Cape Verde Investment Climate Assessment

Cape Verde is a small country with a population of about 472,000 people spread over nine islands in a ten-island archipelago. It is more developed that most other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. Its per capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Investment Climate Assessment (ICA)
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
GDP
M2
NPL
SME
TAX
WTO
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/03/16597667/cape-verde-investment-climate-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12305
id okr-10986-12305
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCESS TO FINANCING
ACCOUNTING
AGRICULTURE
AMOUNT OF CAPITAL
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
BANK FINANCING
BANK LOANS
BANKING SYSTEM
BANKS
BENCHMARK
BENCHMARKING
BOOK VALUE
BUDGET DEFICIT
BUSINESS COMMUNITY
CAPITAL STOCK
COMPANY
COMPETITIVENESS
COMPETITORS
CONSTANT RETURNS TO SCALE
CORPORATE TAX RATE
COUNTRY COMPARISONS
CREDIBILITY
CURRENCY
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICITS
DEBT
DEFICITS
DEPOSIT
DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS
DEPOSITS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIVERSIFICATION
DOMESTIC BANKING
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC MARKETS
DUMMY VARIABLE
DUMMY VARIABLES
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC REFORM
ECONOMIC SITUATION
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EFFICIENCY WAGE THEORIES
ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT
ENTERPRISE OPERATIONS
ENTERPRISE PERFORMANCE
ENTERPRISE SIZE
EQUIPMENT
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATE INSTABILITY
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
EXPORTER
EXPORTERS
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL SERVICES
FIRM PERFORMANCE
FIRM SIZE
FIRMS
FISCAL DEFICIT
FIXED COSTS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN EXCHANGES
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GOVERNMENT DEFICIT
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATE
HOST COUNTRIES
HUMAN CAPITAL
INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INEFFICIENCY
INFLATION
INSURANCE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL MARKET
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
INTERNATIONAL RESERVES
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS
LABOR COSTS
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LABOR POLICIES
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
LABOR REGULATIONS
LARGE ENTERPRISES
LEGAL SYSTEM
LICENSING
LOCAL MARKET
LOCAL MARKETS
M2
MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY
MACROECONOMIC POLICY
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISE
MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISES
MARKET RETURNS
MARKET SHARE
MARKET SHARES
MICROENTERPRISES
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY
MIGRATION
MONETARY FUND
NON-PERFORMING LOAN
NPL
OIL PRICES
OVERDRAFT FACILITIES
OVERDRAFT FACILITY
PARTY
PER CAPITA INCOME
PERFECT COMPETITION
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATE INVESTMENTS
PRIVATIZATION
PRODUCTION COSTS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC DEBT
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PUBLIC SERVICES
PURCHASING POWER
REGULATORY REFORM
REMITTANCE
REMITTANCES
RESERVE
RETAINED EARNINGS
RETURN
RETURNS
SELF-FINANCE
SHORT-TERM ASSETS
SIZE OF FIRMS
SKILLED WORKERS
SMALL ENTERPRISE
SMALL ENTERPRISES
SMALL FIRM
SMALL FIRMS
SME
SUPPLIER
SUPPLIERS
TARIFF BARRIERS
TAX
TAX POLICY
TAX RATES
TAX SYSTEMS
TAXATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADE BALANCE
TRADE DEFICIT
TRADE POLICY
TRADE REGIME
TRANSPORT
UNDERESTIMATES
UNEMPLOYED
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNFAIR COMPETITION
VALUE ADDED
WAGE STRUCTURE
WAGES
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
WTO
spellingShingle ACCESS TO FINANCING
ACCOUNTING
AGRICULTURE
AMOUNT OF CAPITAL
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
BANK FINANCING
BANK LOANS
BANKING SYSTEM
BANKS
BENCHMARK
BENCHMARKING
BOOK VALUE
BUDGET DEFICIT
BUSINESS COMMUNITY
CAPITAL STOCK
COMPANY
COMPETITIVENESS
COMPETITORS
CONSTANT RETURNS TO SCALE
CORPORATE TAX RATE
COUNTRY COMPARISONS
CREDIBILITY
CURRENCY
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICITS
DEBT
DEFICITS
DEPOSIT
DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS
DEPOSITS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIVERSIFICATION
DOMESTIC BANKING
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC MARKETS
DUMMY VARIABLE
DUMMY VARIABLES
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC REFORM
ECONOMIC SITUATION
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EFFICIENCY WAGE THEORIES
ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT
ENTERPRISE OPERATIONS
ENTERPRISE PERFORMANCE
ENTERPRISE SIZE
EQUIPMENT
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATE INSTABILITY
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
