Enabling international financial institutions to better evaluate the business environment in developing countries
Submitting Institution
Heriot-Watt UniversityUnit of Assessment
Business and Management StudiesSummary Impact Type
EconomicResearch Subject Area(s)
Economics: Applied Economics
Studies In Human Society: Policy and Administration
Summary of the impact
Research at HWU in collaboration with economists at UCL, Toulouse and
international financial institutions led to the development of a framework
for analysing the relationship between company performance and the
business environment in developing countries. The framework has been and
is being used by the World Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction
and Development (EBRD) to analyse survey data on tens of thousands of
firms. In the words of the Office of the Chief Economist of EBRD, the
framework has enabled them to "identify interventions that policy
makers should prioritize to improve the public infrastructure with which
firms operate."
Underpinning research
Since the late 1990s, the World Bank, EBRD, and other international
organisations have been surveying companies around the world about the
quality of the business environment in which the companies operate and the
main constraints on growth that they face. As of August 2013, the
Enterprise Surveys project (http://www.enterprisesurveys.org/)
has collected data on approximately 130,000 firms in 135 countries. These
data are used by the World Bank and EBRD for conducting policy analysis;
they are also made available to the public.
Deriving robust and useful policy conclusions from these datasets faces
important challenges, however. The key problem is that what companies
identify as constraints depends not just on the constraints, but also on
the companies themselves. For example, a company might report that
corruption is not a problem because officials are honest. But it might
also report that corruption is not much of a problem because the company
is small, lossmaking firm that corrupt officials ignore because the
pickings are better elsewhere. This problem appears across the board for
the constraints measured in the Enterprise Surveys project, e.g., rapidly
growing companies will report bigger problems with electricity supplies
because they are growing rapidly and putting increased demands on the
electricity infrastructure, and not necessarily because the infrastructure
itself is very poor. While there are econometric methods that can be used
in a non-experimental setting to attempt to address this problem (e.g.,
instrumental variables), use of these estimators faced important obstacles
relating to data requirements that made employing these methods difficult
or impossible.
Mark Schaffer, working with Wendy Carlin (UCL) and Paul Seabright
(Toulouse), developed an alternative analytical framework for using these
data that does not have such stringent data requirements. In this
framework, responses of companies to questions about the constraints they
face on their operations are treated as "shadow prices" — in effect, as
valuations of the costs that these constraints impose on the companies.
These costs are predicted theoretically, and are shown empirically, to
vary systematically across companies in countries. Because the surveys
collect data on a range of public inputs provided by government
(electricity, transport links, customs, policing, courts, etc.), the
framework enables the identification of the most important public goods
for the state to improve, and provides an alternative to the laundry lists
of reforms often prescribed by international institutions and other policy
advisors for developing countries. The costs of constraints also vary
systematically across countries, and the framework enables the
cross-country ranking and comparison of the obstacles to company growth.
While originally developed as a policy-oriented tool for data analysis,
the framework also has academic and pure research applications; the
Carlin-Schaffer-Seabright economic history paper on the evaluation of the
legacy of decades of central planning is an example.
References to the research
[1] Wendy Carlin and Mark E. Schaffer, "The Business Environment in
the Transition", in Paul Hare and Gerard Turley (eds.), Handbook
of the Economics and Political Economy of Transition, Routledge
2013. Available on request.
[2] Wendy Carlin, Mark E. Schaffer and Paul Seabright, "Soviet power
plus electrification: what is the long-run legacy of communism?", Explorations
in Economic History, Vol. 50, No. 1, January 2013, pp. 116-47. DOI: 10.1016/j.eeh.2012.07.003
[3] Wendy Carlin and Mark E. Schaffer, "Understanding the business
environment in South Asia: evidence from firm-level surveys", Policy
Research Working Paper Series 6160, The World Bank, 2012. DOI: 10.1596/1813-9450-6160
[4] Wendy Carlin, Mark E. Schaffer and Paul Seabright, "A Framework
for Cross-Country Comparisons of Public Infrastructure Constraints on
Firm Growth", CEPR Discussion Paper 7662, 2010. http://www.cepr.org/pubs/dps/DP7662.asp
[5] Pradeep Mitra, Marcelo Selowsky and Juan Zalduendo, Turmoil at
Twenty: Recession, Recovery, and Reform in Central and Eastern Europe
and the Former Soviet Union, World Bank, 2009. Available on
request.
[6] Reema Nayar, Pablo Gottret, Pradeep Mitra, Gordon Betcherman, Yue Man
Lee, Indhira Santos, Mahesh Dahal, and Maheshwor Shrestha, More and
Better Jobs in South Asia, World Bank, 2012. Available
on request.
