Doing Business in Poland 2015 : Comparing Business Regulations for Domestic Firms in 18 Cities with 188 Other Economies
Poland’s economic growth over the last 25 years has been spectacular. In that period, Poland has more than doubled its income per capita and became a European growth champion. It was the only EU country to avoid a recession in 2009. Its current GDP...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Report |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2015
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25468655/doing-business-poland-2015-comparing-business-regulations-domestic-firms-18-cities http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23254 |
id |
okr-10986-23254 |
---|---|
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 |
LIVING STANDARDS TARIFFS PLEDGES DEPOSIT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK LIABILITY NO OBJECTION CERTIFICATES EQUIPMENT ACCOUNTING CHECKS WAREHOUSE DEPOSITS LIQUIDATION LOCAL ECONOMY MOVABLE ASSETS DEED STOCK CADASTRES INFORMATION SYSTEM DEBTORS INTEREST ENTRY REQUIREMENTS PROPERTY AS COLLATERAL JUSTICE SYSTEMS PROPERTY RIGHTS PRIVATE CREDIT OPTION EXCHANGE LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP CONSUMER GOODS NOTARY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BANK ACCOUNT DEBTOR REVENUES MARKET SIZE MORTGAGE BARRIER TO ENTRY LOAN CAPACITY BUILDING MINORITY INVESTORS TAX BUDGETING INFORMATION SYSTEMS CREDITORS INFLATION INTERNATIONAL BANK CREDITOR DISPUTE RESOLUTION CREDIBILITY BUDGET LAND POLICIES LIENS LAND PARCEL SMALL BUSINESS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY LEGAL FRAMEWORKS INTERNATIONAL FINANCE HUMAN RESOURCE LAND TITLING MORTGAGES COMMERCIAL CODE LEGAL RIGHT ENFORCEMENT OF CONTRACTS CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT CAPITAL GAINS PUBLIC FUNDS DEBTS CONTRACTS STAMP DUTY LOCAL BUSINESS FINANCES TAX REGIME REGISTRATION FEE TRADING OPTIONS MONETARY FUND MARKETS LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS DEBT BARRIERS TO ENTRY LOCAL GOVERNMENT CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS SETTLEMENT SALES AGREEMENT DEPOSIT INSURANCE COMPANY LAW REGISTRATION FEES LOANS SHARE VALUE NOTARIAL FEES RESERVES PUBLIC SALE GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT FINANCIAL SYSTEM DUE DILIGENCE WEALTH CREATION LEGAL FRAMEWORK FINANCE REGISTRY OFFICIALS BANK POLICY TAXES JUDICIAL SYSTEM TRANSACTIONS CADASTRE AUCTIONS NOTARIES EQUITY TRANSACTION INVESTORS GOOD INTERNATIONAL TRADE TRANSPARENCY MARKET CAPITALIZATION MINIMUM CAPITAL REQUIREMENT TURNOVER FUTURE MINIMUM CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS BUDGETS EXCHANGES DEBT COLLECTION NATIONAL INVESTMENT CONTRACT CAPITALIZATION PUBLIC ENFORCEMENT LAND PARCELS CREDIT INFORMATION PROPERTY ISSUANCE PROPERTIES LEGAL OWNERSHIP SHARES MARKET STAMP DUTIES INVESTMENT POLICY LEASE AGREEMENT TREASURY BANK ACCOUNTS CREDIT INFORMATION SYSTEM SHAREHOLDERS INSURANCE REFERENDA GOVERNMENT POLICIES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INTERESTS BANK LOAN GOODS INVESTOR SECURITY REGISTRATION SYSTEM INVESTMENT REGULATORY PRACTICE HUMAN RESOURCES SHARE CIVIL LAW IMMOVABLE PROPERTY INVESTMENT CLIMATE COLLATERAL PUBLIC FINANCES POVERTY NOTARY PUBLIC FINANCIAL INFORMATION JUDICIAL SYSTEMS DISCOUNTS CAPITAL REQUIREMENT REVENUE BAILIFF JUSTICE SYSTEM WAREHOUSES INVESTMENTS LENDING CHECK IMMOVABLE ASSETS SHAREHOLDER DEBT RECOVERY REGISTRATION SYSTEMS BAILIFFS PROFITS LIMITED LIABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEMS POST OFFICE STOCK EXCHANGES SMALL BUSINESSES GUARANTEE INCOME LEVEL REGISTRATION PROCESS TAX OBLIGATIONS MIDDLEMEN MICROENTERPRISES INVESTING INVESTMENT DECISION |
