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Business Environment Reform - DCED Practical Guidance

 

The DCED defines the business environment as a complex of policy, legal, institutional, and regulatory conditions that govern business activities. It is a sub-set of the investment climate and includes the administration and enforcement mechanisms established to implement government policy, as well as the institutional arrangements that influence the way key actors operate (e.g., government agencies, regulatory authorities, and business membership organisations including businesswomen associations, civil society organisations, trade unions, etc.).

Along with other private sector development initiatives, the business environment affects the performance of private enterprises in both the formal and informal economies. Business environment reform promotes the development of markets that encourage competition and enhance the effectiveness and sustainability of other development interventions. Many agencies consider a conducive business environment as one of the pre-requisites for economic growth and poverty reduction. [DCED, 2008]

Overview of the DCED's work on Business Environment Reforms

The DCED's work in this theme is driven by the Business Environment Working Group (BEWG). Four conferences have now been organised; the first three informed the development of the Donor Guidance document (see below). All of the materials generated by these conferences, including case studies, related research and synthesis documents, are posted on the Business Environment database at www.Business-Environment.org.

Practical Guidance on Supporting Business Environment Reforms

In 2008, the DCED published "Supporting Business Environment Reforms. Practical Guidance for Development Agencies" ("Yellow Book"). Versions in different languages and supporting materials can be downloaded below.

Click on the links below to access supporting materials on the practical guidance:

Annex to the Practical Guidance on Supporting Business Environment Reforms: How Business Environment Reform Can Promote Formalisation

This Annex to the Practical Guidance on Supporting Business Environment Reform (BER), published by the DCED in 2011, focuses on how BER can address the informal economy and encourage the formalisation of informal enterprises.

Country-Level Reviews of Donor Support to Business Environment Reform

In 2010, the DCED initiated a pilot project to review donors' programmes and practices in support of BE Reform. Three countries were chosen: Kenya, Bangladesh and Rwanda. The report below presents findings from the first  review.

Other DCED Publications on BER

In addition to the Practical Guidance on BER and associated documents, the DCED Business Environment Working Group has also published other papers and reports on the theme. These are listed below.

The Political Economy of Business Environment Reform: An Introduction for Practitioners

This paper, published by the DCED in 2011, considers how political economy issues affect donors’ efforts to support business environment reform, and suggests ways which practitioners can address these issues. The paper draws on examples from four countries.

Business Environment Reforms and the Informal Economy

In 2009, the DCED commissioned a discussion paper on Business Environment Reforms and the Informal Economy, written by Professor Clifford Zinnes.

Other documents

Photographs courtesy of Melina Heinrich