Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Counting the cost of red tape for business in South Africa Reflections on the 2004-5 study for GTZ BIC Reform Seminar 22-25 May 2006 b lc f BUS INESS LINK AGES challe nge fund Presentation structure • • • • Background Key survey results Project outcomes Survey methodology • Mistakes • Good ideas • Project methodology Background • Project emerged from SBP’s ‘regulatory best practice’ agenda • Mounting evidence that regulatory reform makes a major contribution to growth and development • But: – What precisely to reform? – How to get regulatory reform onto national agenda? • Largely inspired by OECD studies • Funded by BLCF & ComMark (DFID) and FNS Key results • Three key results • Firms think regulatory compliance costs are a major barrier • Regulatory costs are regressive • The BIG number • Examples of useful detail – Costs by type of regulation – Costs by sector Factors inhibiting business growth Factors inhibiting business growth No wish to expand Not inhibited other <1% each Cheap Imports Corruption Confidence Discrimination Employee quality Rand strength State competence Crime Unfair competition Operating costs Skills constraints Capital cost/access Labour problems State Interface, Regulations Weakness in economy/demand 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Percentage of Respondents 35 40 45 Compliance costs as a percentage of turnover Annual Regulatory Compliance Cost as a Percentage of Turnover 9% 8% 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% < R1 m R1m-R5m R5mR10m R10mR25m R25m- R100m- R500m- R1bn + R100m R500m R1bn Annual Turnover Total regulatory compliance costs for South Africa, 2004 • Total compliance costs were R79 billion = US$11 billion in 2004 • 6.5% of GDP • 2.8% of total sales in 2003 • 16% of the total wage bill in 2003 • 28% of tax revenue (2002/2003) International comparisons • Regulatory costs as % of GDP: –SA = 6.5% of GDP – Sweden = 2.2% – Australia = 3% – Bulgaria= 5% Useful detail Breakdown of Recurring Compliance Costs Tax Compliance 26% Additional/Sector Regulations 21% Local Government Regulations 6% Information to Government 8% Labour and Employment 17% Employment Equity/BEE 12% Annual Registration 9% Useful detail Compliance Costs as a percentage of turnover: main sample and tourism 16% 14% 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% <R1m R1<R5m R5<R10m R10<R25m Main Sample R25<R100m Tourism R100<R500m R500m<R1bn >R1bn Project Outcomes • Much higher national profile for ‘red tape’ costs • Contribution to highest-level official commitment to ‘lowering costs of doing business’ • Contribution to momentum towards introduction of Regulatory Impact Assessment • Sectoral work: – Analysis of sector-specific regulatory burden for Presidency (using same data) – Current project on regulatory costs for tourism: the ‘new gold.’ • Etc… (Middleburg; AmCham; Tanzania; Kenya; SARF) Survey methodology • Survey February-June 2004 • 1794 businesses throughout South Africa • 1140 formal sector enterprises in a representative sample ranging from largest corporations to smallest SMEs • 6 purposive sector surveys: agri-processing, automotive, clothing and textiles, ICT, pharmaceuticals, tourism (240 in total) • 150 informal enterprises (different questionnaire) Survey methodology • Extremely simple questionnaire – What kind of firm are you? – Which regulations are most troublesome? – How much do regulations cost to comply with by broad type of regulation, including your staff time and service provider time? • Very challenging survey to do: – Big scale – Approach firm; explain purpose; set up interview; do interview(s); (re-schedule); call-backs etc – Expensive – 4 times more expensive than an opinion survey Survey methodology • Mistakes – T/O and employment – still not sure about this – A lot of wasted effort trying to weight the sample although business size distribution not known – We thought regions would matter more and sectors less – seriously wrong; sector samples too small – Needed more detail on sector-specific regulations • Good ideas – Representative national sample – Budgeting for persistence – Separate informal sample with even simpler questionnaire and focus on costs of non-compliance (e.g. finance and storage issues, damage from police raids, bribery) Project methodology • Place results in relevant contexts – for instance: – International comparisons – International thinking on types of regulatory costs (compliance costs, administrative costs, efficiency costs, noncompliance costs) – International thinking on managing regulatory costs (RIA, regulatory budgeting, regulatory review, competition-based approaches etc) – Regulatory costs and development • Brief government fully in advance of media release • Regulatory costs are boring – – – – Have a big headline Be a little bit ‘populist’ Make boring a strength Handle own media coverage Insert cartoon