spellingShingle |
LIVING STANDARDS TARIFFS PLEDGES DEPOSIT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK LIABILITY NO OBJECTION CERTIFICATES EQUIPMENT ACCOUNTING CHECKS WAREHOUSE DEPOSITS LIQUIDATION LOCAL ECONOMY MOVABLE ASSETS DEED STOCK CADASTRES INFORMATION SYSTEM DEBTORS INTEREST ENTRY REQUIREMENTS PROPERTY AS COLLATERAL JUSTICE SYSTEMS PROPERTY RIGHTS PRIVATE CREDIT OPTION EXCHANGE LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP CONSUMER GOODS NOTARY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BANK ACCOUNT DEBTOR REVENUES MARKET SIZE MORTGAGE BARRIER TO ENTRY LOAN CAPACITY BUILDING MINORITY INVESTORS TAX BUDGETING INFORMATION SYSTEMS CREDITORS INFLATION INTERNATIONAL BANK CREDITOR DISPUTE RESOLUTION CREDIBILITY BUDGET LAND POLICIES LIENS LAND PARCEL SMALL BUSINESS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY LEGAL FRAMEWORKS INTERNATIONAL FINANCE HUMAN RESOURCE LAND TITLING MORTGAGES COMMERCIAL CODE LEGAL RIGHT ENFORCEMENT OF CONTRACTS CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT CAPITAL GAINS PUBLIC FUNDS DEBTS CONTRACTS STAMP DUTY LOCAL BUSINESS FINANCES TAX REGIME REGISTRATION FEE TRADING OPTIONS MONETARY FUND MARKETS LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS DEBT BARRIERS TO ENTRY LOCAL GOVERNMENT CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS SETTLEMENT SALES AGREEMENT DEPOSIT INSURANCE COMPANY LAW REGISTRATION FEES LOANS SHARE VALUE NOTARIAL FEES RESERVES PUBLIC SALE GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT FINANCIAL SYSTEM DUE DILIGENCE WEALTH CREATION LEGAL FRAMEWORK FINANCE REGISTRY OFFICIALS BANK POLICY TAXES JUDICIAL SYSTEM TRANSACTIONS CADASTRE AUCTIONS NOTARIES EQUITY TRANSACTION INVESTORS GOOD INTERNATIONAL TRADE TRANSPARENCY MARKET CAPITALIZATION MINIMUM CAPITAL REQUIREMENT TURNOVER FUTURE MINIMUM CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS BUDGETS EXCHANGES DEBT COLLECTION NATIONAL INVESTMENT CONTRACT CAPITALIZATION PUBLIC ENFORCEMENT LAND PARCELS CREDIT INFORMATION PROPERTY ISSUANCE PROPERTIES LEGAL OWNERSHIP SHARES MARKET STAMP DUTIES INVESTMENT POLICY LEASE AGREEMENT TREASURY BANK ACCOUNTS CREDIT INFORMATION SYSTEM SHAREHOLDERS INSURANCE REFERENDA GOVERNMENT POLICIES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INTERESTS BANK LOAN GOODS INVESTOR SECURITY REGISTRATION SYSTEM INVESTMENT REGULATORY PRACTICE HUMAN RESOURCES SHARE CIVIL LAW IMMOVABLE PROPERTY INVESTMENT CLIMATE COLLATERAL PUBLIC FINANCES POVERTY NOTARY PUBLIC FINANCIAL INFORMATION JUDICIAL SYSTEMS DISCOUNTS CAPITAL REQUIREMENT REVENUE BAILIFF JUSTICE SYSTEM WAREHOUSES INVESTMENTS LENDING CHECK IMMOVABLE ASSETS SHAREHOLDER DEBT RECOVERY REGISTRATION SYSTEMS BAILIFFS PROFITS LIMITED LIABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEMS POST OFFICE STOCK EXCHANGES SMALL BUSINESSES GUARANTEE INCOME LEVEL REGISTRATION PROCESS TAX OBLIGATIONS MIDDLEMEN MICROENTERPRISES INVESTING INVESTMENT DECISION World Bank Group Doing Business in Poland 2015 : Comparing Business Regulations for Domestic Firms in 18 Cities with 188 Other Economies |
geographic_facet |
Europe and Central Asia Poland |
description |
Poland’s economic growth over the last
25 years has been spectacular. In that period, Poland has
more than doubled its income per capita and became a
European growth champion. It was the only EU country to
avoid a recession in 2009. Its current GDP growth rate is
strong. Poland seems to be on the brink of its new ‘golden
age.’ Doing Business in Poland 2015 is the first subnational