EXPORTER
EXPORTERS
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL SERVICES
FIRM PERFORMANCE
FIRM SIZE
FIRMS
FISCAL DEFICIT
FIXED COSTS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN EXCHANGES
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GOVERNMENT DEFICIT
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATE
HOST COUNTRIES
HUMAN CAPITAL
INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INEFFICIENCY
INFLATION
INSURANCE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL MARKET
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
INTERNATIONAL RESERVES
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS
LABOR COSTS
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKET
LABOR MARKETS
LABOR POLICIES
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
LABOR REGULATIONS
LARGE ENTERPRISES
LEGAL SYSTEM
LICENSING
LOCAL MARKET
LOCAL MARKETS
M2
MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY
MACROECONOMIC POLICY
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISE
MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISES
MARKET RETURNS
MARKET SHARE
MARKET SHARES
MICROENTERPRISES
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY
MIGRATION
MONETARY FUND
NON-PERFORMING LOAN
NPL
OIL PRICES
OVERDRAFT FACILITIES
OVERDRAFT FACILITY
PARTY
PER CAPITA INCOME
PERFECT COMPETITION
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATE INVESTMENTS
PRIVATIZATION
PRODUCTION COSTS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC DEBT
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PUBLIC SERVICES
PURCHASING POWER
REGULATORY REFORM
REMITTANCE
REMITTANCES
RESERVE
RETAINED EARNINGS
RETURN
RETURNS
SELF-FINANCE
SHORT-TERM ASSETS
SIZE OF FIRMS
SKILLED WORKERS
SMALL ENTERPRISE
SMALL ENTERPRISES
SMALL FIRM
SMALL FIRMS
SME
SUPPLIER
SUPPLIERS
TARIFF BARRIERS
TAX
TAX POLICY
TAX RATES
TAX SYSTEMS
TAXATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADE BALANCE
TRADE DEFICIT
TRADE POLICY
TRADE REGIME
TRANSPORT
UNDERESTIMATES
UNEMPLOYED
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNFAIR COMPETITION
VALUE ADDED
WAGE STRUCTURE
WAGES
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
WTO
World Bank
Cape Verde Investment Climate Assessment
geographic_facet Africa
Cape Verde
description Cape Verde is a small country with a population of about 472,000 people spread over nine islands in a ten-island archipelago. It is more developed that most other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. Its per capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita is US$5,715 in purchasing power parity (PPP) adjusted terms in 2004. The economy is dominated by the service sector, which accounted for about 75.5 percent of GDP in 2005. As a small island economy, Cape Verde is heavily dependent upon external economies. Remittances and foreign aid are important sources of capital and the economy is heavily dependent upon imports for much of its consumption and investment. Recent growth in the tourism sector has further increased Cape Verde's integration into the world economy. The main sources of information for the Investment Climate Assessment (ICA) are two surveys carried out in Cape Verde in March and April 2006. Both surveys were conducted in two locations, Praia and Mindelo. The first survey, the Investment Climate Survey (ICS), covered formal enterprises with over five employees in manufacturing, retail trade, construction, and other services. Firms were randomly selected from lists provided by the National Institute of Statistics (INE). The second survey, the Microenterprise Investment Climate Survey (MICS), covered Microenterprises in the same sectors. Firms in this sample were selected randomly in prescribed areas of the cities. This approach means that the survey will cover both registered and unregistered microenterprises. Because the two surveys were sampled using different methodologies and because there is no way to weight the firms in the two samples they are not pooled in the analysis.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Investment Climate Assessment (ICA)
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Cape Verde Investment Climate Assessment
title_short Cape Verde Investment Climate Assessment
title_full Cape Verde Investment Climate Assessment
title_fullStr Cape Verde Investment Climate Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Cape Verde Investment Climate Assessment
title_sort cape verde investment climate assessment
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/03/16597667/cape-verde-investment-climate-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12305
_version_ 1764422068506460160
