Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 100875 Economy Profile 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 2 © 2016 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000; Internet: www.worldbank.org Some rights reserved 1 2 3 4 18 17 16 15 This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank with external contributions. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this work do not necessarily reflect the views of The World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. 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Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 3 CONTENTS Introduction .................................................................................................................................. 4 Starting a business ..................................................................................................................... 17 Dealing with construction permits ........................................................................................... 23 Getting electricity ....................................................................................................................... 32 Registering property .................................................................................................................. 40 Getting credit .............................................................................................................................. 50 Protecting minority investors ................................................................................................... 55 Paying taxes ................................................................................................................................ 61 Trading across borders .............................................................................................................. 65 Enforcing contracts .................................................................................................................... 71 Resolving insolvency .................................................................................................................. 78 Labor market regulation ........................................................................................................... 87 Distance to frontier and ease of doing business ranking ...................................................... 93 Resources on the Doing Business website .............................................................................. 97 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 4 INTRODUCTION Doing Business sheds light on how easy or difficult it is useful comparison, it also provides data for other for a local entrepreneur to open and run a small to selected economies (comparator economies) for each medium-size business when complying with relevant indicator. The data in this report are current as of June 1, regulations. It measures and tracks changes in 2015 (except for the paying taxes indicators, which cover regulations affecting 11 areas in the life cycle of a the period January–December 2014). business: starting a business, dealing with construction The Doing Business methodology has limitations. Other permits, getting electricity, registering property, getting areas important to business—such as an economy’s credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, proximity to large markets, the quality of its trading across borders, enforcing contracts, resolving infrastructure services (other than those related to insolvency and labor market regulation. Doing Business trading across borders and getting electricity), the 2016 presents the data for the labor market regulation security of property from theft and looting, the indicators in an annex. The report does not present transparency of government procurement, rankings of economies on labor market regulation macroeconomic conditions or the underlying strength of indicators or include the topic in the aggregate distance institutions—are not directly studied by Doing Business. to frontier score or ranking on the ease of doing The indicators refer to a specific type of business, business. generally a local limited liability company operating in In a series of annual reports Doing Business presents the largest business city. Because standard assumptions quantitative indicators on business regulations and the are used in the data collection, comparisons and protection of property rights that can be compared benchmarks are valid across economies. The data not across 189 economies, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, only highlight the extent of obstacles to doing business; over time. The data set covers 47 economies in Sub- they also help identify the source of those obstacles, Saharan Africa, 32 in Latin America and the Caribbean, 25 supporting policy makers in designing regulatory reform. in East Asia and the Pacific, 25 in Eastern Europe and More information is available in the full report. Doing Central Asia, 20 in the Middle East and North Africa and Business 2016 presents the indicators, analyzes their 8 in South Asia, as well as 32 OECD high-income relationship with economic outcomes and presents economies. The indicators are used to analyze economic business regulatory reforms. The data, along with outcomes and identify what reforms have worked, where information on ordering Doing Business 2016, are and why. available on the Doing Business website at This economy profile presents the Doing Business http://www.doingbusiness.org. indicators for St. Vincent and the Grenadines. To allow Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 5 CHANGES IN DOING BUSINESS 2016 As part of a two-year update in methodology, Doing The case study underlying the trading across borders Business 2016 expands the focus of five indicator sets indicators has been changed to increase its relevance. (dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, For each economy the export product and partner are registering property, enforcing contracts and labor now determined on the basis of the economy’s market regulation), substantially revises the comparative advantage, the import product is auto parts, methodology for one indicator set (trading across and the import partner is selected on the basis of which borders) and implements small updates to the economy has the highest trade value in that product. The methodology for another (protecting minority investors). indicators continue to measure the time and cost to export and import. The indicators on dealing with construction permits now include an index of the quality of building regulation and Beyond these changes there is one other update in its implementation. The getting electricity indicators now methodology, for the protecting minority investors include a measure of the price of electricity consumption indicators. A few points for the extent of shareholder and an index of the reliability of electricity supply and governance index have been fine-tuned, and the index transparency of tariffs. Starting this year, the registering now also measures aspects of the regulations applicable property indicators include an index of the quality of the to limited companies rather than privately held joint land administration system in each economy in addition stock companies. to the indicators on the number of procedures and the For more details on the changes, see the “What is time and cost to transfer property. And for enforcing changing in Doing Business?” chapter starting on page contracts an index of the quality and efficiency of judicial 27 of the Doing Business 2016 report. For more details processes has been added while the indicator on the on the data and methodology, please see the “Data number of procedures to enforce a contract has been Notes” chapter starting on page 119 of the Doing dropped. Business 2016 report. For more details on the distance to The scope of the labor market regulation indicator set frontier metric, please see the “Distance to frontier and has also been expanded, to include more areas capturing ease of doing business ranking” chapter in this profile. aspects of job quality. The labor market regulation indicators continue to be excluded from the aggregate distance to frontier score and ranking on the ease of doing business. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 6 THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT For policy makers trying to improve their economy’s regulatory environment for business, a good place to start ECONOMY OVERVIEW is to find out how it compares with the regulatory environment in other economies. Doing Business provides an aggregate ranking on the ease of doing business Region: Latin America & Caribbean based on indicator sets that measure and benchmark regulations applying to domestic small to medium-size Income category: Upper middle income businesses through their life cycle. Economies are ranked from 1 to 189 by the ease of doing business ranking. Population: 109,371 Doing Business presents results for 2 aggregate measures: the distance to frontier score and the ease of doing GNI per capita (US$): 6,560 business ranking. The ranking of economies is determined by sorting the aggregate distance to frontier scores, DB2016 rank: 111 rounded to two decimals. An economy’s distance to frontier score is indicated on a scale from 0 to 100, where DB2015 rank: 106* 0 represents the worst performance and 100 the frontier. Change in rank: -5 (See the chapter on the distance to frontier and ease of doing business). DB 2016 DTF: 57.91 The ease of doing business ranking compares economies with one another; the distance to frontier score DB 2015 DTF: 57.9 benchmarks economies with respect to regulatory best practice, showing the absolute distance to the best Change in DTF: 0.01 performance on each Doing Business indicator. When compared across years, the distance to frontier score * DB2015 ranking shown is not last year’s published shows how much the regulatory environment for local ranking but a comparable ranking for DB2015 that entrepreneurs in an economy has changed over time in captures the effects of such factors as data revisions absolute terms, while the ease of doing business ranking and the changes in methodology. See the data notes can show only how much the regulatory environment has starting on page 119 of the Doing Business 2016 changed relative to that in other economies. report for sources and definitions. The 10 topics included in the ranking in Doing Business 2016: starting a business, dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and resolving insolvency. The labor market regulation indicators are not included in this year’s aggregate ease of doing business ranking, but the data are presented in the economy profile. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Figure 1.1 Where economies stand in the global ranking on the ease of doing business Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT For policy makers, knowing where their economy regional average (figure 1.2). The economy’s rankings stands in the aggregate ranking on the ease of doing (figure 1.3) and distance to frontier scores (figure 1.4) business is useful. Also useful is to know how it ranks on the topics included in the ease of doing business relative to comparator economies and relative to the ranking provide another perspective. Figure 1.2 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of doing business Note: The rankings are benchmarked to June 2015 and based on the average of each economy’s distance to frontier (DTF) scores for the 10 topics included in this year’s aggregate ranking. The distance to frontier score benchmarks economies with respect to regulatory practice, showing the absolute distance to the best performance in each Doing Business indicator. An economy’s distance to frontier score is indicated on a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 represents the worst performance and 100 the frontier. For the economies for which the data cover 2 cities, scores are a population-weighted average for the 2 cities. Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 9 THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Figure 1.3 Rankings on Doing Business topics - St. Vincent and the Grenadines (Scale: Rank 189 center, Rank 1 outer edge) Figure 1.4 Distance to frontier scores on Doing Business topics - St. Vincent and the Grenadines (Scale: Score 0 center, Score 100 outer edge) Source: Doing Business database. Note: The rankings are benchmarked to June 2015 and based on the average of each economy’s distance to frontier (DTF) scores for the 10 topics included in this year’s aggregate ranking. The distance to frontier score benchmarks economies with respect to regulatory practice, showing the absolute distance to the best performance in each Doing Business indicator. An economy’s distance to frontier score is indicated on a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 represents the worst performance and 100 the frontier. For the economies for which the data cover 2 cities, scores are a population-weighted average for the 2 cities. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 10 THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Just as the overall ranking on the ease of doing business Doing Business introduced the distance to frontier score. tells only part of the story, so do changes in that ranking. This measure shows how far on average an economy is Yearly movements in rankings can provide some indication from the best performance achieved by any economy on of changes in an economy’s regulatory environment for each Doing Business indicator. firms, but they are always relative. Comparing the measure for an economy at 2 points in time Moreover, year-to-year changes in the overall rankings do allows users to assess how much the economy’s regulatory not reflect how the business regulatory environment in an environment as measured by Doing Business has changed economy has changed over time—or how it has changed over time—how far it has moved toward (or away from) in different areas. To aid in assessing such changes, the most efficient practices and strongest regulations in areas covered by Doing Business (figure 1.5). Figure 1.5 How far has St. Vincent and the Grenadines come in the areas measured by Doing Business? Note: The distance to frontier score shows how far on average an economy is from the best performance achieved by any economy on each Doing Business indicator. Starting a business is comparable to 2010. Getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes and resolving insolvency had methodology changes in 2014 and thus are only comparable to 2013. Dealing with construction permits, registering property, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and getting electricity had methodology changes in 2015 and thus are only comparable to 2014. The measure is normalized to range between 0 and 100, with 100 representing the best performance (the frontier). See the data notes starting on page 119 of the Doing Business 2016 report for more details on the distance to frontier score. Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 11 THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT The absolute values of the indicators tell another part of regulation—such as a regulatory process that can be the story (table 1.1). The indicators, on their own or in completed with a small number of procedures in a few comparison with the indicators of a good practice days and at a low cost. Comparison of the economy’s economy or those of comparator economies in the indicators today with those in the previous year may region, may reveal bottlenecks reflected in large numbers show where substantial bottlenecks persist—and where of procedures, long delays or high costs. Or they may they are diminishing. reveal unexpected strengths in an area of business Table 1.1 Summary of Doing Business indicators for St. Vincent and the Grenadines Puerto Rico (U.S.) DB2016 Best performer globally Antigua and Barbuda Grenadines DB2016 Grenadines DB2015 St. Vincent and the St. Vincent and the St. Kitts and Nevis Dominica DB2016 Grenada DB2016 Jamaica DB2016 Indicator DB2016 DB2016 DB2016 Starting a Business 77 74 107 63 76 9 51 90 New Zealand (1) (rank) Starting a Business (DTF 86.72 86.7 83.37 89.35 86.84 97.28 91.11 85.66 New Zealand (99.96) Score) Procedures (number) 7.0 7.0 8.0 5.0 6.0 2.0 6.0 7.0 New Zealand (1.00)* Time (days) 10.0 10.0 21.0 12.0 15.0 3.0 6.0 18.5 New Zealand (0.50) Cost (% of income per 16.5 16.7 9.5 15.0 17.3 5.0 1.3 7.9 Slovenia (0.00) capita) Paid-in min. capital (% 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 105 Economies (0.00)* of income per capita) Dealing with Construction Permits 59 59 95 115 100 72 135 32 Singapore (1) (rank) Dealing with Construction Permits 72.74 72.74 68.24 65.76 67.61 71.1 62.21 77.31 Singapore (92.97) (DTF Score) Procedures (number) 14.0 14.0 16.0 10.0 13.0 17.0 20.0 10.0 5 Economies (7.00)* Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 12 Puerto Rico (U.S.) DB2016 Best performer globally Antigua and Barbuda Grenadines DB2016 Grenadines DB2015 St. Vincent and the St. Vincent and the St. Kitts and Nevis Dominica DB2016 Grenada DB2016 Jamaica DB2016 Indicator DB2016 DB2016 DB2016 Time (days) 92.0 92.0 110.0 175.0 128.0 129.5 165.0 104.0 Singapore (26.00) Cost (% of warehouse 0.1 0.1 0.4 0.1 0.3 0.9 6.2 0.3 Qatar (0.00) value) Building quality control 7.0 7.0 6.5 4.0 5.0 10.0 12.0 8.0 New Zealand (15.00) index (0-15) Getting Electricity 79 74 33 37 58 80 57 84 Korea, Rep. (1) (rank) Getting Electricity (DTF 71.13 71.12 83.48 82.44 76.39 71.09 76.58 70.02 Korea, Rep. (99.88) Score) Procedures (number) 3.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 5.0 7.0 5.0 4.0 14 Economies (3.00)* Time (days) 52.0 52.0 42.0 61.0 38.0 95.0 32.0 18.0 Korea, Rep. (18.00)* Cost (% of income per 55.6 58.5 118.8 461.1 196.4 242.9 346.4 264.3 Japan (0.00) capita) Reliability of supply and transparency of tariff 0.0 0.0 5.0 7.0 4.0 7.0 4.0 0.0 18 Economies (8.00)* index (0-8) Registering Property 160 157 118 165 139 122 164 170 New Zealand (1) (rank) Registering Property 44.17 44.17 55.75 43.41 50.16 53.7 43.77 40.31 New Zealand (94.46) (DTF Score) Procedures (number) 7.0 7.0 7.0 5.0 8.0 8.0 8.0 6.0 4 Economies (1.00)* Time (days) 38.0 38.0 39.0 42.0 32.0 18.0 193.5 82.0 3 Economies (1.00)* Cost (% of property 11.8 11.8 10.8 13.3 7.4 9.8 0.9 13.2 Saudi Arabia (0.00) value) Quality of the land administration index (0- 7.0 7.0 19.0 4.5 7.0 14.0 9.5 9.0 3 Economies (28.50)* 30) Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 13 Puerto Rico (U.S.) DB2016 Best performer globally Antigua and Barbuda Grenadines DB2016 Grenadines DB2015 St. Vincent and the St. Vincent and the St. Kitts and Nevis Dominica DB2016 Grenada DB2016 Jamaica DB2016 Indicator DB2016 DB2016 DB2016 Getting Credit (rank) 152 150 152 133 133 7 7 152 New Zealand (1) Getting Credit (DTF 25 25 25 30 30 85 85 25 New Zealand (100) Score) Strength of legal rights 5.0 5.0 5.0 6.0 6.0 10.0 10.0 5.0 3 Economies (12.00)* index (0-12) Depth of credit 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 7.0 7.0 0.0 26 Economies (8.00)* information index (0-8) Credit registry coverage 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Portugal (100.00) (% of adults) Credit bureau coverage 22 Economies 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 22.4 100.0 0.0 (% of adults) (100.00)* Protecting Minority 66 64 66 66 122 57 88 88 Singapore (1)* Investors (rank) Protecting Minority 56.67 56.67 56.67 56.67 45 58.33 53.33 53.33 Singapore (83.33)* Investors (DTF Score) Strength of minority investor protection 5.7 5.7 5.7 5.7 4.5 5.8 5.3 5.3 3 Economies (8.30)* index (0-10) Extent of conflict of interest regulation 6.7 6.7 6.7 6.7 6.7 5.7 7.0 6.7 Singapore (9.30)* index (0-10) Extent of shareholder governance index (0- 4.7 4.7 4.7 4.7 2.3 6.0 3.7 4.0 4 Economies (8.00)* 10) United Arab Emirates Paying Taxes (rank) 97 93 161 98 132 146 134 147 (1)* Paying Taxes (DTF United Arab Emirates 72.76 72.76 54.35 72.49 64.46 60.95 63.93 60.64 Score) (99.44)* Payments (number per 36.0 36.0 57.0 37.0 42.0 37.0 16.0 39.0 Hong Kong SAR, Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 14 Puerto Rico (U.S.) DB2016 Best performer globally Antigua and Barbuda Grenadines DB2016 Grenadines DB2015 St. Vincent and the St. Vincent and the St. Kitts and Nevis Dominica DB2016 Grenada DB2016 Jamaica DB2016 Indicator DB2016 DB2016 DB2016 year) China (3.00)* Time (hours per year) 108.0 108.0 207.0 117.0 140.0 358.0 218.0 203.0 Luxembourg (55.00) Total tax rate (% of 38.6 38.6 41.9 37.0 45.3 35.2 65.8 49.7 Ireland (25.90) profit) Trading Across Borders 68 68 114 61 138 146 93 70 Denmark (1)* (rank) Trading Across Borders 79.78 79.78 62.01 81.04 55.76 50.84 70.16 79.2 Denmark (100)* (DTF Score) Time to export: Border 28 28 85 19 101 82 48 3 15 Economies (0.00)* compliance (hours) Cost to export: Border 200 200 546 450 1,034 599 586 285 18 Economies (0.00)* compliance (USD) Time to export: Documentary 3 3 51 12 77 62 2 48 Jordan (0.00) compliance (hours) Cost to export: Documentary 80 80 121 50 40 314 223 150 20 Economies (0.00)* compliance (USD) Time to import: Border 48 48 85 39 37 106 48 37 19 Economies (0.00)* compliance (hours) Cost to import: Border 875 875 546 583 1,745 606 586 261 28 Economies (0.00)* compliance (USD) Time to import: Documentary 6 6 109 24 44 87 2 41 21 Economies (1.00)* compliance (hours) Cost to import: Documentary 90 90 132 50 50 331 223 150 30 Economies (0.00)* compliance (USD) Enforcing Contracts 31 31 19 83 89 107 100 42 Singapore (1) Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 15 Puerto Rico (U.S.) DB2016 Best performer globally Antigua and Barbuda Grenadines DB2016 Grenadines DB2015 St. Vincent and the St. Vincent and the St. Kitts and Nevis Dominica DB2016 Grenada DB2016 Jamaica DB2016 Indicator DB2016 DB2016 DB2016 (rank) Enforcing Contracts 70.08 70.08 73.18 59.17 58.41 55.36 56.41 66.87 Singapore (84.91) (DTF Score) Time (days) 394.0 394.0 351.0 681.0 688.0 655.0 620.0 578.0 Singapore (150.00) Cost (% of claim) 30.3 30.3 22.7 36.0 32.6 45.6 25.6 20.5 Iceland (9.00) Quality of judicial 12.0 12.0 11.5 11.5 10.5 11.0 7.0 11.0 3 Economies (15.50)* processes index (0-18) Resolving Insolvency 189 189 125 129 189 35 7 189 Finland (1) (rank) Resolving Insolvency 0 0 35 34.03 0 69.08 84.84 0 Finland (93.81) (DTF Score) Recovery rate (cents on 0.0 0.0 36.0 28.4 0.0 64.5 70.5 0.0 Japan (92.90) the dollar) no no no no Time (years) 3.0 4.0 1.1 2.5 Ireland (0.40) practice practice practice practice no no no no Cost (% of estate) 7.0 10.0 18.0 11.0 Norway (1.00) practice practice practice practice Outcome (0 as no no no no piecemeal sale and 1 as 0 0 1 1 practice practice practice practice going concern) Strength of insolvency 0.0 0.0 5.0 6.0 0.0 11.0 15.0 0.0 4 Economies (15.00)* framework index (0-16) Source: Doing Business database. Note: DB2015 rankings shown are not last year’s published rankings but comparable rankings for DB2015 that capture the effects of such factors as data revisions and changes to the methodology. The global best performer on time for paying taxes is defined as the lowest time recorded among all economies in the DB2016 sample that levy the 3 major taxes: profit tax, labor taxes and mandatory contributions, and VAT or sales tax. If an economy has no laws or regulations covering a specific area—for example, insolvency—it receives a “no practice” mark. Similarly, an economy receives a “no practice” mark if regulation exists but is never used in practice or if a competing regulation prohibits such practice. Either way, a “no practice” mark puts the economy at the bottom of the ranking on the relevant indicator. * Two or more economies share the top ranking on this indicator. A number shown in place of an economy’s name Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 16 indicates the number of economies that share the top ranking on the indicator. For a list of these economies, see the Doing Business website (http://www.doingbusiness.org). Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 17 STARTING A BUSINESS Formal registration of companies has many WHAT THE STARTING A BUSINESS immediate benefits for the companies and for business owners and employees. Legal entities can INDICATORS MEASURE outlive their founders. Resources are pooled as several shareholders join forces to start a company. Procedures to legally start and operate a Formally registered companies have access to company (number) services and institutions from courts to banks as well Preregistration (for example, name as to new markets. And their employees can benefit verification or reservation, notarization) from protections provided by the law. An additional benefit comes with limited liability companies. These Registration in the economy’s largest limit the financial liability of company owners to their business city 1 investments, so personal assets of the owners are not Postregistration (for example, social security put at risk. Where governments make registration registration, company seal) easy, more entrepreneurs start businesses in the formal sector, creating more good jobs and Time required to complete each procedure generating more revenue for the government. (calendar days) What do the indicators cover? Does not include time spent gathering information Doing Business records all procedures officially required, or commonly done in practice, for an Each procedure starts on a separate day (2 entrepreneur to start up and formally operate an procedures cannot start on the same day). industrial or commercial business, as well as the time Procedures that can be fully completed and cost to complete these procedures and the paid- online are recorded as ½ day. in minimum capital requirement. These procedures Procedure completed once final document is include obtaining all necessary licenses and permits received and completing any required notifications, verifications or inscriptions for the company and No prior contact with officials employees with relevant authorities. The ranking of Cost required to complete each procedure economies on the ease of starting a business is (% of income per capita) determined by sorting their distance to frontier scores for starting a business. These scores are the Official costs only, no bribes simple average of the distance to frontier scores for No professional fees unless services required each of the component indicators. by law or commonly used in practice To make the data comparable across economies, Paid-in minimum capital (% of income several assumptions about the business and the per capita) procedures are used. It is assumed that any required information is readily available and that the Deposited in a bank or with a notary before entrepreneur will pay no bribes. Assumptions about registration (or within 3 months) the business:  Is a limited liability company (or its legal  Has a start-up capital of 10 times income per equivalent), located in the largest business city capita and a turnover of at least 100 times 1 and is 100% domestically owned with five income per capita. owners, none of whom is a legal entity.  Has a company deed 10 pages long.  Has at least 10 and up to 50 employees, all of  Does not qualify for any special benefits. them domestic nationals.  Leases the commercial plant or offices and is not  Performs general commercial or industrial a proprietor of real estate. activities. 1 For 11 economies the data are also collected for the second largest business city. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 18 STARTING A BUSINESS Where does the economy stand today? What does it take to start a business in St. Vincent and sets refer to a case scenario in the largest business city of the Grenadines? According to data collected by Doing an economy, except for 11 economies for which the data Business, starting a business there requires 7.00 are a population-weighted average of the 2 largest procedures, takes 10.00 days, costs 16.50% of income business cities. See the chapter on distance to frontier per capita and requires paid-in minimum capital of and ease of doing business ranking at the end of this 0.00% of income per capita (figure 2.1). Most indicator profile for more details. Figure 2.1 What it takes to start a business in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Paid-in minimum capital (% of income per capita): 0.00 Source: Doing Business database. Note: Time shown in the figure above may not reflect simultaneity of procedures. Online procedures account for 0.5 days in the total time calculation. For more information on the methodology of the starting a business indicators, see the Doing Business website (http://www.doingbusiness.org). For details on the procedures reflected here, see the summary at the end of this chapter. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 19 STARTING A BUSINESS Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 77 in other useful information for assessing how easy it is for the ranking of 189 economies on the ease of starting a an entrepreneur in St. Vincent and the Grenadines to business (figure 2.2). The rankings for comparator start a business. economies and the regional average ranking provide Figure 2.2 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of starting a business Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 20 STARTING A BUSINESS What are the details? Underlying the indicators shown in this chapter for St. STANDARDIZED COMPANY Vincent and the Grenadines is a set of specific procedures—the bureaucratic and legal steps that an entrepreneur must complete to incorporate and Legal form: Private Limited Liability Company register a new firm. These are identified by Doing Business through collaboration with relevant local Paid-in minimum capital requirement: XCD 0 professionals and the study of laws, regulations and City: Kingstown publicly available information on business entry in that economy. Following is a detailed summary of Start-up Capital: 10 times GNI per capita those procedures, along with the associated time and cost. These procedures are those that apply to a company matching the standard assumptions (the “standardized company”) used by Doing Business in collecting the data (see the section in this chapter on what the indicators measure). Table 2.2 Summary of time, cost and procedures for starting a business in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete Search and reserve company name Pre-approval of a company name is obtained by filing a request for name search and reservation (form 26) with the Commerce and Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) in advance of the related application. To avoid unnecessary delays, statutory instructions for form completion are distributed at CIPO. A fee of XCD 25 is payable to CIPO. Form 26 makes provision for the choice of 3 alternative names. On receipt of a request for name reservation, CIPO will conduct a 1 comparative search of registered business and corporate names and 1 day XCD 25 will consider the overall suitability of the proposed having regard to the prescribed restrictions. Where a name is approved, it will be reserved for a period of 90 days from approval. It’s recommended that all applicants use the name reservation procedures to avoid the inconvenience of having to prepare a new set of forms should the first chosen name be declined. Agency: Commerce and Intellectual Property Office Obtain and legalize the incorporation documents Pursuant to the Companies Act, Chapter 143 of the Laws of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 2009 Revised Edition, the company Director or the attorney, must prepare the incorporation documents. A standard 2 Article of Association exist at the registry and therefore the company 1 day XCD 1,750 director can prepare it, however almost all companies choose to use an attorney to complete these formalities. Any person: (a) over the age of 18; (b) of sound mind; and (c) not having declared bankruptcy may form a company under the Companies Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 21 Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete Act, 2009 revised edition. Filing may be accompanied by a statutory declaration of an attorney at law attesting that the qualifying requirements identified above have been met. Agency: Lawyer Register with the Commercial Registry The company must file the following documents with CIPO: • the articles of incorporation, the notice of directors, • the notice of registered office, • the request for name search and name reservation, • the lawyer’s declaration that company meets qualifying requirements, • and a cover letter if any director does not have a middle name (the 3 forms require a middle initial). 2 days XCD 950 After 2 days, if all documents are in order, CIPO, otherwise referred to as the Commercial Registry, releases a certificate of incorporation. The administrative fee is XCD 950. Agency: Commerce and Intellectual Property Office File bylaws and notice of appointment of secretary Upon retrieving the certificate of incorporation, the company or the retained lawyer files two copies of the bylaws and the notice of appointment of secretary, and two days later, retrieves company 4 registration certificate. The bylaws cost XCD 100 and the notice of 2 days XCD 150 appointment of secretary costs XCD 50. Agency: Commerce and Intellectual Property Office Apply for a trade/industrial license All businesses that conduct commercial or industrial activities must apply for a license. Government officials do not inspect the company before issuing the license. The cost of the license depends on the company stock, with average cost costs being around XCD 100. To 2 days XCD 100 5 determine the cost of the license, government officials evaluate the type and the amount of stock of each company. Agency: Ministry of Trade Register with the Inland Revenue Department The registrar sends a notice to the Inland Revenue Department once 1 day no charge 6 the company is incorporated and the company must then register at the Inland Revenue Department office in person. Following the initial registration, any filings thereafter can be done online at etaxsvg.gov.vc Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 22 Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete Pursuant to section 9(2) of the Value Added Tax Act, Chapter 445 of the Laws of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 2009 Revised Edition, the company must also register for VAT in case its turnover exceeds XCD. 120,000 one hundred and twenty thousand East Caribbean dollars. The company must apply for registration under the VAT Act on the last day of any month if their gross sales meet the threshold of $120,000 per year, or if gross sales average $10,000 per month. Agency: Inland Revenue Department Enroll company and workers at the National Insurance Services The company submits a form with company information and a form for every employee hired to the National Insurance Services. The company’s contribution to the National Insurance Services is based on 7 each employee’s salary. Employee pays 4.5% of salary and employer 1 day no charge pays 5.5% (elaboration). Agency: National Insurance Services * Takes place simultaneously with another procedure. Source: Doing Business database. Note: Online procedures account for 0.5 days in the total time calculation. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 23 DEALING WITH CONSTRUCTION PERMITS Regulation of construction is critical to protect the WHAT THE DEALING WITH CONSTRUCTION public. But it needs to be efficient, to avoid excessive PERMITS INDICATORS MEASURE constraints on a sector that plays an important part in every economy. Where complying with building regulations is excessively costly in time and money, Procedures to legally build a warehouse many builders opt out. They may pay bribes to pass (number) inspections or simply build illegally, leading to Submitting all relevant documents and hazardous construction that puts public safety at risk. obtaining all necessary clearances, licenses, Where compliance is simple, straightforward and permits and certificates inexpensive, everyone is better off. Submitting all required notifications and What do the indicators cover? receiving all necessary inspections Doing Business records all procedures required for a Obtaining utility connections for water and business in the construction industry to build a sewerage warehouse along with the time and cost to complete Registering and selling the warehouse after its each procedure. In addition, this year Doing Business completion introduces a new measure, the building quality Time required to complete each procedure control index, evaluating the quality of building (calendar days) regulations, the strength of quality control and safety mechanisms, liability and insurance regimes, and Does not include time spent gathering professional certification requirements. information The ranking of economies on the ease of dealing with Each procedure starts on a separate day. Procedures that can be fully completed online construction permits is determined by sorting their are recorded as ½ day distance to frontier scores for dealing with construction permits. These scores are the simple Procedure considered completed once final average of the distance to frontier scores for each of document is received the component indicators. No prior contact with officials To make the data comparable across economies, Cost required to complete each procedure (% several assumptions about the construction of warehouse value) company, the warehouse project and the utility Official costs only, no bribes connections are used. Building quality control index (0-15) Assumptions about the construction company Sum of the scores of six component indices: The construction company (BuildCo): Quality of building regulations (0-2)  Is a limited liability company (or its legal equivalent). Quality control before construction (0-1)  Operates in the economy’s largest business Quality control during construction (0-3) city. For 11 economies the data are also Quality control after construction (0-3) collected for the second largest business Liability and insurance regimes (0-2) city. Professional certifications (0-4)  Is 100% domestically and privately owned.  Has five owners, none of whom is a legal entity.  Is fully licensed and insured to carry out construction projects, such as building warehouses. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 24 The construction company (BuildCo) (continued):  Will be a new construction (there was no previous construction on the land), with no  Has 60 builders and other employees, all of trees, natural water sources, natural reserves them nationals with the technical expertise or historical monuments of any kind on the and professional experience necessary to plot. obtain construction permits and approvals.  Will have complete architectural and  Has at least one employee who is a technical plans prepared by a licensed licensed architect or engineer and architect. If preparation of the plans requires registered with the local association of such steps as obtaining further architects or engineers. BuildCo is not documentation or getting prior approvals assumed to have any other employees who from external agencies, these are counted as are technical or licensed experts, such as procedures. geological or topographical experts.  Will include all technical equipment required  Has paid all taxes and taken out all to be fully operational. necessary insurance applicable to its general business activity (for example,  Will take 30 weeks to construct (excluding all accidental insurance for construction delays due to administrative and regulatory workers and third-person liability). requirements).  Owns the land on which the warehouse will be built and will sell the warehouse upon Assumptions about the utility connections its completion. The water and sewerage connections:  Is valued at 50 times income per capita.  Will be 150 meters (492 feet) from the Assumptions about the warehouse existing water source and sewer tap. If there The warehouse: is no water delivery infrastructure in the economy, a borehole will be dug. If there is  Will be used for general storage activities, no sewerage infrastructure, a septic tank in such as storage of books or stationery. The the smallest size available will be installed or warehouse will not be used for any goods built. requiring special conditions, such as food, chemicals or pharmaceuticals.  Will not require water for fire protection reasons; a fire extinguishing system (dry  Will have two stories, both above ground, system) will be used instead. If a wet fire with a total constructed area of protection system is required by law, it is approximately 1,300.6 square meters assumed that the water demand specified (14,000 square feet). Each floor will be 3 below also covers the water needed for fire meters (9 feet, 10 inches) high. protection.  Will have road access and be located in the  Will have an average water use of 662 liters periurban area of the economy’s largest (175 gallons) a day and an average business city (that is, on the fringes of the wastewater flow of 568 liters (150 gallons) a city but still within its official limits). For 11 day. Will have a peak water use of 1,325 liters economies the data are also collected for (350 gallons) a day and a peak wastewater the second largest business city. flow of 1,136 liters (300 gallons) a day.  Will not be located in a special economic  Will have a constant level of water demand or industrial zone. Will be located on a land and wastewater flow throughout the year. plot of approximately 929 square meters (10,000 square feet) that is 100% owned by  Will be 1 inch in diameter for the water BuildCo and is accurately registered in the connection and 4 inches in diameter for the cadastre and land registry. sewerage connection. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 25 DEALING WITH CONSTRUCTION PERMITS Where does the economy stand today? What does it take to comply with the formalities to build economy, except for 11 economies for which the data a warehouse in St. Vincent and the Grenadines? are a population-weighted average of the 2 largest According to data collected by Doing Business, dealing business cities. See the chapter on distance to frontier with construction permits there requires 14.00 and ease of doing business ranking at the end of this procedures, takes 92.00 days and costs 0.10% of the profile for more details. warehouse value (figure 3.1). Most indicator sets refer to a case scenario in the largest business city of an Figure 3.1 What it takes to comply with formalities to build a warehouse in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Source: Doing Business database. Note: Time shown in the figure above may not reflect simultaneity of procedures. Online procedures account for 0.5 days in the total time calculation. For more information on the methodology of the dealing with construction permits indicators, see the Doing Business website (http://www.doingbusiness.org). For details on the procedures reflected here, see the summary at the end of this chapter. . Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 26 DEALING WITH CONSTRUCTION PERMITS Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 59 in provide other useful information for assessing how easy the ranking of 189 economies on the ease of dealing it is for an entrepreneur in St. Vincent and the with construction permits (figure 3.2). The rankings for Grenadines to legally build a warehouse. comparator economies and the regional average ranking Figure 3.2 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of dealing with construction permits Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 27 DEALING WITH CONSTRUCTION PERMITS What are the details? The indicators reported here for St. Vincent and the BUILDING A WAREHOUSE Grenadines are based on a set of specific procedures—the steps that a company must complete to legally build a warehouse—identified by Estimated value of Doing Business through information collected from XCD 899,021 warehouse : experts in construction licensing, including architects, civil engineers, construction lawyers, construction City : Kingstown firms, utility service providers and public officials who deal with building regulations. These procedures are those that apply to a company and The procedures, along with the associated time and cost, structure matching the standard assumptions used are summarized below. by Doing Business in collecting the data (see the section in this chapter on what the indicators cover). Table 3.2 Summary of time, cost and procedures for dealing with construction permits in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete Obtain a location plan from the Land and Surveys Department One of the requirements to apply for a building permit is to provide a location plan which can be obtained either from the Land and Surveys Department or at the Office of the Planning 1 Board. According to the new Building regulations, this location 1 day XCD 5 plan must clearly show all easily identifiable points such as streams, road junctions, bridges and nearby houses. Agency: Land and Surveys Department Receive site inspection prior to the building permit The Physical Planning Unit (PPU) will conduct a site inspection once the application for a building permit has been received. Once the visit is over, a decision is made regarding the permit. 1 day no charge 2 This inspection is part of the permitting process. Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Obtain building permit from the Physical Planning Unit To obtain a building permit, BuildCo must first obtain an application form and a set of conditions and guidelines for building. BuildCo must then submit the application, along with the building plans and a location map. 40 days XCD 300 3 Upon receiving the application and building plans, the Physical Planning Unit (PPU) advertises the proposed plans in the local newspaper for a minimum of 2 weeks to officially notify the area residents of the proposed commercial construction. If no complaints are raised and the file is complete, the PPU grants Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 28 Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete approval of the application. The stamped documents and application are then returned to the applicant. Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Receive setting out inspection by the Physical Planning Unit An inspection at the start of construction is a formality not always completed in practice. 1 day no charge 4 Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Receive excavation inspection by the Physical Planning Unit Though inspections are required by law, they are rarely enforced in practice because manpower and resources are limited. There are two conditions under which an inspection would certainly take place: • If there is a complaint or the Physical Planning Unit (PPU) suspects noncompliance or an infraction 1 day no charge 5 • If BuildCo has taken a loan for the construction of the warehouse (in this case, the bank will send out its own inspectors to ensure conformity with loan requirements) Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Receive foundation inspection before concreting inspection by the Physical Planning Unit In September 2011, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines implemented a National Building Code. The Code clarified the 8 6 stages of inspection that are required to ensure the safety of 1 day no charge buildings. Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Receive structural inspection (frame and roof) inspection by the Physical Planning Unit 7 1 day no charge Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Receive plumbing and drains inspection by the Physical Planning Unit 8 1 day no charge Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 29 Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete Notify the Physical Planning Unit of the completion of construction and request occupancy permit 9 1 day no charge Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Receive final inspection from the Physical Planning Unit An inspection on completion of construction is a formality that is not always completed in practice. 1 day no charge 10 Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) Obtain occupancy permit 11 7 days no charge Agency: Physical Planning Unit (PPU) * Request water connection 12 1 day no charge Agency: Central Water And Sewerage Authority (CWASA) Receive water inspection 13 1 day no charge Agency: Central Water And Sewerage Authority (CWASA) Obtain water connection 14 35 days XCD 900 Agency: Central Water And Sewerage Authority (CWASA) * Takes place simultaneously with another procedure. Source: Doing Business database. Note: Online procedures account for 0.5 days in the total time calculation. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 30 DEALING WITH CONSTRUCTION PERMITS Building Quality Control Index The building quality control index is the sum of the The index ranges from 0 to 15, with higher values scores on the quality of building regulations, quality indicating better quality control and safety mechanisms in control before construction, quality control during the construction permitting system. construction, quality control after construction, The indicator is based on the same case study liability and insurance regimes, and professional assumptions as the measures of efficiency. certifications indices. Table 3.3 Summary of quality control and safety mechanisms in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Answer Score Building quality control index (0-15) 7.00 Quality of building regulations index (0-2) 1.00 In what way are the building regulations (including the building They must be code) or any regulations dealing with construction permits made 0.0 purchased. available? (0-1) List of required Which requirements for obtaining a building permit are clearly documents; Fees to be specified by the building regulations or by any accessible website, 1.0 paid; Required brochure or pamphlet? (0-1) preapprovals. Quality control before construction index (0-1) 1.00 Who is part of the committee or team that reviews and approves building permit applications in the relevant permit-issuing Licensed engineer. 1.0 agency? (0-1) Quality control during construction index (0-3) 1.00 What types of inspections (if any) are required by law to be Inspections at various 1.0 carried out during construction? (0-2) phases. Mandatory inspections Do legally mandated inspections occur in practice during are done most of the 0.0 construction? (0-1) time during construction. Quality control after construction index (0-3) 2.00 Is there a final inspection required by law to verify that the Yes, final inspection is building was built in accordance with the approved plans and done by government 2.0 regulations? (0-2) agency. Final inspection occurs Do legally mandated final inspections occur in practice? (0-1) 0.0 most of the time. Liability and insurance regimes index (0-2) 1.00 Which parties (if any) are held liable by law for structural flaws or No party is held liable 0.0 problems in the building once it is in use? (0-1) under the law. Which parties (if any) are required by law to obtain an insurance Insurance is commonly 1.0 policy to cover possible structural flaws or problems in the taken in practice. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 31 Answer Score building once it is in use? (0-1) Professional certifications index (0-4) 1.00 University degree in What are the qualification requirements for the professional architecture or responsible for verifying that the architectural plans or drawings engineering; Being a 1.0 are in compliance with existing building regulations? (0-2) registered architect or engineer. What are the qualification requirements for the professional who There are no specific 0.0 supervises the construction on the ground? (0-2) requirements. Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 32 GETTING ELECTRICITY Access to reliable and affordable electricity is vital for WHAT THE GETTING ELECTRICITY businesses. To counter weak electricity supply, many firms in developing economies have to rely on self- INDICATORS MEASURE supply, often at a prohibitively high cost. Whether electricity is reliably available or not, the first step for Procedures to obtain an electricity connection a customer is always to gain access by obtaining a (number) connection. Submitting all relevant documents and What do the indicators cover? obtaining all necessary clearances and permits Doing Business records all procedures required for a Completing all required notifications and local business to obtain a permanent electricity receiving all necessary inspections connection and supply for a standardized warehouse, as well as the time and cost to complete them. These Obtaining external installation works and procedures include applications and contracts with possibly purchasing material for these works electricity utilities, clearances from other agencies Concluding any necessary supply contract and and the external and final connection works. In obtaining final supply addition, this year Doing Business adds two new measures: the reliability of supply and transparency Time required to complete each procedure of tariffs index (included in the aggregate distance to (calendar days) frontier score and ranking on the ease of doing Is at least 1 calendar day business) and the price of electricity (omitted from these aggregate measures). The ranking of Each procedure starts on a separate day economies on the ease of getting electricity is Does not include time spent gathering determined by sorting their distance to frontier information scores for getting electricity. These scores are the Reflects the time spent in practice, with little simple average of the distance to frontier scores for follow-up and no prior contact with officials each of the component indicators. To make the data comparable across economies, several assumptions Cost required to complete each procedure (% are used. of income per capita) Assumptions about the warehouse Official costs only, no bribes The warehouse: Excludes value added tax  Is owned by a local entrepreneur. The reliability of supply and transparency of tariffs index  Is located in the economy’s largest business city. For 11 economies the data Sum of the scores of six component indices: are also collected for the second largest Duration and frequency of outages business city. Tools to monitor power outages  Is located in an area where similar warehouses are typically located. In this Tools to restore power supply area a new electricity connection is not Regulatory monitoring of utilities’ performance eligible for a special investment promotion Financial deterrents aimed at limiting outages regime (offering special subsidization or faster service, for example). Transparency and accessibility of tariffs  Is located in an area with no physical Price of electricity (cents per kilowatt-hour)* constraints. For example, the property is Price based on monthly bill for commercial not near a railway. warehouse in case study  Is a new construction and is being *Price of electricity is not included in the calculation of connected to electricity for the first time. distance to frontier nor ease of doing business ranking Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 33 Assumptions about the monthly consumption The warehouse (continued):  It is assumed that the warehouse operates 8 hours a day for 30 days a month, with  Has two stories, both above ground, with a equipment utilized at 80% of capacity on total surface area of approximately 1,300.6 average, and that there are no electricity cuts square meters (14,000 square feet). The (assumed for simplicity). The subscribed plot of land on which it is built is 929 capacity of the warehouse is 140 kVA, with a square meters (10,000 square feet). power factor of 1 (1 kVA = 1 kW). The  Is used for storage of goods. monthly energy consumption is therefore 26,880 kWh, and the hourly consumption 112 kWh (26,880 kWh/30 days/8 hours). Assumptions about the electricity connection  If multiple electricity suppliers exist, the The electricity connection: warehouse is served by the cheapest supplier.  Is a permanent one.  Tariffs effective in March of the current year  Is a three-phase, four-wire Y, 140-kilovolt- are used for calculation of the price of ampere (kVA) (subscribed capacity) electricity for the warehouse. connection (where the voltage is 120/208 V, the current would be 400 amperes; where it is 230/400 B, the current would be nearly 200 amperes).  Is 150 meters long. The connection is to either the low-voltage or the medium- voltage distribution network and either overhead or underground, whichever is more common in the area where the warehouse is located.  Requires works that involve the crossing of a 10-meter road (such as by excavation or overhead lines) but are all carried out on public land. There is no crossing of other owners’ private property because the warehouse has access to a road.  Includes only a negligible length in the customer’s private domain.  Will supply monthly electricity consumption of 26,880 kilowatt-hours (kWh).  Does not involve work to install the internal electrical wiring. This has already been completed, up to and including the customer’s service panel or switchboard and installation of the meter base. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 34 GETTING ELECTRICITY Where does the economy stand today? What does it take to obtain a new electricity connection Most indicator sets refer to a case scenario in the largest in St. Vincent and the Grenadines? According to data business city of an economy, except for 11 economies for collected by Doing Business, getting electricity there which the data are a population-weighted average of the requires 3.00 procedures, takes 52.00 days and costs 2 largest business cities. See the chapter on distance to 55.60% of income per capita (figure 4.1). frontier and ease of doing business ranking at the end of this profile for more details. Figure 4.1 What it takes to obtain an electricity connection in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Source: Doing Business database. Note: Time shown in the figure above may not reflect simultaneity of procedures. For more information on the methodology of the getting electricity indicators, see the Doing Business website (http://www.doingbusiness.org). For details on the procedures reflected here, see the summary at the end of this chapter. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 35 GETTING ELECTRICITY Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 79 in another perspective in assessing how easy it is for an the ranking of 189 economies on the ease of getting entrepreneur in St. Vincent and the Grenadines to electricity (figure 4.2). The rankings for comparator connect a warehouse to electricity. economies and the regional average ranking provide Figure 4.2 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of getting electricity Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 36 GETTING ELECTRICITY What are the details? The indicators reported here for St. Vincent and the OBTAINING AN ELECTRICITY CONNECTION* Grenadines are based on a set of specific procedures— the steps that an entrepreneur must complete to get a warehouse connected to electricity by the local St. Vincent Electricity Name of utility: distribution utility—identified by Doing Business. Data Services Ltd. (VINLEC) are collected from the distribution utility, then completed and verified by electricity regulatory agencies and Price of electricity independent professionals such as electrical engineers, (US cents per kWh): 30 electrical contractors and construction companies. The electricity distribution utility surveyed is the one serving City: Kingstown the area (or areas) in which warehouses are located. If *Price is calculated as a monthly consumption of 26,880 kWh there is a choice of distribution utilities, the one serving for business customers, based on a standardized case study the largest number of customers is selected. adopted by the getting electricity methodology. Doing Business measures the price of electricity but does not include these The procedures are those that apply to a warehouse and data when calculating the distance to frontier score for getting electricity connection matching the standard electricity or the ranking on the ease of getting electricity. assumptions used by Doing Business in collecting the data (see the section in this chapter on what the indicators cover). The procedures, along with the associated time and cost, are summarized below. Table 4.2 Summary of time, cost and procedures for getting electricity in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete Obtain inspection certificate for internal wiring Before applying for an electricity connection, the customer should obtain an internal wiring Inspection Certificate signed by the Government Electrical Inspector (GEI). The customer's licensed electrician (the licenses are issued by GEI) is in charge of the internal wiring, and the GEI has to inspect the internal wiring. The request for the inspection can be filed as soon as the internal wiring is done. The construction company should fill 14 calendar days XCD 85 1 out a form and submit it at the GEI. After the GEI estimates the cost, the applicant has to pay the fee at the treasury. The treasury gives the applicant a receipt. With the receipt the applicant goes back to the GEI to schedule an inspection. Agency: Government Electrical Inspector Submit application to VINLEC and await connection offer The customer submits an application for an electricity connection to St. 2 Vincent Electricity Services Ltd. The following documents should be 21 calendar days XCD 0 attached: (1) Business Letter on the letterhead of the company signed by authorized signatories stating the business address; (2) Copy of the business Certificate of Registration; (3) GEI’s internal wiring Certificate; (4) Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 37 Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete Any form of Identification such as Identification card, Passport or Driver’s License; (5) A written statement of the required peak electricity demand, work method and times of operation and installed capacity of the machines (“Load Request”). After the application is submitted the external inspection is carried out by St. Vincent Electricity Services Ltd (VINLEC) to check whether the it is possible to add the requested load. The planning department of VINLEC inspects the site and specifies what is required of VINLEC to meet the additional load. There is no need for presence of someone from the applicant's party. After the inspection the customer signs a connection offer. To reduce the delay time the applicant can submit the Written statement of the required peak electricity demand before the engagement of the electrician to wire the premises, so that both the load evaluation and the internal wiring run concurrently. Agency: St. Vincent Electricity Services Ltd. (VINLEC) Await completion of external works and final connection by VINLEC Once the connection offer is signed VINLEC carries out the external connection works. The customer is required to pay the security deposit. The deposit is equivalent to the value of two months’ estimated electricity consumption. The deposit is expected to provide security for the payment of electricity account debts and it may be revised from time to time. Deposits bear interest at 4% per annum. Deposits and earned interest are refunded to customers after their supply is permanently disconnected and all outstanding bills are paid. Given the assumptions the most likely case is that the three phase supply exists in the area and 3 only the upgrade of the transformer bank is required. Assumptions 1. 