1 / 24

How Easy It Is to Invest and Do Business in Macedonia

How Easy It Is to Invest and Do Business in Macedonia. Verica Hadzi Vasileva-Markovska AAG – Analysis and Advisory Group. Macedonia is a tiny country – but …. 25.713 m 2 around USD 5.7 billion worth GDP Appx. USD 7.5 thousand GDP p.c. PPP 2 million people Relatively low purchasing power

quemby-dale
Download Presentation

How Easy It Is to Invest and Do Business in Macedonia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How Easy It Is to Invest and Do Business in Macedonia Verica Hadzi Vasileva-Markovska AAG – Analysis and Advisory Group

  2. Macedonia is a tiny country – but … • 25.713 m2 • around USD 5.7 billion worth GDP • Appx. USD 7.5 thousand GDP p.c. PPP • 2 million people • Relatively low purchasing power • High unemployment rate: 37% • Relatively stable diversified economy • It started to grow in a more sustainable way • Received EU candidate country status

  3. Focus onto some economic indicators

  4. Starting a business is easy • Until 2005: you needed 48 days and 13 procedures • As of 1 January 2006: you will not need more than 3 days once documents were submitted • Major reform in the registration of businesses • Capital requirement: EUR 5,000 for Ltd Co and EUR 25,000 and EUR 50,000 for AD • Much less procedures: Registry takes care of most of them • Statistics: 7600 new units registered in 1-8/2006, compared to 6700 in the same period last year World Bank and IFC: Doing Business in 2006. Creating jobs, 2006

  5. Starting a business – compare! Bosnia: 54 days Croatia: 49 days Slovenia: 60 days Serbia: 15 days Greece: 38 days World Bank and IFC: Doing Business in 2006. Creating jobs, 2006

  6. Buying a business should not be difficult • If there is a suitable target: • Problems: • Not many • Not very open: fear of loss of corporate control • Takeover Law, 2002: • It is applied when: • Buying shares over 25% • in companies with more than 25 shareholders and • with share capital > EUR 2,000,000 • Public offer • Make analysis

  7. Information abundance, or? • Information basis is not very rich: • Although useful, statistics is poorer than Slovenian • Sectoral studies are rare • In general, companies are reluctant to disclose info • Investment analysts are practically non-existent, unless specially engaged

  8. Accounting standards • IFRS are nominally obligatory • Accounting and auditing profession is deficient • All big 4 are present • 25 audit companies registered • Poor enforcement of professional standards: Institute of certified auditors established in June 2006

  9. Personnel: are they readily available? • Sluggish reforms in education and training institutions • old fashioned courses curricula • life-long learning concept – still not alive • knowledge economy concept – still not alive • low R&D expenses • Still many young people studying abroad • General education level is such that allows easy deepening of knowledge and skills • Working ethics: not lower than regional average

  10. Personnel: are they easy to hire and fire? • New Labour Relations Law in 2005 • Much more business friendly and less rigid • Prior to that the difficulty indices were high (on the scale 0-100): • Hiring: 61 • Firing: 40

  11. Financial sector is rather sound but shallow • Banking sector has undergone significant restructuring • It is a sound but rather shallow financial market • total assets to the GDP equaled 45 percent • 19 private banks of universal type, • 1 state-owned bank with specific functions • 14 savings houses • Still new changes in the Law are expected to: • strengthen Bank supervision • transition to more risk based supervision • Interest rates have been falling in the last several years: • in July: 11.3% average in MKD • 8.1% in Forex

  12. Financial sector is dominated by banks • Further reforms in the insurance sector: • approximation with the EU directives • strict licensing requirements and risk management rules • enhancement of the supervision • establishment of an adequate and independent supervisory authority • Pension system: second pillar established • Capital market is constantly growing • Non-banking financial institutions not yet established – lack of legal basis

  13. Getting a loan • The competition among banks is increasing • Banks are more open to providing loans • Law on execution has increased their security for collection • No credit bureaus

  14. Registering and protection of property • Still many problems especially in the real estate – cadastre goes through deep reforms: slow process, not connected information bases • By 2009 a new reliable cadastre is to be set up • To register a property you need 74 days

  15. Registering property in days – compare! Bosnia: 331 Croatia: 956 Slovenia: 391 Serbia: 111 Greece: 23 World Bank and IFC: Doing Business in 2006. Creating jobs, 2006

  16. Taxes • Relatively low tax rates and they are scheduled to ever lower: • VAT: 18% and 5% • CIT: 15%, scheduled to be 10% • PIT: 15%, 18%, 24% • Flat rate is expected to be introduced • Some tax heavens for foreign investors

  17. Dealing with administration • Administration used to be very difficult • It is going through reforms • Still much needs to be done • Corruption is an issue and this needs to be dealt with • E-government project is in the air

  18. Enforcing contracts • Judiciary reforms is underway • Law on Courts changed, Law on Court Budget, Law on Enforcement • Laws have been changed to enable better enforcement • Still problems: days of enforcement: 509!!

  19. Enforcing contracts in days – compare! Bosnia: 330 Croatia: 415 Slovenia: 913 Serbia: 635 Greece: 151 World Bank and IFC: Doing Business in 2006. Creating jobs, 2006

  20. Closing a business • A new law on bankruptcy enacted • streamlining the bankruptcy proceeding, • making it faster, • more efficient, • less costly and • fairer to the creditors and other stakeholders, • building of the professional and ethical capacity of the bankruptcy proceeding bodies: in progress • Duration of a bankruptcy process: 4 years!

  21. Closing a business (in years) – compare! Bosnia: 3.3 Croatia: 3.1 Slovenia: 3.6 Serbia: 2.7 Greece: 2.0 World Bank and IFC: Doing Business in 2006. Creating jobs, 2006

  22. Other issues • Protecting investors: corporate governance • Able partners • Hospitable people • Unexplored opportunities

  23. Aggregate easiness of doing business rank (out of 155) – compare! Bosnia: 87 Croatia: 116 Slovenia: 63 Macedonia: 81 Serbia: 92 Greece: 80 Source: World Bank and IFC: Doing Business in 2006. Creating jobs, 2006

  24. AAG – Analysis and Advisory Group AAG – Analysis and Advisory Group Bul. Ilinden, 42-4 1000 Skopje Phone: +389-2-3120-565 Fax: +389-2-3122-565 e-mail: verica.hadzivasileva@aag.com.mk www.aag.com.mk (soon to be released) Verica Hadzi Vasileva-Markovska Partner

More Related