spelling okr-10986-123052021-04-23T14:03:05Z Cape Verde Investment Climate Assessment World Bank ACCESS TO FINANCING ACCOUNTING AGRICULTURE AMOUNT OF CAPITAL BALANCE OF PAYMENTS BANK FINANCING BANK LOANS BANKING SYSTEM BANKS BENCHMARK BENCHMARKING BOOK VALUE BUDGET DEFICIT BUSINESS COMMUNITY CAPITAL STOCK COMPANY COMPETITIVENESS COMPETITORS CONSTANT RETURNS TO SCALE CORPORATE TAX RATE COUNTRY COMPARISONS CREDIBILITY CURRENCY CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICITS DEBT DEFICITS DEPOSIT DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS DEPOSITS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DIVERSIFICATION DOMESTIC BANKING DOMESTIC MARKET DOMESTIC MARKETS DUMMY VARIABLE DUMMY VARIABLES ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC REFORM ECONOMIC SITUATION ECONOMIES OF SCALE EFFICIENCY WAGE THEORIES ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT ENTERPRISE OPERATIONS ENTERPRISE PERFORMANCE ENTERPRISE SIZE EQUIPMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATE INSTABILITY EXCHANGE RATES EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXPORT PERFORMANCE EXPORTER EXPORTERS EXPORTS EXTERNAL DEBT FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT FINANCIAL SERVICES FIRM PERFORMANCE FIRM SIZE FIRMS FISCAL DEFICIT FIXED COSTS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN EXCHANGES FOREIGN INVESTMENT GDP GDP PER CAPITA GOVERNMENT DEFICIT GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS GOVERNMENT SPENDING GOVERNMENT SUPPORT GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH RATE HOST COUNTRIES HUMAN CAPITAL INCOME INCOME DISTRIBUTION INEFFICIENCY INFLATION INSURANCE INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL MARKET INTERNATIONAL MARKETS INTERNATIONAL RESERVES INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS LABOR COSTS LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET LABOR MARKETS LABOR POLICIES LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOR REGULATIONS LARGE ENTERPRISES LEGAL SYSTEM LICENSING LOCAL MARKET LOCAL MARKETS M2 MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY MACROECONOMIC POLICY MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISE MANUFACTURING ENTERPRISES MARKET RETURNS MARKET SHARE MARKET SHARES MICROENTERPRISES MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY MIGRATION MONETARY FUND NON-PERFORMING LOAN NPL OIL PRICES OVERDRAFT FACILITIES OVERDRAFT FACILITY PARTY PER CAPITA INCOME PERFECT COMPETITION PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE INVESTMENTS PRIVATIZATION PRODUCTION COSTS PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC DEBT PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SERVICES PURCHASING POWER REGULATORY REFORM REMITTANCE REMITTANCES RESERVE RETAINED EARNINGS RETURN RETURNS SELF-FINANCE SHORT-TERM ASSETS SIZE OF FIRMS SKILLED WORKERS SMALL ENTERPRISE SMALL ENTERPRISES SMALL FIRM SMALL FIRMS SME SUPPLIER SUPPLIERS TARIFF BARRIERS TAX TAX POLICY TAX RATES TAX SYSTEMS TAXATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE BALANCE TRADE DEFICIT TRADE POLICY TRADE REGIME TRANSPORT UNDERESTIMATES UNEMPLOYED UNEMPLOYMENT UNFAIR COMPETITION VALUE ADDED WAGE STRUCTURE WAGES WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION WTO Cape Verde is a small country with a population of about 472,000 people spread over nine islands in a ten-island archipelago. It is more developed that most other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. Its per capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita is US$5,715 in purchasing power parity (PPP) adjusted terms in 2004. The economy is dominated by the service sector, which accounted for about 75.5 percent of GDP in 2005. As a small island economy, Cape Verde is heavily dependent upon external economies. Remittances and foreign aid are important sources of capital and the economy is heavily dependent upon imports for much of its consumption and investment. Recent growth in the tourism sector has further increased Cape Verde's integration into the world economy. The main sources of information for the Investment Climate Assessment (ICA) are two surveys carried out in Cape Verde in March and April 2006. Both surveys were conducted in two locations, Praia and Mindelo. The first survey, the Investment Climate Survey (ICS), covered formal enterprises with over five employees in manufacturing, retail trade, construction, and other services. Firms were randomly selected from lists provided by the National Institute of Statistics (INE). The second survey, the Microenterprise Investment Climate Survey (MICS), covered Microenterprises in the same sectors. Firms in this sample were selected randomly in prescribed areas of the cities. This approach means that the survey will cover both registered and unregistered microenterprises. Because the two surveys were sampled using different methodologies and because there is no way to weight the firms in the two samples they are not pooled in the analysis. 2013-02-11T20:56:14Z 2013-02-11T20:56:14Z 2007-03-01 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/03/16597667/cape-verde-investment-climate-assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12305 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Investment Climate Assessment (ICA) Economic & Sector Work Africa Cape Verde