17 calendar days XCD 9,915.04 Three phase supply exist in the area -three (3) 15 kVA transformers. 2. Only the upgrade of the transformer bank is required-– the three (3) 50 kVA transformers. 3. Three (3) 15 kVA transformers will be recovered. The cost of the transformers is recovered by the utility; the value is reflected in the reduction to the customer. The customer has to wait for the completion of the connection works and the meter installation, thereafter electricity starts flowing. Agency: St. Vincent Electricity Services Ltd. (VINLEC) * Takes place simultaneously with another procedure. Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 38 GETTING ELECTRICITY Reliability of supply and transparency of tariffs index The reliability of supply and transparency of tariffs Doing Business uses the system average interruption index encompasses quantitative data on the duration duration index (SAIDI) and the system average and frequency of power outages as well as interruption frequency index (SAIFI) to measure the qualitative information on the mechanisms put in duration and frequency of power outages in the largest place by the utility for monitoring power outages business city of each economy (for 11 economies the data and restoring power supply, the reporting are also collected for the second largest business city). relationship between the utility and the regulator for SAIDI is the average total duration of outages over the power outages, the transparency and accessibility of course of a year for each customer served, while SAIFI is tariffs and whether the utility faces a financial the average number of service interruptions experienced deterrent aimed at limiting outages (such as a by a customer in a year. Annual data (covering the requirement to compensate customers or pay fines calendar year) are collected from distribution utility when outages exceed a certain cap). companies and national regulators on SAIDI and SAIFI. Both SAIDI and SAIFI estimates include load shedding. The index ranges from 0 to 8, with higher values indicating greater reliability of electricity supply and greater transparency of tariffs. Table 4.3 Reliability of Supply and Transparency of Tariff Index in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Answer Score Reliability of supply and transparency of tariff index (0-8) 0.00 Total duration and frequency of outages per customer a year (0-3) 0.00 System average interruption duration index (SAIDI) .. System average interruption frequency index (SAIFI) .. Mechanisms for monitoring outages (0-1) 1.0 Does the distribution utility use automated tools to monitor outages? Yes Mechanisms for restoring service (0-1) 1.0 Does the distribution utility use automated tools to restore service? Yes Regulatory monitoring (0-1) 0.00 Does a regulator—that is, an entity separate from the utility—monitor No the utility’s performance on reliability of supp ly? Financial deterrents aimed at limiting outages (0-1) 0.00 Does the utility either pay compensation to customers or face fines by No the regulator (or both) if outages exceed a certain cap? Communication of tariffs and tariff changes (0-1) 1.00 Are effective tariffs available online? Yes Link to the website, if available online http://www.vinlec. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 39 Answer Score com/contents/ele ctricity-rate- structure Are customers notified of a change in tariff ahead of the billing cycle? Yes Source: Doing Business database. Note: If data on power outages is not collected or if the SAIFI index or SAIDI index are above the threshold of 100, the economy is not eligible to obtain a score in the Reliability of Supply and Transparency of Tariff Index. If SAIDI and SAIFI are 12 (equivalent to an outage of one hour each month) or below, a score of 1 is assigned. If SAIDI and SAIFI are 4 (equivalent to an outage of one hour each quarter) or below, 1 additional point is assigned. Finally, if SAIDI and SAIFI are 1 (equivalent to an outage of one hour per year) or below, 1 more point is assigned. Doing Business measures the price of electricity but does not include these data when calculating the distance to frontier score for getting electricity or the ranking on the ease of getting electricity. The price of electricity is measured in cents per kilowatt-hour. On the basis of the assumptions about monthly consumption, a monthly bill for a commercial warehouse in the largest business city of the economy is computed for the month of March. As noted, the warehouse uses electricity 30 days a month, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., so different tariff schedules may apply if a time-of-use tariff is available. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 40 REGISTERING PROPERTY Ensuring formal property rights is fundamental. WHAT THE REGISTERING PROPERTY Effective administration of land is part of that. If INDICATORS MEASURE formal property transfer is too costly or complicated, formal titles might go informal again. And where property is informal or poorly Procedures to legally transfer title on administered, it has little chance of being accepted immovable property (number) as collateral for loans—limiting access to finance. Preregistration (for example, checking for liens, notarizing sales agreement, paying property What do the indicators cover? transfer taxes) Doing Business records the full sequence of Registration in the economy’s largest business procedures necessary for a business to purchase city 2 property from another business and transfer the property title to the buyer’s name. The transaction is Postregistration (for example, filing title with the municipality) considered complete when it is opposable to third parties and when the buyer can use the property, Time required to complete each procedure use it as collateral for a bank loan or resell it. In (calendar days) addition, this year Doing Business adds a new Does not include time spent gathering measure to the set of registering property information indicators, an index of the quality of the land administration system in each economy. The Each procedure starts on a separate day. ranking of economies on the ease of registering Procedures that can be fully completed online are recorded as ½ day. property is determined by sorting their distance to frontier scores for registering property. These scores Procedure considered completed once final are the simple average of the distance to frontier document is received scores for each of the component indicators. To No prior contact with officials make the data comparable across economies, several assumptions about the parties to the Cost required to complete each procedure transaction, the property and the procedures are (% of property value) used. Official costs only, no bribes The parties (buyer and seller): No value added or capital gains taxes included  Are limited liability companies, 100% Quality of land administration index (0-30) domestically and privately owned and  Is located in a periurban commercial zone, and perform general commercial activities and no rezoning is required. are located in the economy’s largest business city .  Has no mortgages attached, has been under 2 the same ownership for the past 10 years.  Have 50 employees each, all of whom are nationals.  Consists of 557.4 square meters (6,000 square feet) of land and a 10-year-old, 2-story The property (fully owned by the seller): warehouse of 929 square meters (10,000  Has a value of 50 times income per capita. square feet). The warehouse is in good The sale price equals the value and entire condition and complies with all safety property will be transferred. standards, building codes and legal  Is registered in the land registry or cada- requirements. There is no heating system. stre, or both, and is free of title disputes. 2 For the 11 economies with a population of more than 100 million, data for a second city have been added. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 41 REGISTERING PROPERTY Where does the economy stand today? What does it take to complete a property transfer in St. Most indicator sets refer to a case scenario in the largest Vincent and the Grenadines? According to data collected business city of an economy, except for 11 economies for by Doing Business, registering property there requires which the data are a population-weighted average of the 7.00 procedures, takes 38.00 days and costs 11.80% of 2 largest business cities. See the chapter on distance to the property value (figure 5.1). frontier and ease of doing business ranking at the end of this profile for more details. Figure 5.1 What it takes to register property in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Source: Doing Business database. Note: Time shown in the figure above may not reflect simultaneity of procedures. Online procedures account for 0.5 days in the total time calculation. For more information on the methodology of the registering property indicators, see the Doing Business website (http://www.doingbusiness.org). For details on the procedures reflected here, see the summary at the end of this chapter. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 42 REGISTERING PROPERTY Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 160 in other useful information for assessing how easy it is for the ranking of 189 economies on the ease of registering an entrepreneur in St. Vincent and the Grenadines to property (figure 5.2). The rankings for comparator transfer property. economies and the regional average ranking provide Figure 5.2 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of registering property Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 43 REGISTERING PROPERTY What are the details? The indicators reported here are based on a set of STANDARD PROPERTY TRANSFER specific procedures—the steps that a buyer and seller must complete to transfer the property to the buyer’s name—identified by Doing Business through information collected from local property lawyers, Property value: XCD 899,021 notaries and property registries. These procedures are those that apply to a transaction matching the City: Kingstown standard assumptions used by Doing Business in collecting the data (see the section in this chapter on what the indicators cover). The procedures, along with the associated time and cost, are summarized below. Table 5.2 Summary of time, cost and procedures for registering property in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete Search root of title at the Land Registry It is common practice for the lawyer or lawyer’s clerk to search the Index of Deeds at the Lands Registry for the root of title. This can take a long time if the title is not properly indexed- i.e. names of individuals not recorded accurately or omitted. If the indexing is not up-to-date, it may be necessary to search individual deeds for the relevant timeframe. Also, the indexing is done by hand and the quality of paper is diminishing, making the durability of the records more susceptible to wear and tear. EC$2 per day + The search area is limited and there are several persons searching at the EC$0.75 per page 1 up to 21 days same time which causes a delay in the process. Once the search is to be copied (on complete, a copy of the deed is prepared and forwarded to the Valuation average, 3 pages) Office with a covering officially prepared form with details of the property being sold, the location of the property and the price agreed by the parties (Procedure 5). During this time period, the clerk also searches the Cause Books at the Registry for any judgments against the property. Agency: Land Registry Search for encumbrances and judgements at the Registry of the High Court This search is necessary to verify whether or not there are any judgments against the seller and his/her property. Some encumbrances and 1-2 days EC$2 per day + judgments are recorded at the High Registry only and cannot be found (simultaneous EC$0.75 per page 2 at the Land Registry; therefore a check at the High Court Registry must with Procedure 3 to be copied (on be made. Unless all judgments are settled, the transaction cannot and 4) average, 3 pages) proceed. Agency: Registry of the High Court Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 44 Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete * Conduct company search at the Commerce & Intellectual Property Organization When companies are involved in the transaction, a search is done on 1 day their files for the respective registration numbers, the directors, secretary (simultaneous EC$ 5 3 and the by-laws. with Procedure 2 and 4) Agency: Commerce & Intellectual Property Organization * Obtain tax clearance certificate from the Inland Revenue Authority In order for the execution of the deed to proceed, both the seller and purchaser must have paid all outstanding income taxes and property taxes. Therefore, clearance from the Inland Revenue Authority must be granted. This usually takes a few days because the Revenue Authority scans all documents and then must send the clearance certificate to the 1 day land registry. The fee for obtaining your Tax Clearance Certificate is (simultaneous 4 TT$100.00. Payment may be made at the IRD Cashiers' Unit. For non- no cost with Procedure 2 nationals, the Vendor’s Tax is 10%. In addition to this Procedure, the and 3) buyer's lawyer might also choose to make an inquiry with utility companies (water, electricity and phone/cable). Such inquiry could be conducted within 1-2 days. Agency: Inland Revenue Authority Schedule of lawyer’s fees as regulated by the Preparation of deed by lawyer St. Vincent and the Grenadines Bar A lawyer, or lawyer’s clerk, witnesses the signature(s) of the vendor and Association: purchaser and signs a declaration that he witnessed the signature of the Property Value: vendor on the deed (the purchaser does not have to sign the deed of 2 days Fees $1,000: $125 5 conveyance). The declaration is filed during registration. $1,001-$5,000: Charge as for Agency: Lawyer's office $1,000 with addition of 5% of the excess $5,001: $325 $5,000- $10,000: Charge as for $5,000 with Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 45 Time to No. Procedure Cost to complete complete addition of 4% of the excess $10,001: $525 $10,000-$25,000: Charge as for $10,000 with addition of 3% of the excess $25,000: $975 $25,001-$49,999: Charge as for $25,000 with addition of 2.25% of the excess $50,000: $1,538 Over $50,001: Charge as for $50,000 with addition of 1.5% of the excess Valuation of property by the Land Tax Office (Inland Revenue Department) A copy of the deed (quoting the root of the title) is attached to the valuation certificate and sent to the Valuation Office (Land Tax Office) for approval. Clerks at the Valuation Office usually conduct a search on the current owner of the property and make sure that all taxes have been Stamp Duty 10% paid. Given that there are no outstanding taxes, the valuation is returned (5% paid by 6 3-14 days to the purchaser’s lawyers. It is not mandatory to inspect the property, purchaser; 5% paid but the Valuation Office may decide to inspect if they are not familiar by vendor) with the property or if the property value is deemed too low. Inspection is conducted by a valuation officer and the Chief Surveyor. Agency: Land Tax Office of the Inland Revenue Department Registration of the title deed Once the receipt is issued for payment of stamp duty and registration Registration fee fees, the time and date of receipt by the Registry should be recorded on according to the the deed. The deed is then registered, a number is allocated to it, the following scale: original is retained in the records of the Registry (it becomes part of the EC$40 for the first 7 documents for search), and a copy of the registered deed is handed back 2-3 days 15,000 (of sale to the person registering the deed. Documentation required: •Two price), and EC$2.50 copies of the deed with valuation certificate per $1000 Agency: Land Registry thereafter. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 46 * Takes place simultaneously with another procedure. Source: Doing Business database. Note: Online procedures account for 0.5 days in the total time calculation. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 47 REGISTERING PROPERTY Quality of land administration The quality of land administration index is the sum of If private sector entities were unable to register property the scores on the reliability of infrastructure, transfers in an economy between June 2014 and June transparency of information, geographic coverage 2015, the economy receives a “no practice” mark on the and land dispute resolution indices. procedures, time and cost indicators. A “no practice” economy receives a score of 0 on the quality of land The index ranges from 0 to 30, with higher values administration index even if its legal framework includes indicating better quality of the land administration provisions related to land administration. system. Table 5.3 Summary of quality of land administration in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Answer Score Quality of the land administration index (0-30) 7.00 Reliability of infrastructure index (0-8) 0.00 What is the institution in charge of immovable property registration? Land Registry In what format are the majority of title or deed records kept in the largest business city—in a paper format or in a computerized format Paper 0.0 (scanned or fully digital)? Is there an electronic database for checking for encumbrances (liens, No 0.0 mortgages, restrictions and the like)? Institution in charge of the plans showing legal boundaries in the The Surveyor's largest business city: Department In what format are the majority of maps of land plots kept in the largest business city—in a paper format or in a computerized format Paper 0.0 (scanned or fully digital)? Is there an electronic database for recording boundaries, checking plans and providing cadastral information (geographic information No 0.0 system)? Is the information recorded by the immovable property registration Separate agency and the cadastral or mapping agency kept in a single database, 0.0 databases in different but linked databases or in separate databases? Do the immovable property registration agency and cadastral or No 0.0 mapping agency use the same identification number for properties? Transparency of information index (0–6) 1.50 Who is able to obtain information on land ownership at the agency in Anyone who pays 1.0 charge of immovable property registration in the largest business city? the official fee Is the list of documents that are required to complete any type of Yes, in person 0.0 property transaction made publicly available–and if so, how? Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 48 Answer Score Link for online access: Is the applicable fee schedule for any property transaction at the agency in charge of immovable property registration in the largest Yes, in person 0.0 business city made publicly available–and if so, how? Link for online access: Does the agency in charge of immovable property registration commit to delivering a legally binding document that proves property No 0.0 ownership within a specific time frame–and if so, how does it communicate the service standard? Link for online access: Is there a specific and separate mechanism for filing complaints about a problem that occurred at the agency in charge of immovable property No 0.0 registration? Contact information: Are there publicly available official statistics tracking the number of No 0.0 transactions at the immovable property registration agency? Number of property transfers in the largest business city in 2014: Anyone who pays Who is able to consult maps of land plots in the largest business city? 0.5 the official fee Is the applicable fee schedule for accessing maps of land plots made Yes, in person 0.0 publicly available—and if so, how? Link for online access: Does the cadastral or mapping agency commit to delivering an updated map within a specific time frame—and if so, how does it No 0.0 communicate the service standard? Link for online access: Is there a specific and separate mechanism for filing complaints about No 0.0 a problem that occurred at the cadastral or mapping agency? Contact information: Geographic coverage index (0–8) 0.00 Are all privately held land plots in the economy formally registered at No 0.0 the immovable property registry? Are all privately held land plots in the largest business city formally No 0.0 registered at the immovable property registry? Are all privately held land plots in the economy mapped? No 0.0 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 49 Answer Score Are all privately held land plots in the largest business city mapped? No 0.0 Land dispute resolution index (0–8) 5.50 Does the law require that all property sale transactions be registered at the immovable property registry to make them opposable to third Yes 1.5 parties? Is the system of immovable property registration subject to a state or No 0.0 private guarantee? Is there a specific compensation mechanism to cover for losses incurred by parties who engaged in good faith in a property transaction No 0.0 based on erroneous information certified by the immovable property registry? Does the legal system require a control of legality of the documents necessary for a property transaction (e.g., checking the compliance of Yes 0.5 contracts with requirements of the law)? Lawyer; If yes, who is responsible for checking the legality of the documents? Interested parties. Does the legal system require verification of the identity of the parties Yes 0.5 to a property transaction? If yes, who is responsible for verifying the identity of the parties? Lawyer. Is there a national database to verify the accuracy of identity Yes 1.0 documents? For a standard land dispute between two local businesses over tenure rights of a property worth 50 times gross national income (GNI) per The High Court capita and located in the largest business city, what court would be in charge of the case in the first instance? How long does it take on average to obtain a decision from the first- Between 1 and 2 2.0 instance court for such a case (without appeal)? years Are there any statistics on the number of land disputes in the first No 0.0 instance? Number of land disputes in the largest business city in 2014: Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 50 GETTING CREDIT Two types of frameworks can facilitate access to WHAT THE GETTING CREDIT INDICATORS credit and improve its allocation: credit information MEASURE systems and borrowers and lenders in collateral and bankruptcy laws. Credit information systems enable lenders’ rights to view a potential borrower’s financial Strength of legal rights index (0–12) history (positive or negative)—valuable information to Rights of borrowers and lenders through consider when assessing risk. And they permit collateral laws borrowers to establish a good credit history that will Protection of secured creditors’ rights through allow easier access to credit. Sound collateral laws bankruptcy laws enable businesses to use their assets, especially movable property, as security to generate capital— Depth of credit information index (0–8) while strong creditors’ rights have been associated Scope and accessibility of credit information with higher ratios of private sector credit to GDP. distributed by credit bureaus and credit registries What do the indicators cover? Credit bureau coverage (% of adults) Doing Business assesses the sharing of credit information and the legal rights of borrowers and Number of individuals and firms listed in lenders with respect to secured transactions through largest credit bureau as percentage of adult 2 sets of indicators. The depth of credit information population index measures rules and practices affecting the Credit registry coverage (% of adults) coverage, scope and accessibility of credit Number of individuals and firms listed in information available through a credit registry or a credit registry as percentage of adult credit bureau. The strength of legal rights index population measures whether certain features that facilitate lending exist within the applicable collateral and bankruptcy laws. Doing Business uses two case scenarios, Case A and Case B, to determine the scope of the secured transactions system, involving a  Has up to 50 employees. secured borrower and a secured lender and  Is 100% domestically owned, as is the lender. examining legal restrictions on the use of movable collateral (for more details on each case, see the Data The ranking of economies on the ease of getting Notes section of the Doing Business 2016 report). credit is determined by sorting their distance to These scenarios assume that the borrower: frontier scores for getting credit. These scores are the distance to frontier score for the strength of legal  Is a private limited liability company. rights index and the depth of credit information  Has its headquarters and only base of index. operations in the largest business city. For the 11 economies with a population of more than 100 million, data for a second city have been added. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 51 GETTING CREDIT Where does the economy stand today? How well do the credit information system and collateral Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 152 in and bankruptcy laws in St. Vincent and the Grenadines the ranking of 189 economies on the ease of getting facilitate access to credit? The economy has a score of credit (figure 6.1). The rankings for comparator 0.00 on the depth of credit information index and a score economies provide other useful information for of 5.00 on the strength of legal rights index (see the assessing how well regulations and institutions in St. summary of scoring at the end of this chapter for Vincent and the Grenadines support lending and details). Higher scores indicate more credit information borrowing. and stronger legal rights for borrowers and lenders. Figure 6.1 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of getting credit Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 52 GETTING CREDIT One way to put an economy’s score on the getting credit rights index for St. Vincent and the Grenadines and indicators into context is to see where the economy shows the scores for comparator economies as well as stands in the distribution of scores across economies. the regional average score. Figure 6.3 shows the same Figure 6.2 highlights the score on the strength of legal for the depth of credit information index. Figure 6.2 How strong are legal rights for borrowers Figure 6.3 How much credit information is shared — and lenders? and how widely? Economy scores on strength of legal rights index Economy scores on depth of credit information index Source: Doing Business database. Source: Doing Business database. Note: Higher scores indicate that collateral and bankruptcy Note: Higher scores indicate the availability of more credit laws are better designed to facilitate access to credit. information, from either a credit registry or a credit bureau, Source: Doing Business database. to facilitate lending decisions. If the credit bureau or registry is not operational or covers less than 5% of the adult population, the total score on the depth of credit information index is 0. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 53 GETTING CREDIT What are the details? The getting credit indicators reported here for St. The data on the legal rights of borrowers and lenders are Vincent and the Grenadines are based on detailed gathered through a survey of financial lawyers and information collected in that economy. The data on verified through analysis of laws and regulations as well credit information sharing are collected through a survey as public sources of information on collateral and of a credit registry and/or credit bureau (if one exists). To bankruptcy laws. For the strength of legal rights index, a construct the depth of credit information index, a score score of 1 is assigned for each of 10 aspects related to of 1 is assigned for each of 8 features of the credit legal rights in collateral law and 2 aspects in bankruptcy registry or credit bureau (see summary of scoring below). law. Strength of legal rights index (0–12) Index score: 5.00 Does an integrated or unified legal framework for secured transactions that extends to the creation, publicity and enforcement of functional equivalents to security interests in movable No assets exist in the economy? Does the law allow businesses to grant a non possessory security right in a single category of Yes movable assets, without requiring a specific description of collateral? Does the law allow businesses to grant a non possessory security right in substantially all of its Yes assets, without requiring a specific description of collateral? May a security right extend to future or after-acquired assets, and may it extend automatically to Yes the products, proceeds or replacements of the original assets? Is a general description of debts and obligations permitted in collateral agreements; can all types of debts and obligations be secured between parties; and can the collateral agreement include a Yes maximum amount for which the assets are encumbered? Is a collateral registry in operation for both incorporated and non-incorporated entities, that is No unified geographically and by asset type, with an electronic database indexed by debtor's name? Does a notice-based collateral registry exist in which all functional equivalents can be registered? No Does a modern collateral registry exist in which registrations, amendments, cancellations and No searches can be performed online by any interested third party? Are secured creditors paid first (i.e. before tax claims and employee claims) when a debtor No defaults outside an insolvency procedure? Are secured creditors paid first (i.e. before tax claims and employee claims) when a business is No liquidated? Are secured creditors subject to an automatic stay on enforcement when a debtor enters a court-supervised reorganization procedure? Does the law protect secured creditors’ rights by No providing clear grounds for relief from the stay and/or sets a time limit for it? Does the law allow parties to agree on out of court enforcement at the time a security interest is created? Does the law allow the secured creditor to sell the collateral through public auction and Yes private tender, as well as, for the secured creditor to keep the asset in satisfaction of the debt? Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 54 Depth of credit information index (0–8) Credit bureau Credit registry Index score: 0.00 Are data on both firms and individuals distributed? No No 0 Are both positive and negative credit data distributed? No No 0 Are data from retailers or utility companies - in addition to data from banks and financial institutions - No No 0 distributed? Are at least 2 years of historical data distributed? (Credit bureaus and registries that distribute more than 10 years No No 0 of negative data or erase data on defaults as soon as they are repaid obtain a score of 0 for this component.) Are data on loan amounts below 1% of income per No No 0 capita distributed? By law, do borrowers have the right to access their data No No 0 in the credit bureau or credit registry? Can banks and financial institutions access borrowers’ credit information online (for example, through an online No No 0 platform, a system-to-system connection or both)? Are bureau or registry credit scores offered as a value- added service to help banks and financial institutions No No 0 assess the creditworthiness of borrowers? Note: An economy receives a score of 1 if there is a "yes" to either bureau or registry. If the credit bureau or registry is not operational or covers less than 5% of the adult population, the total score on the depth of credit information index is 0. Coverage Credit bureau Credit registry Number of firms 0 0 Number of individuals 0 0 Total 0 0 Total percentage of adult population 0.00 0.00 Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 55 PROTECTING MINORITY INVESTORS Protecting minority investors matters for the ability of companies to raise the capital they need to grow, WHAT THE PROTECTING MINORITY innovate, diversify and compete. Effective regulations INVESTORS INDICATORS MEASURE define related-party transactions precisely, promote clear and efficient disclosure requirements, require shareholder participation in major decisions of the Extent of disclosure index (0–10) company and set detailed standards of accountability Review and approval requirements for related-party for company insiders. transactions; Disclosure requirements for related- What do the indicators cover? party transactions Doing Business measures the protection of minority Extent of director liability index (0–10) investors from conflicts of interest through one set of Ability of minority shareholders to sue and hold indicators and shareholders’ rights in corporate interested directors liable for prejudicial related-party governance through another. The ranking of economies transactions; Available legal remedies (damages, on the strength of minority investor protections is disgorgement of profits, fines, imprisonment, determined by sorting their distance to frontier scores rescission of the transaction) for protecting minority investors. These scores are the Ease of shareholder suits index (0–10) simple average of the distance to frontier scores for the extent of conflict of interest regulation index and the Access to internal corporate documents; Evidence extent of shareholder governance index. To make the obtainable during trial and allocation of legal data comparable across economies, a case study uses expenses several assumptions about the business and the Extent of conflict of interest regulation index transaction. (0–10) The business (Buyer): Simple average of the extent of disclosure, extent of director liability and ease of shareholder indices  Is a publicly traded corporation listed on the economy’s most important stock exchange Extent of shareholder rights index (0-10) (or at least a large private company with Shareholders’ rights and role in major corporate multiple shareholders). decisions  Has a board of directors and a chief executive Extent of ownership and control index (0-10) officer (CEO) who may legally act on behalf of Buyer where permitted, even if this is not Governance safeguards protecting shareholders from undue board control and entrenchment specifically required by law. Extent of corporate transparency index (0-10) The transaction involves the following details: Corporate transparency on ownership stakes,  Mr. James, a director and the majority compensation, audits and financial prospects shareholder of the company, proposes that the company purchase used trucks from Extent of shareholder governance index (0– another company he owns. 10)  The price is higher than the going price for Simple average of the extent of shareholders rights, used trucks, but the transaction goes forward. extent of ownership and control and extent of corporate transparency indices  All required approvals are obtained, and all required disclosures made, though the Strength of investor protection index (0–10) transaction is prejudicial to Buyer. Simple average of the extent of conflict of interest regulation and extent of shareholder governance  Shareholders sue the interested parties and indices the members of the board of directors. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 56 PROTECTING MINORITY INVESTORS Where does the economy stand today? How strong are minority investor protections against minority investor protection index (figure 7.1). While the self-dealing in St. Vincent and the Grenadines? The indicator does not measure all aspects related to the economy has a score of 5.70 on the strength of minority protection of minority investors, a higher ranking does investor protection index, with a higher score indicating indicate that an economy’s regulations offer stronger stronger protections. minority investor protections against self-dealing in the areas measured. Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 66 in the ranking of 189 economies on the strength of Figure 7.1 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies perform on the strength of minority investor protection index Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 57 PROTECTING MINORITY INVESTORS One way to put an economy’s scores on the A summary of scoring for the protecting minority investors protecting minority investors indicators into context indicators at the end of this chapter provides details on is to see where the economy stands in the how the indices were calculated. distribution of scores across comparator economies. Figure 7.2 highlights the scores on the various minority investor protection indices for St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Figure 7.2 Summary of the various minority investor protection indices for St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies. Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 58 PROTECTING MINORITY INVESTORS What are the details? The protecting minority investors indicators reported based on a range of conditions relating to disclosure, here for St. Vincent and the Grenadines are based on director liability, shareholder suits, shareholder rights, detailed information collected through a survey of ownership and control and corporate transparency in a corporate and securities lawyers about securities standard case study (for more details, see the Data Notes regulations, company laws and court rules of evidence section of the Doing Business 2016 report). The summary and procedure. To construct the six indicators on below shows the details underlying the scores for St. minority investor protection, scores are assigned to each Vincent and the Grenadines. Table 7.2 Summary of scoring for the protecting minority investors indicators in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Answer Score Strength of minority investor protection index (0-10) 5.70 Extent of conflict of interest regulation index (0-10) 6.70 Extent of disclosure index (0-10) 4.00 Which corporate body can provide legally sufficient Shareholders or board of directors 1.0 approval for the Buyer-Seller transaction? (0-3) including interested parties Is disclosure by the interested director to the board of Full disclosure of all material facts 2.0 directors required? (0-2) Is disclosure of the transaction in published periodic filings Disclosure on the transaction only 1.0 (annual reports) required? (0-2) Is immediate disclosure of the transaction to the public No disclosure obligation 0.0 and/or shareholders required? (0-2) Must an external body review the terms of the transaction No 0.0 before it takes place? (0-1) Extent of director liability index (0-10) 8.00 Can shareholders sue directly or derivatively for the damage caused by the Buyer-Seller transaction to the company? (0- Yes 1.0 1) Can shareholders hold the interested director liable for the Liable if unfair or prejudicial 2.0 damage caused by the transaction to the company? (0-2) Can shareholders hold members of the approving body liable for the damage cause by the transaction to the Liable if unfair or prejudicial 2.0 company? (0-2) Must the interested director pay damages for the harm caused to the company upon a successful claim by a Yes 1.0 shareholder plaintiff? (0-1) Must the interested director repay profits made from the transaction upon a successful claim by a shareholder Yes 1.0 plaintiff? (0-1) Is the interested director fined and imprisoned or disqualified upon a successful claim by the shareholder No 0.0 plaintiff? (0-1) Can a court void the transaction upon a successful claim by Voidable if negligently concluded 1.0 a shareholder plaintiff? (0-2) Ease of shareholder suits index (0-10) 8.00 Before filing suit, can shareholders owning 10% of the No 0.0 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 59 company’s share capital inspect the transaction documents? (0-1) Can the plaintiff obtain any documents from the defendant Any relevant document 3.0 and witnesses during trial? (0-3) Can the plaintiff request categories of documents from the Yes 1.0 defendant without identifying specific ones? (0-1) Can the plaintiff directly question the defendant and Yes 2.0 witnesses during trial? (0-2) Is the level of proof required for civil suits lower than that of Yes 1.0 criminal cases? (0-1) Can shareholder plaintiffs recover their legal expenses from Yes if successful 1.0 the company? (0-2) Extent of shareholder governance index (0-10) 4.70 Extent of shareholder rights index (0-10) 6.00 Does the sale of 51% of Buyer’s assets require shareholder Yes 1.0 approval? Can shareholders representing 10% of Buyer’s share capital Yes 1.0 call for an extraordinary meeting of shareholders? Must Buyer obtain its shareholders’ approval every time it No 0.0 issues new shares? Do shareholders automatically receive preemption rights No 0.0 every time Buyer issues new shares? Must shareholders approve the election and dismissal of the Yes 1.0 external auditor? Must changes to the voting rights of a class of shares be Yes 1.0 approved only by the holders of the affected shares? Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, does the sale of Yes 1.0 51% of Buyer’s assets requires shareholder approval? Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, can shareholders representing 10% of Buyer’s share capital call for an Yes 1.0 extraordinary meeting of shareholders? Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, must Buyer obtain its shareholders’ approval every time it issues new No 0.0 shares? Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, do shareholders automatically receive preemption rights every time Buyer No 0.0 issues new shares? Extent of ownership and control index (0-10) 5.00 Is the CEO prohibited from also being chair of the board of No 0.0 directors? Must the board of directors include independent and Yes 1.0 nonexecutive board members? Can shareholders remove members of Buyer’s board of Yes 1.0 directors without cause before the end of their term? Must Buyer’s board of directors include a separate audit Yes 1.0 committee? Must a potential acquirer make a tender offer to all No 0.0 shareholders upon acquiring 50% of Buyer? Must Buyer pay dividends within a maximum period set by No 0.0 law after the declaration date? Is a subsidiary prohibited from acquiring shares issued by its Yes 1.0 parent company? Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 60 Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, can shareholders remove members of Buyer’s board of directors without Yes 1.0 cause before the end of their term? Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, must a potential acquirer make a tender offer to all shareholders upon No 0.0 acquiring 50% of Buyer? Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, must Buyer pay dividends within a maximum period set by law after the No 0.0 declaration date? Extent of corporate transparency index (0-10) 3.00 Must Buyer disclose direct and indirect beneficial ownership No 0.0 stakes representing 5%? Must Buyer disclose information about board members’ other directorships as well as basic information on their No 0.0 primary employment? Must Buyer disclose the compensation of individual No 0.0 managers? Must a detailed notice of general meeting be sent 30 days No 0.0 before the meeting? Can shareholders representing 5% of Buyer’s share capital Yes 1.0 put items on the agenda for the general meeting? Must Buyer's annual financial statements be audited by an Yes 1.0 external auditor? Must Buyer disclose its audit reports to the public. No 0.0 Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, must a detailed notice of general meeting be sent 30 days before the No 0.0 meeting? Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, can shareholders representing 5% of Buyer’s share capital put items on the Yes 1.0 agenda for the general meeting? Assuming that Buyer is a limited company, must Buyer's annual financial statements be audited by an external No 0.0 auditor? Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 61 PAYING TAXES Taxes are essential. The level of tax rates needs to be carefully chosen—and needless complexity in tax WHAT THE PAYING TAXES INDICATORS rules avoided. Firms in economies that rank better MEASURE on the ease of paying taxes in the Doing Business study tend to perceive both tax rates and tax Tax payments for a manufacturing company administration as less of an obstacle to business in 2014 (number per year adjusted for according to the World Bank Enterprise Survey electronic and joint filing and payment) research. Total number of taxes and contributions paid, What do the indicators cover? including consumption taxes (value added tax, Using a case scenario, Doing Business records the sales tax or goods and service tax) taxes and mandatory contributions that a medium- Method and frequency of filing and payment size company must pay in a given year as well as Time required to comply with 3 major taxes measures of the administrative burden of paying (hours per year) taxes and contributions. This case scenario uses a set of financial statements and assumptions about Collecting information and computing the tax transactions made over the year. Information is also payable compiled on the frequency of filing and payments as Completing tax return forms, filing with well as time taken to comply with tax laws. The proper agencies ranking of economies on the ease of paying taxes is Arranging payment or withholding determined by sorting their distance to frontier scores on the ease of paying taxes. These scores are Preparing separate tax accounting books, if the simple average of the distance to frontier scores required for each of the component indicators, with a Total tax rate (% of profit before all taxes) threshold and a nonlinear transformation applied to one of the component indicators, the total tax rate . 3 Profit or corporate income tax All financial statement variables are proportional to Social contributions and labor taxes paid by 2012 income per capita. To make the data the employer comparable across economies, several assumptions Property and property transfer taxes are used. Dividend, capital gains and financial  TaxpayerCo is a medium-size business that transactions taxes started operations on January 1, 2013. Waste collection, vehicle, road and other taxes  The business starts from the same financial  Taxes and mandatory contributions include position in each economy. All the taxes corporate income tax, turnover tax and all and mandatory contributions paid during labor taxes and contributions paid by the the second year of operation are recorded. company.  Taxes and mandatory contributions are  A range of standard deductions and measured at all levels of government. exemptions are also recorded. The nonlinear distance to frontier for the total tax rate is equal to the distance to frontier for the total tax rate to the power of 0.8. 3 The threshold is defined as the total tax rate at the 15th percentile of the overall distribution for all years included in the analysis up to and including Doing Business 2015, which is 26.1%. All economies with a total tax rate below this threshold receive the same score as the economy at the threshold. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 62 PAYING TAXES Where does the economy stand today? What is the administrative burden of complying with business cities. See the chapter on distance to frontier taxes in St. Vincent and the Grenadines—and how much and ease of doing business ranking at the end of this do firms pay in taxes? On average, firms make 36.00 tax profile for more details. payments a year, spend 108.00 hours a year filing, Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 97 in preparing and paying taxes and pay total taxes the ranking of 189 economies on the ease of paying amounting to 38.60% of profit (see the summary at the taxes (figure 8.1). The rankings for comparator end of this chapter for details). Most indicator sets refer economies and the regional average ranking provide to a case scenario in the largest business city of an other useful information for assessing the tax compliance economy, except for 11 economies for which the data burden for businesses in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. are a population-weighted average of the 2 largest Figure 8.1 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of paying taxes Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 63 PAYING TAXES What are the details? The indicators reported here for St. Vincent and the LOCATION OF STANDARDIZED COMPANY Grenadines are based on the taxes and contributions that would be paid by a standardized case study company used by Doing Business in collecting the City: Kingstown data (see the section in this chapter on what the indicators cover). Tax practitioners are asked to review a set of financial statements as well as a standardized list of assumptions and transactions The taxes and contributions paid are listed in the that the company completed during its 2nd year of summary below, along with the associated number of operation. Respondents are asked how much taxes payments, time and tax rate. and mandatory contributions the business must pay and how these taxes are filed and paid. Table 8.2 Summary of tax rates and administration Total tax Notes on Tax or mandatory Payments Notes on Time Statutory Tax base rate (% of total tax contribution (number) payments (hours) tax rate profit) rate taxable Corporate income tax 4 14 0.325 30.22 profit Employer paid - Social security gross 12 49 0.045 5.08 contributions salaries Property transfer tax (stamp 1 0.05 sale price 3.03 duty) various Business license 1 0.07 rates rental Property tax 1 0.05 0.06 value gross various weight Vehicle tax 1 0.05 rates and size of vehicle insurance Insurance premium tax 1 0.05 0.05 premium number of small Tax on check transactions 1 30 cents 0.01 checks amount included in small Fuel tax 1 the price 0 amount of fuel Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 64 Total tax Notes on Tax or mandatory Payments Notes on Time Statutory Tax base rate (% of total tax contribution (number) payments (hours) tax rate profit) rate Employee paid - Social security gross 0 jointly 0.035 0 contributions salaries value not Value added tax (VAT) 12 45 0.15 0 added included various value of small Stamp duty on contracts 1 0 rates contract amount Totals 36.00 108.00 38.60 Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 65 TRADING ACROSS BORDERS In today’s globalized world, making trade between WHAT THE TRADING ACROSS BORDERS economies easier is increasingly important for INDICATORS MEASURE FOR IMPORT & EXPORT business. Excessive document requirements, burdensome customs procedures, inefficient port operations and inadequate infrastructure all lead Documentary compliance – cost (US$) & time to extra costs and delays for exporters and (hours) importers, stifling trade potential. Obtain, prepare and submit documents: What do the indicators cover? -During transport, clearance, inspections and port or border handling in origin economy Doing Business records the time and cost associated with the logistical process of exporting -Required by origin, transit and destination and importing goods. Under the new methodology economies introduced this year, Doing Business measures the Covers all documents by law and in practice time and cost (excluding tariffs) associated with Border compliance – cost (US$) & time (hours) three sets of procedures—documentary compliance, border compliance and domestic Customs clearance and inspections transport—within the overall process of exporting Inspections by other agencies or importing a shipment of goods. The ranking of Port or border handling economies on the ease of trading across borders is determined by sorting their distance to frontier Obtaining, preparing and submitting documents scores for trading across borders. These scores are during clearance, inspections and port or border the simple average of the distance to frontier handling scores for the time and cost for documentary Domestic transport* compliance and border compliance to export and Loading and unloading of shipment import. Transport between warehouse and terminal/port To make the data comparable across economies, a Transport between terminal/port and border few assumptions are made about the traded goods Obtaining, preparing and submitting documents and the transactions: during domestic transport Time Traffic delays and road police checks while shipment is en route  Time is measured in hours, and 1 day is 24 hours (for example, 22 days are * Although Doing Business collects and publishes data on the recorded as 22 × 24 = 528 hours). If time and cost for domestic transport, it does not use these customs clearance takes 7.5 hours, the data in calculating the distance to frontier score for trading data are recorded as is. Alternatively, across borders or the ranking on the ease of trading across suppose that documents are submitted borders. to a customs agency at 8:00 a.m., are Cost processed overnight and can be picked up at 8:00 a.m. the next day. In this case  Insurance cost and informal payments for which the time for customs clearance would be no receipt is issued are excluded from the costs recorded as 24 hours because the actual recorded. Costs are reported in U.S. dollars. procedure took 24 hours. Contributors are asked to convert local currency into U.S. dollars based on the exchange rate prevailing on the day they answer the questionnaire. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 66 Assumptions of the case study  For each of the 189 economies covered by  Shipping cost based on weight is assumed to be Doing Business, it is assumed that a shipment greater than shipping cost based on volume. travels from a warehouse in the largest  If government fees are determined by the value business city of the exporting economy to a of the shipment, the value is assumed to be warehouse in the largest business city of the $50,000. importing economy. For 11 economies the data are also collected, under the same case  The product is new, not secondhand or used study assumptions, for the second largest merchandise. business city.  The exporting firm is responsible for hiring and  The import and export case studies assume paying for a freight forwarder or customs different traded products. It is assumed that broker (or both) and pays for all costs related to each economy imports a standardized international shipping, domestic transport, shipment of 15 metric tons of containerized clearance and mandatory inspections by auto parts (HS 8708) from its natural import customs and other government agencies, port partner—the economy from which it imports or border handling, documentary compliance the largest value (price times quantity) of auto fees and the like for exports. The importing firm parts. It is assumed that each economy is responsible for the above costs for imports. exports the product of its comparative  The mode of transport is the one most widely advantage (defined by the largest export used for the chosen export or import product value) to its natural export partner—the and the trading partner, as is the seaport, economy that is the largest purchaser of this airport or land border crossing. product. Precious metal and gems, live animals and pharmaceuticals are excluded  All electronic submissions of information from the list of possible export products, requested by any government agency in however, and the second largest product connection with the shipment are considered to category is considered as needed. be documents obtained, prepared and submitted during the export or import process.  To identify the trading partners and export product for each economy, Doing Business  A port or border is defined as a place (seaport, collected data on trade flows for the most airport or land border crossing) where recent four-year period from international merchandise can enter or leave an economy. databases such as the United Nations  Government agencies considered relevant are Commodity Trade Statistics Database (UN agencies such as customs, port authorities, road Comtrade). For economies for which trade police, border guards, standardization agencies, flow data were not available, data from ministries or departments of agriculture or ancillary government sources (various industry, national security agencies and any ministries and departments) and World Bank other government authorities. Group country offices were used to identify the export product and natural trading partners.  A shipment is a unit of trade. Export shipments do not necessarily need to be containerized, while import shipments of auto parts are assumed to be containerized. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 67 TRADING ACROSS BORDERS Where does the economy stand today? The Trading across Border indicator refers to a case Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 68 in study scenario of a warehouse in the largest business city the ranking of 189 economies on the ease of trading of an economy (except for 11 economies for which the across borders (figure 9.1). data are a population-weighted average of the 2 largest While not included in the distance to frontier or ease of business cities) trading with the main import and export doing business ranking, data on domestic transportation partner through the economy’s main border crossing. is also recorded for all economies and provided in Table 9.3. Figure 9.1 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of trading across borders Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 68 TRADING ACROSS BORDERS What are the details? The indicators reported here for St. Vincent and the LOCATION OF STANDARDIZED COMPANY Grenadines are based on a set of specific predefined procedures for trading a shipment of goods by the most widely used mode of transport (whether sea, City: Kingstown land, air or some combination of these). The information on the time and cost to complete export The details on the predefined set of procedures, and the and import is collected from local freight forwarders, associated time and cost, for exporting and importing a customs brokers and traders. shipment of goods are listed in the summary bellow, along with the required documents. Table 9.2 Summary of export and import time and cost for trading across borders in St. Vincent and the Grenadines St. Vincent and the Latin America & Caribbean Grenadines Time to export: Border compliance (hours) 28 86 Cost to export: Border compliance (USD) 200 493 Time to export: Documentary compliance (hours) 3 68 Cost to export: Documentary compliance (USD) 80 134 Time to import: Border compliance (hours) 48 107 Cost to import: Border compliance (USD) 875 665 Time to import: Documentary compliance (hours) 6 93 Cost to import: Documentary compliance (USD) 90 128 Source: Doing Business database. Table 9.3 Summary of trading details, transport time and documents for trading across borders in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Export Import HS 11 : Products of the milling HS 8708: Parts and accessories Product industry; malt; starches; inulin; of motor vehicles wheat gluten Trade partner St. Lucia United States Border Campden Park port Campden Park port Distance (km) 5 5 Domestic transport time (hours) 1 1 Domestic transport cost (USD) 191 190 Domestic transport speed (km/hour) 3.9 4.0 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 69 Export Import Domestic transport cost per distance (USD/km) 38.2 38.0 Source: Doing Business database. Note: Although Doing Business collects and publishes data on the time and cost for domestic transport, it does not use these data in calculating the distance to frontier score for trading across borders or the ranking on the ease of trading across borders. Documents to export Bill of lading Certificate of origin Commercial invoice Insurance certificate Packing list Shipping bill Documents to import Asycuda waybill Certificate of origin Commercial invoice Entry for home use Health declaration Import license Insurance certificate Source: Doing Business database. Note: Doing Business continues to collect data on the number of documents needed to trade internationally. Unlike in previous years, however, these data are excluded from the calculation of the distance to frontier score and ranking. The time and cost for documentary compliance serve as better measures of the overall cost and complexity of compliance with documentary requirements than does the number of documents required. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 70 Figure 9.2 Summary of St. Vincent and the Grenadines on the ease of trading across borders Export Import Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 71 ENFORCING CONTRACTS Effective commercial dispute resolution has many WHAT THE ENFORCING CONTRACTS benefits. Courts are essential for entrepreneurs INDICATORS MEASURE because they interpret the rules of the market and protect economic rights. Efficient and transparent courts encourage new business relationships because Time required to enforce a contract through businesses know they can rely on the courts if a new the courts (calendar days) customer fails to pay. Speedy trials are essential for Time to file and serve the case small enterprises, which may lack the resources to Time for trial and to obtain the judgment stay in business while awaiting the outcome of a long court dispute. Time to enforce the judgment What do the indicators cover? Cost required to enforce a contract through the courts (% of claim) Doing Business measures the time and cost for resolving a standardized commercial dispute through Attorney fees a local first-instance court. In addition, this year it Court fees introduces a new measure, the quality of judicial Enforcement fees processes index, evaluating whether each economy has adopted a series of good practices that promote Quality of judicial processes index (0-18) quality and efficiency in the court system. This new Court structure and proceedings (0-5) index replaces the indicator on procedures, which was eliminated this year. The ranking of economies Case management (0-6) on the ease of enforcing contracts is determined by Court automation (0-4) sorting their distance to frontier scores. These scores Alternative dispute resolution (0-3) are the simple average of the distance to frontier scores for each of the component indicators. The dispute in the case study involves the breach of a sales contract between 2 domestic businesses. The  The value of the dispute is 200% of the case study assumes that the court hears an expert on income per capita or the equivalent in local the quality of the goods in dispute. This distinguishes currency of USD 5,000, whichever is greater. the case from simple debt enforcement. To make the  The seller sues the buyer before the court data comparable across economies, Doing Business with jurisdiction over commercial cases worth uses several assumptions about the case: 200% of income per capita or $5,000.  The dispute concerns a lawful transaction  The seller requests a pretrial attachment to between two businesses (Seller and Buyer), secure the claim. both located in the economy’s largest  The dispute on the quality of the goods business city. For 11 economies the data requires an expert opinion. are also collected for the second largest business city.  The judge decides in favor of the seller; there is no appeal.  The buyer orders custom-made goods, then fails to pay.  The seller enforces the judgment through a public sale of the buyer’s movable assets. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 72 ENFORCING CONTRACTS Where does the economy stand today? How efficient is the process of resolving a commercial doing business ranking at the end of this profile for more dispute through the courts in St. Vincent and the details. Grenadines? According to data collected by Doing Globally, St. Vincent and the Grenadines stands at 31 in Business, contract enforcement takes 394.00 days and the ranking of 189 economies on the ease of enforcing costs 30.30% of the value of the claim. Most indicator contracts (figure 10.1). The rankings for comparator sets refer to the largest business city of an economy, economies and the regional average ranking provide except for 11 economies for which the data are a other useful benchmarks for assessing the efficiency of population-weighted average of the 2 largest business contract enforcement in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. cities. See the chapter on distance to frontier and ease of Figure 10.1 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of enforcing contracts Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 73 ENFORCING CONTRACTS What are the details? The data on time and cost reported here for St. ECONOMY DETAILS Vincent and the Grenadines are built by following the step-by-step evolution of a commercial sale dispute within the court, under the assumptions Eastern Caribbean about the case described above (figure 10.2). The Supreme Court, time and cost of resolving the standardized dispute Court name: Kingstown High Court of are identified through study of the codes of civil Justice procedure and other court regulations, as well as through questionnaires completed by local litigation City: Kingstown lawyers (and, in a quarter of the economies covered by Doing Business, by judges as well). Figure 10.2 Time and cost of contract enforcement in St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 74 Table 10.2 Details on time and cost for enforcing contracts in St. Vincent and the Grenadines St. Vincent and Latin America & Indicator the Grenadines Caribbean average Time (days) 394 737 Filing and service 30 Trial and judgment 244 Enforcement of judgment 120 Cost (% of claim) 30.3 30.8 Attorney fees (% of claim) 14.3 Court fees (% of claim) 7.8 Enforcement fees (% of claim) 8.2 Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 75 ENFORCING CONTRACTS Quality of judicial processes index The quality of judicial processes index measures The scores reported here show which of these good whether each economy has adopted a series of good practices are available in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. practices in its court system in four areas: court This methodology was initially developed by Djankov and structure and proceedings, case management, court others (2003) and is adopted here with several changes. automation and alternative dispute resolution. The The quality of judicial processes index was introduced in score on the quality of judicial processes index is the Doing Business 2016. The good practices tested in this sum of the scores on these 4 sub-components. The index were developed on the basis of internationally index ranges from 0 to 18, with higher values recognized good practices promoting judicial efficiency. indicating more efficient judicial processes. Figure 10.3 Quality of judicial processes index in St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 76 Table 10.3 Details of the quality of judicial processes index in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Answer Score Quality of judicial processes index (0-18) 12.00 Court structure and proceedings (0-5) 5.0 1. Is there a court or division of a court dedicated solely to hearing Yes 1.5 commercial cases? 2. Small claims court 1.5 2.a. Is there a small claims court or a fast-track procedure for small Yes claims? 2.b. If yes, is self-representation allowed? Yes 3. Is pretrial attachment available? Yes 1.0 4. Are new cases assigned randomly to judges? Yes 1 Case management (0-6) 3.0 1. Time standards 1.0 1.a. Are there laws setting overall time standards for key court events in Yes a civil case? 1.b. If yes, are the time standards set for at least three court events? Yes 1.c. Are these time standards respected in more than 50% of cases? Yes 2. Adjournments 0.0 2.a. Does the law regulate the maximum number of adjournments that No can be granted? 2.b. Are adjournments limited to unforeseen and exceptional No circumstances? 2.c. If rules on adjournments exist, are they respected in more than 50% n.a. of cases? 3. Can two of the following four reports be generated about the competent court: (i) time to disposition report; (ii) clearance rate report; Yes 1.0 (iii) age of pending cases report; and (iv) single case progress report? 4. Is a pretrial conference among the case management techniques Yes 1.0 used before the competent court? 5. Are there any electronic case management tools in place within the No 0.0 competent court for use by judges? 6. Are there any electronic case management tools in place within the No 0.0 competent court for use by lawyers? Court automation (0-4) 1.5 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 77 Answer Score 1. Can the initial complaint be filed electronically through a dedicated No 0.0 platform within the competent court? 2. Is it possible to carry out service of process electronically for claims Yes 1.0 filed before the competent court? 3. Can court fees be paid electronically within the competent court? No 0.0 4. Publication of judgments 0.5 4.a Are judgments rendered in commercial cases at all levels made available to the general public through publication in official gazettes, No in newspapers or on the internet or court website? 4.b. Are judgments rendered in commercial cases at the appellate and supreme court level made available to the general public through Yes publication in official gazettes, in newspapers or on the internet or court website? Alternative dispute resolution (0-3) 2.5 1. Arbitration 1.5 1.a. Is domestic commercial arbitration governed by a consolidated law or consolidated chapter or section of the applicable code of civil Yes procedure encompassing substantially all its aspects? 1.b. Are there any commercial disputes—aside from those that deal with public order or public policy—that cannot be submitted to No arbitration? 1.c. Are valid arbitration clauses or agreements usually enforced by the Yes courts? 2. Mediation/Conciliation 1.0 2.a. Is voluntary mediation or conciliation available? Yes 2.b. Are mediation, conciliation or both governed by a consolidated law or consolidated chapter or section of the applicable code of civil Yes procedure encompassing substantially all their aspects? 2.c. Are there financial incentives for parties to attempt mediation or conciliation (i.e., if mediation or conciliation is successful, a refund of No court filing fees, income tax credits or the like)? Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 78 RESOLVING INSOLVENCY A robust bankruptcy system functions as a filter, WHAT THE RESOLVING INSOLVENCY ensuring the survival of economically efficient companies and reallocating the resources of INDICATORS MEASURE inefficient ones. Fast and cheap insolvency proceedings result in the speedy return of businesses Time required to recover debt (years) to normal operation and increase returns to Measured in calendar years creditors. By clarifying the expectations of creditors and debtors about the outcome of insolvency Appeals and requests for extension are proceedings, well-functioning insolvency systems can included facilitate access to finance, save more viable Cost required to recover debt (% of debtor’s businesses and sustainably grow the economy. estate) What do the indicators cover? Measured as percentage of estate value Doing Business studies the time, cost and outcome of Court fees insolvency proceedings involving domestic legal Fees of insolvency administrators entities. These variables are used to calculate the recovery rate, which is recorded as cents on the Lawyers’ fees dollar recovered by secured creditors through Assessors’ and auctioneers’ fees reorganization, liquidation or debt enforcement Other related fees (foreclosure or receivership) proceedings. To determine the present value of the amount Outcome recovered by creditors, Doing Business uses the Whether business continues operating as a lending rates from the International Monetary Fund, going concern or business assets are sold supplemented with data from central banks and the piecemeal Economist Intelligence Unit. Recovery rate for creditors In addition, Doing Business evaluates the adequacy Measures the cents on the dollar recovered and integrity of the existing legal framework by secured creditors applicable to liquidation and reorganization proceedings through the strength of insolvency Outcome for the business (survival or not) framework index. The index tests whether economies determines the maximum value that can be adopted internationally accepted good practices in recovered four areas: commencement of proceedings, Official costs of the insolvency proceedings management of debtor’s assets, reorganization are deducted proceedings and creditor participation. Depreciation of furniture is taken into The ranking of economies on the ease of resolving account insolvency is determined by sorting their distance to Present value of debt recovered frontier scores for resolving insolvency. These scores are the simple average of the distance to frontier Strength of insolvency framework index (0- scores for the recovery rate and the strength of 16) insolvency framework index. The Resolving Sum of the scores of four component indices: Insolvency indicators do not measure insolvency Commencement of proceedings index (0-3) proceedings of individuals and financial institutions. The data are derived from questionnaire responses Management of debtor’s assets index (0-6) by local insolvency practitioners and verified through Reorganization proceedings index (0-3) a study of laws and regulations as well as public information on bankruptcy systems. Creditor participation index (0-4) Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 79 RESOLVING INSOLVENCY Where does the economy stand today? St. Vincent and the Grenadines receives a no practice economies on the ease of resolving insolvency (figure mark. If an economy had zero cases a year over the past 11.1). five years involving a judicial reorganization, judicial The resolving insolvency indicators are based on detailed liquidation or debt enforcement procedure (foreclosure information collected through questionnaires completed or receivership), the economy receives a no practice by insolvency experts, including lawyers, practitioners mark on the time, cost and outcome indicators. This (administrators, trustees), accountants and judges. Data means that creditors are unlikely to recover their money on the time, cost and outcome refer to the most likely in- through a formal legal process. The recovery rate for no court insolvency procedure applicable under specific practice economies is zero. In addition, a no practice economy receives a score of 0 on the strength of case study assumptions. Data on provisions applicable to insolvency framework index even if its legal framework judicial liquidation and reorganization is based on the includes provisions related to insolvency proceedings current law governing insolvency proceedings in each (liquidation or reorganization). Globally, St. Vincent and economy. the Grenadines stands at 189 in the ranking of 189 Figure 11.1 How St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies rank on the ease of resolving insolvency Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 80 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 81 Figure 11.2 Efficiency of proceedings - time, cost and recovery rate in St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies. Source: Doing Business database. Note: The recovery rate is calculated based on the time, cost and outcome of insolvency proceedings involving domestic legal entities and is recorded as cents on the dollar recovered by secured creditors. The calculation takes into account the outcome: whether the business emerges from the proceedings as a going concern or the assets are sold piecemeal. Then the costs of the proceedings are deducted. Finally, the value lost as a result of the time the money remains tied up in insolvency proceedings is taken into account. The recovery rate is the present value of the remaining proceeds, based on end-2014 lending rates. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 82 Table 11.1 Details of data on efficiency of insolvency proceedings in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Indicator Answer Explanation According to the research conducted by the team, there were no foreclosure, liquidation or reorganization proceedings filed in the country in the last 12 Proceedin No Practice months. Due to this circumstance, it is not possible to assess the time, the cost or g the outcome associated with the insolvency scenario described in the case study. According to the research conducted by the team, there were no foreclosure, liquidation or reorganization proceedings filed in the country in the last 12 Outcome No Practice months. Due to this circumstance, it is not possible to assess the time, the cost or the outcome associated with the insolvency scenario described in the case study. According to the research conducted by the team, there were no foreclosure, Time (in liquidation or reorganization proceedings filed in the country in the last 12 No Practice years) months. Due to this circumstance, it is not possible to assess the time, the cost or the outcome associated with the insolvency scenario described in the case study. According to the research conducted by the team, there were no foreclosure, Cost (% of liquidation or reorganization proceedings filed in the country in the last 12 No Practice estate) months. Due to this circumstance, it is not possible to assess the time, the cost or the outcome associated with the insolvency scenario described in the case study. Recovery rate: 0.00 Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 83 RESOLVING INSOLVENCY A well-balanced bankruptcy system distinguishes change. Many recent reforms of bankruptcy laws have companies that are financially distressed but been aimed at helping more of the viable businesses economically viable from inefficient companies that survive. What insolvency reforms has Doing Business should be liquidated. But in some insolvency systems recorded in St. Vincent and the Grenadines (table 11.2)? even viable businesses are liquidated. This is starting to Table 11.2 How has St. Vincent and the Grenadines made resolving insolvency easier—or not? By Doing Business report year from DB2011 to DB2016 DB year Reform St. Vincent and the Grenadines made resolving insolvency easier by introducing a rehabilitation procedure; introducing provisions to facilitate the continuation of the debtor’s DB2016 business during insolvency proceedings and allow creditors greater participation in important decisions during the proceedings; and establishing a public office responsible for the general administration of insolvency cases. Source: Doing Business database. Note: For information on reforms in earlier years (back to DB2005), see the Doing Business reports for these years, available at http://www.doingbusiness.org. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 84 RESOLVING INSOLVENCY Strength of resolving insolvency index The strength of insolvency framework index is the with higher values indicating insolvency legislation that is sum of the scores on the commencement of better designed for rehabilitating viable firms and proceedings index, management of debtor’s assets liquidating nonviable ones. St. Vincent and the index, reorganization proceedings index and creditor Grenadines’s score on the strength of insolvency participation index. The index ranges from 0 to 16, framework index is 0.00 out of 16. Figure 11.3 Strength of insolvency framework index (0-16) in St. Vincent and the Grenadines and comparator economies Source: Doing Business database. Note: Even if the economy’s legal framework includes provisions related to insolvency proceedings (liquidation or reorganization), the economy receives 0 points for the strength of insolvency framework index, if time, cost and outcome indicators are recorded as “no practice”. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 85 Table 11.3 Summary of data for the strength of insolvency framework index in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Answer Score Strength of insolvency framework index (0-16) 0.00 Commencement of proceedings index (0-3) 2.50 (a) Debtor may What procedures are available to a DEBTOR when commencing insolvency file for both 1.0 proceedings? liquidation and reorganization (b) Yes, but a Does the insolvency framework allow a CREDITOR to file for insolvency of creditor may file 0.5 the debtor? for liquidation only (c) Both (a) and (b) options are What basis for commencement of the insolvency proceedings is allowed available, but 1.0 under the insolvency framework? only one of them needs to be complied with Management of debtor's assets index (0-6) 4.50 Does the insolvency framework allow the continuation of contracts No 0.0 supplying essential goods and services to the debtor? Does the insolvency framework allow the rejection by the debtor of overly Yes 1.0 burdensome contracts? Does the insolvency framework allow avoidance of preferential Yes 1.0 transactions? Does the insolvency framework allow avoidance of undervalued Yes 1.0 transactions? Does the insolvency framework provide for the possibility of the debtor Yes 1.0 obtaining credit after commencement of insolvency proceedings? (a) Yes over all pre- Does the insolvency framework assign priority to post-commencement commencement 0.5 credit? creditors, secured or unsecured Reorganization proceedings index (0-3) 1.00 (b) Only creditors whose rights are Which creditors vote on the proposed reorganization plan? 1.0 affected by the proposed plan Does the insolvency framework require that dissenting creditors in No 0.0 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 86 Answer Score reorganization receive at least as much as what they would obtain in a liquidation? Are the creditors divided into classes for the purposes of voting on the reorganization plan, does each class vote separately and are creditors in No 0.0 the same class treated equally? Creditor participation index (0-4) 3.00 Does the insolvency framework require approval by the creditors for Yes 1.0 selection or appointment of the insolvency representative? Does the insolvency framework require approval by the creditors for sale Yes 1.0 of substantial assets of the debtor? Does the insolvency framework provide that a creditor has the right to Yes 1.0 request information from the insolvency representative? Does the insolvency framework provide that a creditor has the right to No 0.0 object to decisions accepting or rejecting creditors' claims? Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 87 LABOR MARKET REGULATION Doing Business has historically studied the flexibility of regulations as well as secondary sources are reviewed to regulation of employment, specifically as it relates to the ensure accuracy. areas of hiring, working hours and redundancy. This year Doing Business has expanded the scope of the labor To make the data comparable across economies, several market regulation indicators by adding 16 new assumptions about the worker and the business are questions, most of which focus on measuring job quality. used. Over the period from 2007 to 2011 improvements were The worker: made to align the methodology for the labor market  Is a cashier in a supermarket or grocery store, regulation indicators (formerly the employing workers age 19, with one year of work experience. indicators) with the letter and spirit of the International  Is a full-time employee. Labour Organization (ILO) conventions. Ten of the 189  Is not a member of the labor union, unless ILO conventions cover areas now measured by Doing membership is mandatory. Business (up from four previously): employee The business: termination, weekend work, holiday with pay, night work,  Is a limited liability company (or the equivalent protection against unemployment, sickness benefits, in the economy). maternity protection, working hours, equal remuneration  Operates a supermarket or grocery store in the and labor inspections. economy’s largest business city. For 11 economies the data are also collected for the Between 2009 and 2011 the World Bank Group worked second largest business city. with a consultative group—including labor lawyers,  Has 60 employees. employer and employee representatives, and experts  Is subject to collective bargaining agreements if from the ILO, the Organisation for Economic Co- such agreements cover more than 50% of the operation and Development (OECD), civil society and the food retail sector and they apply even to firms private sector—to review the methodology for the labor that are not party to them. market regulation indicators and explore future areas of  Abides by every law and regulation but does not research. grant workers more benefits than those mandated by law, regulation or (if applicable) A full report with the conclusions of the consultative collective bargaining agreements. group, along with the methodology it proposed, is available on the Doing Business website at: http://www.doingbusiness.org/methodology/labor- market-regulation. Doing Business 2016 presents the data for the labor market regulation indicators in an annex. The report does not present rankings of economies on these indicators or include the topic in the aggregate distance to frontier score or ranking on the ease of doing business. Detailed data collected on labor market regulation are available on the Doing Business website (http://www.doingbusiness.org). The data on labor market regulation are based on a detailed questionnaire on employment regulations that is completed by local lawyers and public officials. Employment laws and Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 88 LABOR MARKET REGULATION What are the details? The data reported here for St. Vincent and the public officials. Employment laws and regulations as well Grenadines are based on a detailed survey of labor as secondary sources are reviewed to ensure accuracy. market regulation that is completed by local lawyers and Hiring Data on hiring cover five areas: (i) whether fixed-term wage to the average value added per worker (the ratio of contracts are prohibited for permanent tasks; (ii) the an economy’s GNI per capita to the working-age maximum cumulative duration of fixed-term contracts; population as a percentage of the total population), and (iii) the minimum wage for a cashier, age 19, with one (v) the availability of incentives for employers to hire year of work experience; (iv) the ratio of the minimum employees under the age of 25*. Hiring Data Fixed-term contracts prohibited for permanent tasks? No Maximum length of a single fixed-term contract (months) No limit Maximum length of fixed-term contracts, including renewals (months) No Limit Minimum wage applicable to the worker assumed in the case study 237.1 (US$/month) Ratio of minimum wage to value added per worker 0.3 Incentives for employing workers under age 25? No Source: Doing Business database. *A new question introduced in the Doing Business 2016 report for the first time. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 89 LABOR MARKET REGULATION Working hours Data on working hours cover nine areas: i) the maximum and nonnursing women can work the same night hours number of working days allowed per week; (ii) the as men*; (vii) whether there are restrictions on weekly premium for night work (as a percentage of hourly pay); holiday work; (viii) whether there are restrictions on (iii) the premium for work on a weekly rest day (as a overtime work*; and (ix) the average paid annual leave percentage of hourly pay); (iv) the premium for overtime for workers with 1 year of tenure, 5 years of tenure, and work (as a percentage of hourly pay)*; (v) whether there 10 years of tenure. are restrictions on night work; (vi) whether nonpregnant Working Hours Data Maximum number of working days per week 6.0 Premium for night work (% of hourly pay) 0.0 Premium for work on weekly rest day (% of hourly pay) 0.0 Premium for overtime work (% of hourly pay) 50.0 Restrictions on night work? 0.0 Whether nonpregnant and nonnursing women can work the same night Yes hours as men Restrictions on weekly holiday? 0.0 Restrictions on overtime work? No Paid annual leave for a worker with 1 year of tenure (working days) 14.0 Paid annual leave for a worker with 5 years of tenure (working days) 21.0 Paid annual leave for a worker with 10 years of tenure (working days) 21.0 Paid annual leave (average for workers with 1, 5 and 10 years of tenure, in 18.7 working days) Source: Doing Business database. *A new question introduced in the Doing Business 2016 report for the first time. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 90 LABOR MARKET REGULATION Redundancy rules Data on redundancy cover nine areas: (i) the length of whether the employer needs approval from a third party the maximum probationary period (in months) for to terminate one redundant worker; (vi) whether the permanent employees; (ii) whether redundancy is employer needs approval from a third party to terminate allowed as a basis for terminating workers; (iii) whether a group of nine redundant workers; (vii) whether the law the employer needs to notify a third party (such as a requires the employer to reassign or retrain a worker government agency) to terminate one redundant worker; before making the worker redundant; (viii) whether (iv) whether the employer needs to notify a third party to priority rules apply for redundancies; and (ix) whether terminate a group of nine redundant workers; (v) priority rules apply for reemployment. Redundancy rules Data Maximum length of probationary period (months) 6.0 Dismissal due to redundancy allowed by law? Yes Third-party notification if one worker is dismissed? No Third-party approval if one worker is dismissed? No Third-party notification if nine workers are dismissed? Yes Third-party approval if nine workers are dismissed? No Retraining or reassignment obligation before redundancy? No Priority rules for redundancies? No Priority rules for reemployment? Yes Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 91 LABOR MARKET REGULATION Redundancy cost Redundancy cost measures the cost of advance notice severance payments applicable to a worker with 1 year of requirements and severance payments due when tenure, a worker with 5 years and a worker with 10 years terminating a redundant worker, expressed in weeks of is considered. One month is recorded as 4 and 1/3 salary. The average value of notice requirements and weeks. Redundancy cost indicator (in salary weeks) Data Notice period for redundancy dismissal for a worker with 1 year of tenure 4.0 Notice period for redundancy dismissal for a worker with 5 years of tenure 4.0 Notice period for redundancy dismissal for a worker with 10 years of tenure 4.0 Notice period for redundancy dismissal (average for workers with 1, 5 and 10 years 4.0 of tenure) Severance pay for redundancy dismissal for a worker with 1 year of tenure 0.0 Severance pay for redundancy dismissal for a worker with 5 years of tenure 10.0 Severance pay for redundancy dismissal for a worker with 10 years of tenure 20.0 Severance pay for redundancy dismissal (average for workers with 1, 5 and 10 years 10.0 of tenure) Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 92 LABOR MARKET REGULATION Job quality Doing Business 2016 report presents, for the first time, on-the-job training at no cost to the employee; (viii) data on 12 job quality areas: (i) whether the law whether a worker is eligible for an unemployment mandates equal remuneration for work of equal value; protection scheme after one year of service; (ix) the (ii) whether the law mandates nondiscrimination based minimum duration of the contribution period (in months) on gender in hiring, (iii) whether the law mandates paid required for unemployment protection; (x) whether an or unpaid maternity leave; (iv) the minimum length of employee can create or join a union; (xi) the availability maternity leave in calendar days (minimum number of of administrative or judicial relief in case of infringement days that legally have to be paid by the government, the of employees’ rights; and (xii) the availability of a labor employer or both); (v) whether employees on maternity inspection system. If no maternity leave is mandated by leave receive 100 % of wages; (vi) the availability of five law, parental leave is measured if applicable. fully paid days of sick leave a year; (vii) the availability of Job Quality Data Equal remuneration for work of equal value? No Gender nondiscrimination in hiring? No Paid or unpaid maternity leave mandated by law? Yes Minimum length of maternity leave (calendar days)? 91.0 Receive 100% of wages on maternity leave? No Five fully paid days of sick leave a year? Yes On-the-job training? No Unemployment protection after one year of employment? No Minimum contribution period for unemployment protection (months)? n.a. Can employee create or join union? Yes Administrative or judicial relief for infringement of employees' rights? Yes Labor inspection system? Yes Source: Doing Business database. Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 93 DISTANCE TO FRONTIER AND EASE OF DOING BUSINESS RANKING Doing Business presents results for two aggregate even though it is no longer at the frontier in a measures: the distance to frontier score and the ease of subsequent year. doing business ranking, which is based on the distance For scores such as those on the strength of legal rights to frontier score. The ease of doing business ranking index or the quality of land administration index, the compares economies with one another; the distance to frontier is set at the highest possible value. For the total frontier score benchmarks economies with respect to tax rate, consistent with the use of a threshold in regulatory best practice, showing the absolute distance calculating the rankings on this indicator, the frontier is to the best performance on each Doing Business defined as the total tax rate at the 15th percentile of the indicator. When compared across years, the distance to overall distribution for all years included in the analysis frontier score shows how much the regulatory up to and including Doing Business 2015. For the time to environment for local entrepreneurs in an economy has pay taxes the frontier is defined as the lowest time changed over time in absolute terms, while the ease of recorded among all economies that levy the three major doing business ranking can show only how much the taxes: profit tax, labor taxes and mandatory regulatory environment has changed relative to that in contributions, and value added tax (VAT) or sales tax. For other economies. the different times to trade across borders, the frontier is Distance to Frontier defined as 1 hour even though in many economies the time is less than that. The distance to frontier score captures the gap between an economy’s performance and a measure of best In the same formulation, to mitigate the effects of practice across the entire sample of 36 indicators for 10 extreme outliers in the distributions of the rescaled data Doing Business topics (the labor market regulation for most component indicators (very few economies indicators are excluded). For starting a business, for need 700 days to complete the procedures to start a example, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia business, but many need 9 days), the worst performance and New Zealand have the smallest number of is calculated after the removal of outliers. The definition procedures required (1), and New Zealand the shortest of outliers is based on the distribution for each time to fulfill them (0.5 days). Slovenia has the lowest component indicator. To simplify the process two rules cost (0.0), and Australia, Colombia and 103 other were defined: the 95th percentile is used for the economies have no paid-in minimum capital indicators with the most dispersed distributions requirement (table 14.1 in the Doing Business 2016 (including minimum capital, number of payments to pay report). taxes, and the time and cost indicators), and the 99th percentile is used for number of procedures. No outlier is Calculation of the distance to frontier score removed for component indicators bound by definition Calculating the distance to frontier score for each or construction, including legal index scores (such as the economy involves two main steps. In the first step depth of credit information index, extent of conflict of individual component indicators are normalized to a interest regulation index and strength of insolvency common unit where each of the 36 component framework index) and the recovery rate (figure 14.1). indicators y (except for the total tax rate) is rescaled In the second step for calculating the distance to frontier using the linear transformation (worst − y)/(worst − score, the scores obtained for individual indicators for frontier). In this formulation the frontier represents the each economy are aggregated through simple averaging best performance on the indicator across all economies into one distance to frontier score, first for each topic since 2005 or the third year in which data for the and then across all 10 topics: starting a business, dealing indicator were collected. Both the best performance and with construction permits, getting electricity, registering the worst performance are established every five years property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, based on the Doing Business data for the year in which paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts they are established, and remain at that level for the five and resolving insolvency. More complex aggregation years regardless of any changes in data in interim years. methods—such as principal components and Thus an economy may set the frontier for an indicator unobserved components—yield a ranking nearly Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 94 identical to the simple average used by Doing Business . The nonlinear transformation is not based on any 4 Thus Doing Business uses the simplest method: economic theory of an “optimal tax rate” that minimizes weighting all topics equally and, within each topic, giving distortions or maximizes efficiency in an economy’s equal weight to each of the topic components . overall tax system. Instead, it is mainly empirical in 5 nature. The nonlinear transformation along with the An economy’s distance to frontier score is indicated on a threshold reduces the bias in the indicator toward scale from 0 to 100, where 0 represents the worst economies that do not need to levy significant taxes on performance and 100 the frontier. All distance to frontier companies like the Doing Business standardized case calculations are based on a maximum of five decimals. study company because they raise public revenue in However, indicator ranking calculations and the ease of other ways—for example, through taxes on foreign doing business ranking calculations are based on two companies, through taxes on sectors other than decimals. manufacturing or from natural resources (all of which are The difference between an economy’s distance to outside the scope of the methodology). In addition, it frontier score in any previous year and its score in 2015 acknowledges the need of economies to collect taxes illustrates the extent to which the economy has closed from firms. the gap to the regulatory frontier over time. And in any Calculation of scores for economies with 2 cities given year the score measures how far an economy is covered from the best performance at that time. For each of the 11 economies in which Doing Business Treatment of the total tax rate collects data for the second largest business city as well The total tax rate component of the paying taxes as the largest one, the distance to frontier score is indicator set enters the distance to frontier calculation in calculated as the population-weighted average of the a different way than any other indicator. The distance to distance to frontier scores for these two cities (table frontier score obtained for the total tax rate is 13.1). This is done for the aggregate score, the scores for transformed in a nonlinear fashion before it enters the each topic and the scores for all the component distance to frontier score for paying taxes. As a result of indicators for each topic. the nonlinear transformation, an increase in the total tax rate has a smaller impact on the distance to frontier score for the total tax rate—and therefore on the distance to frontier score for paying taxes—for economies with a below-average total tax rate than it would have had before this approach was adopted in Doing Business 2015 (line B is smaller than line A in figure 14.2 of the Doing Business 2016 report). And for economies with an extreme total tax rate (a rate that is very high relative to the average), an increase has a greater impact on both these distance to frontier scores than it would have had before (line D is bigger than line C in figure 14.2 of the Doing Business 2016 report). 4 See Djankov, Manraj and others (2005). Principal components and unobserved components methods yield a ranking nearly identical to that from the simple average method because both these methods assign roughly equal weights to the topics, since the pairwise correlations among indicators do not differ much. An alternative to the simple average method is to give different weights to the topics, depending on which are considered of more or less importance in the context of a specific economy. 5 For getting credit, indicators are weighted proportionally, according to their contribution to the total score, with a weight of 60% assigned to the strength of legal rights index and 40% to the depth of credit information index. Indicators for all other topics are assigned equal weights Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 95 Table 13.1 Weights used in calculating the distance to implemented regulatory reforms making it easier to do frontier scores for economies with 2 cities covered business in 3 or more of the 10 topics included in this year’s aggregate distance to frontier score. Changes Economy City Weight (%) making it more difficult to do business are subtracted Dhaka 78 Bangladesh from the total number of those making it easier to do Chittagong 22 São Paulo 61 business. Twenty-four economies meet this criterion: Brazil Armenia; Azerbaijan; Benin; Costa Rica; Côte d’Ivoire; Rio de Janeiro 39 Shanghai 55 Cyprus; Hong Kong SAR, China; Indonesia; Jamaica; China Beijing 45 Kazakhstan; Kenya; Lithuania; Madagascar; Mauritania; Mumbai 47 Morocco; Romania; the Russian Federation; Rwanda; India Delhi 53 Senegal; Togo; Uganda; the United Arab Emirates; Jakarta 78 Uzbekistan; and Vietnam. Second, Doing Business sorts Indonesia Surabaya 22 these economies on the increase in their distance to Tokyo 65 Japan frontier score from the previous year using comparable Osaka 35 data. Mexico City 83 Mexico Monterrey 17 Selecting the economies that implemented regulatory Lagos 77 reforms in at least three topics and had the biggest Nigeria Kano 23 improvements in their distance to frontier scores is Karachi 65 intended to highlight economies with ongoing, broad- Pakistan Lahore 35 based reform programs. The improvement in the Moscow 70 Russian Federation distance to frontier score is used to identify the top St. Petersburg 30 New York 60 improvers because this allows a focus on the absolute United States improvement—in contrast with the relative improvement Los Angeles 40 Source: United Nations, Department of Economic and Social shown by a change in rankings—that economies have Affairs, Population Division, World Urbanization Prospects, made in their regulatory environment for business. 2014 Revision. http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/CD- ROM/Default.aspx. Ease of Doing Business ranking Economies that improved the most across 3 or more Doing Business topics in 2014/15 The ease of doing business ranking ranges from 1 to 189. The ranking of economies is determined by sorting the Doing Business 2016 uses a simple method to calculate aggregate distance to frontier scores, rounded to 2 which economies improved the ease of doing business decimals. the most. First, it selects the economies that in 2014/15 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 96 Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 97 RESOURCES ON THE DOING BUSINESS WEBSITE Current features Law library News on the Doing Business project Online collection of business laws and regulations http://www.doingbusiness.org relating to business http://www.doingbusiness.org/law-library Rankings How economies rank—from 1 to 189 Contributors http://www.doingbusiness.org/rankings More than 11,400 specialists in 189 economies who participate in Doing Business Data http://www.doingbusiness.org/contributors/doing- All the data for 189 economies—topic rankings, business indicator values, lists of regulatory procedures and details underlying indicators Entrepreneurship data http://www.doingbusiness.org/data Data on business density (number of newly registered companies per 1,000 working-age Reports people) for 136 economies Access to Doing Business reports as well as http://www.doingbusiness.org/data/exploretopics/ent subnational and regional reports, case studies and repreneurship customized economy and regional profiles http://www.doingbusiness.org/reports Distance to frontier Data benchmarking 189 economies to the frontier Methodology in regulatory practice and a distance to frontier The methodologies and research papers underlying calculator Doing Business http://www.doingbusiness.org/data/distance-to- http://www.doingbusiness.org/methodology frontier Research Information on good practices Abstracts of papers on Doing Business topics and Showing where the many good practices identified related policy issues by Doing Business have been adopted http://www.doingbusiness.org/research http://www.doingbusiness.org/data/good-practice Doing Business reforms Short summaries of DB2016 business regulation reforms and lists of reforms since DB2008 http://www.doingbusiness.org/reforms Historical data Customized data sets since DB2004 http://www.doingbusiness.org/custom-query Doing Business 2016 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 98