONOMY VALUE OF OUTPUT WAGE RATES WORLD ECONOMY WORLD MARKET WORLD PRICES INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY GARMENT INDUSTRY FOOD PROCESSING INDUSTRY COMPETITIVENESS INFRASTRUCTURAL INVESTMENTS GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES BUREAUCRACY BARRIERS TO ENTRY OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS COMPETITIVE MARKETS The authors explore the links between the investment climate and firm-level productivity and attempt to identify which dimensions of the investment climate matter most for productivity. Their analysis is based on data collected in a recent investment climate survey of garment and food processing firms in five countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The authors use the first principal components of a series of indicators to summarize broad aspects of the investment climate and identify those most important in determining productivity. Their results indicate that competitive pressure is the most critical factor in the investment climate, accounting for more variation in firm-level productivity than infrastructure provision or issues related to government rent seeking and bureaucratic burden. This suggests that to improve productivity, increase output, and reduce poverty, policymakers should focus reform efforts on removing barriers to entry and creating open, highly competitive markets. 2013-06-25T17:19:37Z 2013-06-25T17:19:37Z 2004-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/06/4991083/productivity-investment-climate-matters-most https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14174 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No.3325 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, D.C.
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BRIBERY
BUREAUCRACY
BUSINESS CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
CAPACITY UTILIZATION
CENTRALLY PLANNED ECONOMIES
CLOSED ECONOMIES
COMMODITIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPETITIVE PRESSURE
COMPETITIVENESS
CORRUPTION
CRIME
CUSTOMS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DOMESTIC COMPETITION
DOMESTIC COMPETITORS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC RESOURCES
ELASTICITIES
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FOREIGN COMPETITION
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN TRADE
GDP
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GOOD INVESTMENT CLIMATE
GOVERNANCE ISSUES
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
INFLATION
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES
LABOR INPUTS
LABOR REGULATIONS
LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS
MARKET COMPETITION
MARKET POWER
MEASUREMENT ERROR
NET INFLOWS
OIL
OPEN ECONOMIES
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
POLICY REFORMS
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRICE TAKERS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCERS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTIVE ASSETS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
REGULATORY POLICY
REGULATORY REGIME
REMOVING BARRIERS
RENT SEEKING
TAX RATES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADABLE GOODS
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
TRANSITION ECONOMY
VALUE OF OUTPUT
WAGE RATES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD PRICES INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY
GARMENT INDUSTRY
FOOD PROCESSING INDUSTRY
COMPETITIVENESS
INFRASTRUCTURAL INVESTMENTS
GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES
BUREAUCRACY
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BRIBERY
BUREAUCRACY
BUSINESS CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
CAPACITY UTILIZATION
CENTRALLY PLANNED ECONOMIES
CLOSED ECONOMIES
COMMODITIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPETITIVE PRESSURE
COMPETITIVENESS
CORRUPTION
CRIME
CUSTOMS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DOMESTIC COMPETITION
DOMESTIC COMPETITORS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC RESOURCES
ELASTICITIES
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FOREIGN COMPETITION
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN TRADE
GDP
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GOOD INVESTMENT CLIMATE
GOVERNANCE ISSUES
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
INFLATION
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES
LABOR INPUTS
LABOR REGULATIONS
LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS
MARKET COMPETITION
MARKET POWER
MEASUREMENT ERROR
NET INFLOWS
OIL
OPEN ECONOMIES
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
POLICY REFORMS
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRICE TAKERS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCERS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTIVE ASSETS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
REGULATORY POLICY
REGULATORY REGIME
REMOVING BARRIERS
RENT SEEKING
TAX RATES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADABLE GOODS
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
TRANSITION ECONOMY
VALUE OF OUTPUT
WAGE RATES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD PRICES INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY
GARMENT INDUSTRY
FOOD PROCESSING INDUSTRY
COMPETITIVENESS
INFRASTRUCTURAL INVESTMENTS
GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES
BUREAUCRACY
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
spellingShingle BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BRIBERY
BUREAUCRACY
BUSINESS CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
CAPACITY UTILIZATION
CENTRALLY PLANNED ECONOMIES
CLOSED ECONOMIES
COMMODITIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPETITIVE PRESSURE
COMPETITIVENESS
CORRUPTION
CRIME
CUSTOMS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DOMESTIC COMPETITION
DOMESTIC COMPETITORS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC RESOURCES
ELASTICITIES
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FOREIGN COMPETITION
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN TRADE
GDP
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GOOD INVESTMENT CLIMATE
GOVERNANCE ISSUES
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
INFLATION
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES
LABOR INPUTS
LABOR REGULATIONS
LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS
MARKET COMPETITION
MARKET POWER
MEASUREMENT ERROR
NET INFLOWS
OIL
OPEN ECONOMIES