report of the Doing Business series in Poland. It measures
business regulations and their enforcement from the
perspective of a small to medium-size domestic firm. The
idea is a simple one: if entrepreneurs spend fewer resources
on regulatory burdens, they will have more time to devote to
productive activities. If laws and regulations are clear,
accessible, and transparent and, at the same time,
enforceable before the courts, entrepreneurs will feel more
confident to do business with people they don’t know, and
expand their client and supplier network. The gap between
the 18 cities benchmarked is significant. By adopting
existing good practices found across the country in the four
areas measured by this report, Poland would rank 24th out of
189 economies globally, eight positions higher than Poland’s
current ranking according to Doing Business 2015, placing
the country ahead of France and the Netherlands. Promoting
convergence among regions and cities towards the top
performers and thus improving the ease of doing business in
the whole country is a challenge worth taking. |
format |
Report |
author |
World Bank Group |
author_facet |
World Bank Group |
author_sort |
World Bank Group |
title |
Doing Business in Poland 2015 : Comparing Business Regulations for Domestic Firms in 18 Cities with 188 Other Economies |
title_short |
Doing Business in Poland 2015 : Comparing Business Regulations for Domestic Firms in 18 Cities with 188 Other Economies |
title_full |
Doing Business in Poland 2015 : Comparing Business Regulations for Domestic Firms in 18 Cities with 188 Other Economies |
title_fullStr |
Doing Business in Poland 2015 : Comparing Business Regulations for Domestic Firms in 18 Cities with 188 Other Economies |
title_full_unstemmed |
Doing Business in Poland 2015 : Comparing Business Regulations for Domestic Firms in 18 Cities with 188 Other Economies |
title_sort |
doing business in poland 2015 : comparing business regulations for domestic firms in 18 cities with 188 other economies |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25468655/doing-business-poland-2015-comparing-business-regulations-domestic-firms-18-cities http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23254 |
_version_ |
1764453505239613440 |
spelling |
okr-10986-232542021-04-23T14:04:14Z Doing Business in Poland 2015 : Comparing Business Regulations for Domestic Firms in 18 Cities with 188 Other Economies World Bank Group LIVING STANDARDS TARIFFS PLEDGES DEPOSIT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK LIABILITY NO OBJECTION CERTIFICATES EQUIPMENT ACCOUNTING CHECKS WAREHOUSE DEPOSITS LIQUIDATION LOCAL ECONOMY MOVABLE ASSETS DEED STOCK CADASTRES INFORMATION SYSTEM DEBTORS INTEREST ENTRY REQUIREMENTS PROPERTY AS COLLATERAL JUSTICE SYSTEMS PROPERTY RIGHTS PRIVATE CREDIT OPTION EXCHANGE LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP CONSUMER GOODS NOTARY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BANK ACCOUNT DEBTOR REVENUES MARKET SIZE MORTGAGE BARRIER TO ENTRY LOAN CAPACITY BUILDING MINORITY INVESTORS TAX BUDGETING INFORMATION SYSTEMS CREDITORS INFLATION INTERNATIONAL BANK CREDITOR DISPUTE RESOLUTION CREDIBILITY BUDGET LAND POLICIES LIENS LAND PARCEL SMALL BUSINESS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY LEGAL FRAMEWORKS INTERNATIONAL FINANCE HUMAN RESOURCE LAND TITLING MORTGAGES COMMERCIAL CODE LEGAL RIGHT ENFORCEMENT OF CONTRACTS CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT CAPITAL GAINS PUBLIC FUNDS DEBTS CONTRACTS STAMP DUTY LOCAL BUSINESS FINANCES TAX REGIME REGISTRATION FEE TRADING OPTIONS MONETARY FUND MARKETS LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS DEBT BARRIERS TO ENTRY LOCAL GOVERNMENT CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS SETTLEMENT SALES AGREEMENT DEPOSIT INSURANCE COMPANY LAW REGISTRATION FEES LOANS SHARE VALUE NOTARIAL FEES RESERVES PUBLIC SALE GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT FINANCIAL SYSTEM DUE DILIGENCE WEALTH CREATION LEGAL FRAMEWORK FINANCE REGISTRY OFFICIALS BANK POLICY TAXES JUDICIAL SYSTEM TRANSACTIONS CADASTRE AUCTIONS NOTARIES EQUITY TRANSACTION INVESTORS GOOD INTERNATIONAL TRADE TRANSPARENCY MARKET CAPITALIZATION MINIMUM CAPITAL REQUIREMENT TURNOVER FUTURE MINIMUM CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS BUDGETS EXCHANGES DEBT COLLECTION NATIONAL INVESTMENT CONTRACT CAPITALIZATION PUBLIC ENFORCEMENT LAND PARCELS CREDIT INFORMATION PROPERTY ISSUANCE PROPERTIES LEGAL OWNERSHIP SHARES MARKET STAMP DUTIES INVESTMENT POLICY LEASE AGREEMENT TREASURY BANK ACCOUNTS CREDIT INFORMATION SYSTEM SHAREHOLDERS INSURANCE REFERENDA GOVERNMENT POLICIES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INTERESTS BANK LOAN GOODS INVESTOR SECURITY REGISTRATION SYSTEM INVESTMENT REGULATORY PRACTICE HUMAN RESOURCES SHARE CIVIL LAW IMMOVABLE PROPERTY INVESTMENT CLIMATE COLLATERAL PUBLIC FINANCES POVERTY NOTARY PUBLIC FINANCIAL INFORMATION JUDICIAL SYSTEMS DISCOUNTS CAPITAL REQUIREMENT REVENUE BAILIFF JUSTICE SYSTEM WAREHOUSES INVESTMENTS LENDING CHECK IMMOVABLE ASSETS SHAREHOLDER DEBT RECOVERY REGISTRATION SYSTEMS BAILIFFS PROFITS LIMITED LIABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEMS POST OFFICE STOCK EXCHANGES SMALL BUSINESSES GUARANTEE INCOME LEVEL REGISTRATION PROCESS TAX OBLIGATIONS MIDDLEMEN MICROENTERPRISES INVESTING INVESTMENT DECISION Poland’s economic growth over the last 25 years has been spectacular. In that period, Poland has more than doubled its income per capita and became a European growth champion. It was the only EU country to avoid a recession in 2009. Its current GDP growth rate is strong. Poland seems to be on the brink of its new ‘golden age.’ Doing Business in Poland 2015 is the first subnational report of the Doing Business series in Poland. It measures business regulations and their enforcement from the perspective of a small to medium-size domestic firm. The idea is a simple one: if entrepreneurs spend fewer resources on regulatory burdens, they will have more time to devote to productive activities. If laws and regulations are clear, accessible, and transparent and, at the same time, enforceable before the courts, entrepreneurs will feel more confident to do business with people they don’t know, and expand their client and supplier network. The gap between the 18 cities benchmarked is significant. By adopting existing good practices found across the country in the four areas measured by this report, Poland would rank 24th out of 189 economies globally, eight positions higher than Poland’s current ranking according to Doing Business 2015, placing the country ahead of France and the Netherlands. Promoting convergence among regions and cities towards the top performers and thus improving the ease of doing business in the whole country is a challenge worth taking. 2015-12-09T16:11:51Z 2015-12-09T16:11:51Z 2015-06 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25468655/doing-business-poland-2015-comparing-business-regulations-domestic-firms-18-cities http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23254 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Public Sector Study Economic & Sector Work :: Financial Sector Assessment Program Europe and Central Asia Poland |