Details of the impact
The framework developed by Schaffer and colleagues has been used by the
EBRD and the World Bank in a series of policy analyses and publications,
framing localised responses to national issues. The framework provides
researchers and policymakers with tools for a data-based diagnostic of the
state of the business environment in their countries and for developing
strategies for reform. The EBRD values the fact that "the framework
that you proposed ... identifies interventions that policy makers should
prioritize to improve the public infrastructure within which firms
operate", and they regularly use the framework in their analyses of
the data collected in the joint EBRD-World Bank survey of companies, the
Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey (BEEPS).
The EBRD made extensive use of the framework developed by Schaffer and
colleagues in their EBRD Transition Report 2010, EBRD Transition Report
2012, and Diversifying Russia report. This work was done by the EBRD's
economics staff without the direct input of Schaffer et al. More recently,
Schaffer and Carlin have been working with the EBRD's Office of the Chief
Economist to quantify the impact of business environment constraints on
companies' costs. In order to do so, the EBRD has developed, with input
from Schaffer and Carlin, a series of follow-up questions on business
environment constraints and are currently implementing them in surveys of
thousands of companies in 30 countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia,
as well as in 10 countries in the Middle East and Northern Africa region.
EBRD's Office of the Chief Economist states, "A great advantage of the
framework you proposed is that it identifies interventions that
policy-makers should prioritize to improve the public infrastructure
with which firms operate. We have used a version of your framework in
analysing the results of BEEPS V Russia, which covered 37 Russian
regions, and we have presented them to a number of regional policy
makers in Russia in December 2012. ... Your work has had a significant
impact on the way we interpret the business environment constraints and
their use in policy dialogue, which we hope will improve the business
environment for the firms in the EBRD countries of operation." [S2]
In its Diversifying Russia report, the ERBD undertook a survey of 37 of
Russia's Regions with over 4,000 companies applying the framework
developed by Schaffer et al. The application of the framework in the
survey suggests that even neighbouring regions often have very different
profiles in terms of their business environments. For example, in the
Primorsky Region, where the Far Eastern seaport of Vladivostok is located,
companies perceive corruption, competition from the informal sector and
access to land to be the most important obstacles to doing business. By
contrast, in the neighbouring Khabarovsk Region, various aspects of
infrastructure appear to constrain local businesses most: transportation,
access to electricity and telecommunications (page 46).
The World Bank used the framework for two flagship reports. The first was
Turmoil at Twenty (2009), a twenty-year retrospective on the
experiences of economies of Central and Eastern Europe and the former USSR
since the collapse of communism in 1989-91 and the start of the transition
to market-based economies. The second was More and Better Jobs in
South Asia, a forward-looking evaluation of the labour markets of
the 8 economies in the World Bank's South Asia regional operations.
Schaffer and Carlin served as consultants for both reports, contributing
directly to the analysis and to drafting of portions of the reports. The
most important of the findings, as identified by the World Bank, that were
based on the framework developed by Schaffer and Carlin were that (a) in
the transition economies, physical infrastructure and labour market skills
during those twenty years had become significantly more severe constraints
to the operations of companies in transition countries compared to
non-transition countries at similar levels of per capita income; (b) in
the economies of South Asia, notwithstanding the notable diversity of
those countries, the top three constraints affecting the operations of
firms that had added jobs in South Asia were the lack of reliable
electricity supply, bribes paid to the utilities and tax authorities, and
political instability, and addressing these constraints should feature on
any agenda for job creation.
The World Bank's Chief Economist for the Europe and Central Asia Region
[S1] when the work for the first report was initiated was also a member of
the World Bank team that drafted the second report. He writes that "These
results emerged from a rigorous and imaginative application of the
framework developed by Mark Schaffer and his co-authors. They have had a
clear impact on the way World Bank economists working on these issues
think about the business environment."
Sources to corroborate the impact
[S1] Former World Bank Chief Economist for Europe and Central Asia will
confirm that he used the framework to analyse a complex set of statistics
for the World Bank and make recommendations for policy direction based on
the analysis. The work has had a clear impact on the way World Bank
economists working on these issues think about the business environment.
[S2] Office of the EBRD Chief Economist and Director of Research will
confirm that the framework is used to identify interventions that
policy-makers should prioritize to improve the public infrastructure with
which firms operate. The EBRD used a version the framework in analysing
the results of BEEPS V Russia.
[S3] http://www.ebrd.com/downloads/research/economics/publications/specials/diversifying-russia.pdf
In the ERBD report "Diversifying Russia", chapter 4, Improving The
Business Environment In Russia's Regions, describes the application
of the Schaffer et al's Framework for Cross-Country Comparisons of
Public Infrastructure Constraints on Firm Growth in Russia