Competing in the Global Economy : An Investment Climate Assessment for Uganda
Uganda's economic growth since the late 1980s has resulted largely from restoring and rehabilitating the country's productive capacity. Going forward, growth will need to come increasingly from new investments or new activities. That will...
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Format: | Investment Climate Assessment (ICA) |
Language: | English en_US |
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World Bank and International Finance Corporation, Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/08/6327150/competing-global-economy-investment-climate-assessment-uganda http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14416 |
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okr-10986-144162021-04-23T14:03:18Z Competing in the Global Economy : An Investment Climate Assessment for Uganda Cotton, Linda Ramachandran, Vijaya Leechor, Chad Marchat, Jean Michel Paton, John Shah, Manju Kedia Habyarimana, James Wong, Michael Kalema, William Ntale, Charles ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTING ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS AGRICULTURE ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY ANNUAL SALES APPROPRIATIONS BANK LOANS BANKING SECTOR BANKING SYSTEM BANKS BENCHMARKS BUDGET EXECUTION BUDGET MONITORING CAPACITY BUILDING CAPACITY UTILIZATION CAPITAL FLIGHT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL NEEDS CIVIL SERVICE COMPETITIVE MARKETS COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMERS COST OF CAPITAL CREDIT RATINGS CREDITWORTHINESS CROWDING OUT DEBT DEBT RELIEF DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DIVIDENDS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICIES ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC REFORM ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY GENERATION EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXCISE TAXES EXPENDITURES EXPORTS EXTERNALITIES FACTOR MARKETS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SERVICES FISCAL DISCIPLINE FISCAL POLICY FIXED ASSETS FOREIGN CAPITAL FOREIGN COMPANIES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS GDP GROWTH HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INEFFICIENCY INFLATION INSURANCE INTEREST RATES INVESTMENT INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT CLIMATE ASSESSMENT INVESTMENT CODE INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT INVESTMENT NEEDS INVESTMENT RATE INVESTMENT RATES INVESTOR CONFIDENCE LABOR COSTS LABOR FORCE LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOR UNIONS LARGE PUBLIC ENTERPRISES LAWS LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEGISLATION LICENSES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MATURITIES NATIONAL INCOME NEW ENTRANTS PENSIONS PER CAPITA INCOME PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENT PRIVATIZATION PRODUCERS PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PUBLIC PUBLIC ENTERPRISES PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SERVICE PURCHASING POWER QUALITY STANDARDS RATE OF INVESTMENT RATING SERVICES REAL GDP REGRESSION ANALYSIS REGULATORY BURDEN REGULATORY FRAMEWORK REGULATORY POLICY RESOURCE ALLOCATION RESOURCE MOBILIZATION ROADS SOCIAL SERVICES STRATEGIC INVESTORS TAX TAX ADMINISTRATION TAX CREDITS TAX LAWS TAX RATES TAXATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE BARRIERS TRADE CREDIT TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TREASURY TREASURY BILLS UTILITIES VALUE ADDED WAGE DIFFERENTIALS WAGES WASTE DISPOSAL WASTE DISPOSAL TAXES WEALTH WORKING CAPITAL Uganda's economic growth since the late 1980s has resulted largely from restoring and rehabilitating the country's productive capacity. Going forward, growth will need to come increasingly from new investments or new activities. That will require more investment, more intensive acquisition of know-how, and more complex collaboration between local and foreign partners. It will also require a far greater role for private sector investment. While Uganda has benefited enormously from development assistance for almost two decades, foreign aid may decline in the next decade. Indeed, Uganda must accelerate private sector investment and growth if it is to achieve the goals set out in its Poverty Eradication Action Plan. To reduce the poverty rate to 10 percent by 2017, GDP growth will have to exceed 7 percent a year, requiring an investment rate of 30 percent or more of GDP. Attaining these targets will be feasible only with reforms to promote private investment. 2013-07-09T16:12:47Z 2013-07-09T16:12:47Z 2004-08 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/08/6327150/competing-global-economy-investment-climate-assessment-uganda http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14416 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank and International Finance Corporation, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Investment Climate Assessment (ICA) Economic & Sector Work Africa Uganda |
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 |
ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTING ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS AGRICULTURE ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY ANNUAL SALES APPROPRIATIONS BANK LOANS BANKING SECTOR BANKING SYSTEM BANKS BENCHMARKS BUDGET EXECUTION BUDGET MONITORING CAPACITY BUILDING CAPACITY UTILIZATION CAPITAL FLIGHT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL NEEDS CIVIL SERVICE COMPETITIVE MARKETS COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMERS COST OF CAPITAL CREDIT RATINGS CREDITWORTHINESS CROWDING OUT DEBT DEBT RELIEF DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DIVIDENDS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICIES ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC REFORM ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY GENERATION EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXCISE TAXES EXPENDITURES EXPORTS EXTERNALITIES FACTOR MARKETS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SERVICES FISCAL DISCIPLINE FISCAL POLICY FIXED ASSETS FOREIGN CAPITAL FOREIGN COMPANIES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS GDP GROWTH HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INEFFICIENCY INFLATION INSURANCE INTEREST RATES INVESTMENT INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT CLIMATE ASSESSMENT INVESTMENT CODE INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT INVESTMENT NEEDS INVESTMENT RATE INVESTMENT RATES INVESTOR CONFIDENCE LABOR COSTS LABOR FORCE LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOR UNIONS LARGE PUBLIC ENTERPRISES LAWS LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEGISLATION LICENSES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MATURITIES NATIONAL INCOME NEW ENTRANTS PENSIONS PER CAPITA INCOME PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENT PRIVATIZATION PRODUCERS PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PUBLIC PUBLIC ENTERPRISES PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SERVICE PURCHASING POWER QUALITY STANDARDS RATE OF INVESTMENT RATING SERVICES REAL GDP REGRESSION ANALYSIS REGULATORY BURDEN REGULATORY FRAMEWORK REGULATORY POLICY RESOURCE ALLOCATION RESOURCE MOBILIZATION ROADS SOCIAL SERVICES STRATEGIC INVESTORS TAX TAX ADMINISTRATION TAX CREDITS TAX LAWS TAX RATES TAXATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE BARRIERS TRADE CREDIT TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TREASURY TREASURY BILLS UTILITIES VALUE ADDED WAGE DIFFERENTIALS WAGES WASTE DISPOSAL WASTE DISPOSAL TAXES WEALTH WORKING CAPITAL |
spellingShingle |
ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTING ACCOUNTING STANDARDS ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS AGRICULTURE ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY ANNUAL SALES APPROPRIATIONS BANK LOANS BANKING SECTOR BANKING SYSTEM BANKS BENCHMARKS BUDGET EXECUTION BUDGET MONITORING CAPACITY BUILDING CAPACITY UTILIZATION CAPITAL FLIGHT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL NEEDS CIVIL SERVICE COMPETITIVE MARKETS COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMERS COST OF CAPITAL CREDIT RATINGS CREDITWORTHINESS CROWDING OUT DEBT DEBT RELIEF DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DIVIDENDS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICIES ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC REFORM ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY GENERATION EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXCISE TAXES EXPENDITURES EXPORTS EXTERNALITIES FACTOR MARKETS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SERVICES FISCAL DISCIPLINE FISCAL POLICY FIXED ASSETS FOREIGN CAPITAL FOREIGN COMPANIES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS GDP GROWTH HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INEFFICIENCY INFLATION INSURANCE INTEREST RATES INVESTMENT INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT CLIMATE ASSESSMENT INVESTMENT CODE INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT INVESTMENT NEEDS INVESTMENT RATE INVESTMENT RATES INVESTOR CONFIDENCE LABOR COSTS LABOR FORCE LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOR UNIONS LARGE PUBLIC ENTERPRISES LAWS LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEGISLATION LICENSES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MATURITIES NATIONAL INCOME NEW ENTRANTS PENSIONS PER CAPITA INCOME PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENT PRIVATIZATION PRODUCERS PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PUBLIC PUBLIC ENTERPRISES PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SERVICE PURCHASING POWER QUALITY STANDARDS RATE OF INVESTMENT RATING SERVICES REAL GDP REGRESSION ANALYSIS REGULATORY BURDEN REGULATORY FRAMEWORK REGULATORY POLICY RESOURCE ALLOCATION RESOURCE MOBILIZATION ROADS SOCIAL SERVICES STRATEGIC INVESTORS TAX TAX ADMINISTRATION TAX CREDITS TAX LAWS TAX RATES TAXATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE BARRIERS TRADE CREDIT TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TREASURY TREASURY BILLS UTILITIES VALUE ADDED WAGE DIFFERENTIALS WAGES WASTE DISPOSAL WASTE DISPOSAL TAXES WEALTH WORKING CAPITAL Cotton, Linda Ramachandran, Vijaya Leechor, Chad Marchat, Jean Michel Paton, John Shah, Manju Kedia Habyarimana, James Wong, Michael Kalema, William Ntale, Charles Competing in the Global Economy : An Investment Climate Assessment for Uganda |
geographic_facet |
Africa Uganda |
description |
Uganda's economic growth since the
late 1980s has resulted largely from restoring and
rehabilitating the country's productive capacity. Going
forward, growth will need to come increasingly from new
investments or new activities. That will require more
investment, more intensive acquisition of know-how, and more
complex collaboration between local and foreign partners. It
will also require a far greater role for private sector
investment. While Uganda has benefited enormously from
development assistance for almost two decades, foreign aid
may decline in the next decade. Indeed, Uganda must
accelerate private sector investment and growth if it is to
achieve the goals set out in its Poverty Eradication Action
Plan. To reduce the poverty rate to 10 percent by 2017, GDP
growth will have to exceed 7 percent a year, requiring an
investment rate of 30 percent or more of GDP. Attaining
these targets will be feasible only with reforms to promote
private investment. |
format |
Economic & Sector Work :: Investment Climate Assessment (ICA) |
author |
Cotton, Linda Ramachandran, Vijaya Leechor, Chad Marchat, Jean Michel Paton, John Shah, Manju Kedia Habyarimana, James Wong, Michael Kalema, William Ntale, Charles |
author_facet |
Cotton, Linda Ramachandran, Vijaya Leechor, Chad Marchat, Jean Michel Paton, John Shah, Manju Kedia Habyarimana, James Wong, Michael Kalema, William Ntale, Charles |
author_sort |
Cotton, Linda |
title |
Competing in the Global Economy : An Investment Climate Assessment for Uganda |
title_short |
Competing in the Global Economy : An Investment Climate Assessment for Uganda |
title_full |
Competing in the Global Economy : An Investment Climate Assessment for Uganda |
title_fullStr |
Competing in the Global Economy : An Investment Climate Assessment for Uganda |
title_full_unstemmed |
Competing in the Global Economy : An Investment Climate Assessment for Uganda |
title_sort |
competing in the global economy : an investment climate assessment for uganda |
publisher |
World Bank and International Finance Corporation, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/08/6327150/competing-global-economy-investment-climate-assessment-uganda http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14416 |
_version_ |
1764429057904082944 |