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
POLICY REFORMS
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRICE TAKERS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCERS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTIVE ASSETS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
REGULATORY POLICY
REGULATORY REGIME
REMOVING BARRIERS
RENT SEEKING
TAX RATES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADABLE GOODS
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
TRANSITION ECONOMY
VALUE OF OUTPUT
WAGE RATES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD PRICES INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY
GARMENT INDUSTRY
FOOD PROCESSING INDUSTRY
COMPETITIVENESS
INFRASTRUCTURAL INVESTMENTS
GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES
BUREAUCRACY
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BRIBERY
BUREAUCRACY
BUSINESS CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
CAPACITY UTILIZATION
CENTRALLY PLANNED ECONOMIES
CLOSED ECONOMIES
COMMODITIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPETITIVE PRESSURE
COMPETITIVENESS
CORRUPTION
CRIME
CUSTOMS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DOMESTIC COMPETITION
DOMESTIC COMPETITORS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC RESOURCES
ELASTICITIES
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FOREIGN COMPETITION
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN TRADE
GDP
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GOOD INVESTMENT CLIMATE
GOVERNANCE ISSUES
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
INFLATION
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES
LABOR INPUTS
LABOR REGULATIONS
LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS
MARKET COMPETITION
MARKET POWER
MEASUREMENT ERROR
NET INFLOWS
OIL
OPEN ECONOMIES
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
POLICY REFORMS
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRICE TAKERS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCERS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTIVE ASSETS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
REGULATORY POLICY
REGULATORY REGIME
REMOVING BARRIERS
RENT SEEKING
TAX RATES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADABLE GOODS
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
TRANSITION ECONOMY
VALUE OF OUTPUT
WAGE RATES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD PRICES INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY
GARMENT INDUSTRY
FOOD PROCESSING INDUSTRY
COMPETITIVENESS
INFRASTRUCTURAL INVESTMENTS
GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES
BUREAUCRACY
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
Bastos, Fabiano
Nasir, John
Productivity and the Investment Climate: What Matters Most?
description The authors explore the links between the investment climate and firm-level productivity and attempt to identify which dimensions of the investment climate matter most for productivity. Their analysis is based on data collected in a recent investment climate survey of garment and food processing firms in five countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The authors use the first principal components of a series of indicators to summarize broad aspects of the investment climate and identify those most important in determining productivity. Their results indicate that competitive pressure is the most critical factor in the investment climate, accounting for more variation in firm-level productivity than infrastructure provision or issues related to government rent seeking and bureaucratic burden. This suggests that to improve productivity, increase output, and reduce poverty, policymakers should focus reform efforts on removing barriers to entry and creating open, highly competitive markets.
topic_facet BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BRIBERY
BUREAUCRACY
BUSINESS CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
CAPACITY UTILIZATION
CENTRALLY PLANNED ECONOMIES
CLOSED ECONOMIES
COMMODITIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPETITIVE PRESSURE
COMPETITIVENESS
CORRUPTION
CRIME
CUSTOMS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DOMESTIC COMPETITION
DOMESTIC COMPETITORS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC RESEARCH
ECONOMIC RESOURCES
ELASTICITIES
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FOREIGN COMPETITION
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN TRADE
GDP
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GOOD INVESTMENT CLIMATE
GOVERNANCE ISSUES
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
INFLATION
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES
LABOR INPUTS
LABOR REGULATIONS
LIBERALIZATION EFFORTS
MARKET COMPETITION
MARKET POWER
MEASUREMENT ERROR
NET INFLOWS
OIL
OPEN ECONOMIES
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
POLICY REFORMS
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRICE TAKERS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCERS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTIVE ASSETS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
REGULATORY POLICY
REGULATORY REGIME
REMOVING BARRIERS
RENT SEEKING
TAX RATES
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADABLE GOODS
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
TRANSITION ECONOMY
VALUE OF OUTPUT
WAGE RATES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD PRICES INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIVITY
GARMENT INDUSTRY
FOOD PROCESSING INDUSTRY
COMPETITIVENESS
INFRASTRUCTURAL INVESTMENTS
GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES
BUREAUCRACY
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
author Bastos, Fabiano
Nasir, John
author_facet Bastos, Fabiano
Nasir, John
author_sort Bastos, Fabiano
title Productivity and the Investment Climate: What Matters Most?
title_short Productivity and the Investment Climate: What Matters Most?
title_full Productivity and the Investment Climate: What Matters Most?
title_fullStr Productivity and the Investment Climate: What Matters Most?
title_full_unstemmed Productivity and the Investment Climate: What Matters Most?
title_sort productivity and the investment climate: what matters most?
publisher World Bank, Washington, D.C.
publishDate 2004-06
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/06/4991083/productivity-investment-climate-matters-most
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14174
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