Business Registration Reform Case Study : Norway

Sustainable economic growth and reduction of poverty require a suitable framework of good governance. A register solution that works efficiently and offers reliable business information is an essential part of such a framework. To ensure efficiency...

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Main Author: International Finance Corporation
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/344371542776270745/Norway-Business-Registration-Reform-Case-Study
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31026
id okr-10986-31026
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-310262021-04-23T14:05:00Z Business Registration Reform Case Study : Norway International Finance Corporation SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT REGISTRATION REGULATION PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT TAXATION Sustainable economic growth and reduction of poverty require a suitable framework of good governance. A register solution that works efficiently and offers reliable business information is an essential part of such a framework. To ensure efficiency and simplification in business start-ups, a well-functioning register solution has several beneficial effects. It encourages entrepreneurship, improves access to loans, generates more jobs, makes it easier to comply with rules, and reduces administrative burdens, thus increasing productivity. In a broader perspective, this helps attract investors, boost the economy in general, and reduce poverty. Implementation of good governance has revealed a general need to enhance transparency and integrity standards in public administrations and private entities. Availability of official, high-quality business information is crucial in this context. By granting the legal identity of a business, most register solutions go a step further. In doing so, they increase the predictability of economic interaction and provide contractual partners with core protection against abuse. This also reduces the costs of resolving disputes and leads to greater judicial fairness because of faster contract enforcement. Moreover, improved transparency contributes to more effective tracing of financial crime and therefore constitutes a means to prevent and discourage financial crime in general. In the Norwegian register solution, the aim of enhancing transparency is strongly interlinked with the objective of using public business information efficiently and reducing reporting obligations for businesses. Information sharing is an important building block in this strategy. This case study describes how reforms aimed at simplifying and streamlining business registration were implemented in Norway. It is based on desk research and interviews. 2018-12-19T16:51:17Z 2018-12-19T16:51:17Z 2011-09 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/344371542776270745/Norway-Business-Registration-Reform-Case-Study http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31026 English CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Investment Climate Assessment Economic & Sector Work Norway
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
REGISTRATION
REGULATION
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
TAXATION
spellingShingle SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
REGISTRATION
REGULATION
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
TAXATION
International Finance Corporation
Business Registration Reform Case Study : Norway
geographic_facet Norway
description Sustainable economic growth and reduction of poverty require a suitable framework of good governance. A register solution that works efficiently and offers reliable business information is an essential part of such a framework. To ensure efficiency and simplification in business start-ups, a well-functioning register solution has several beneficial effects. It encourages entrepreneurship, improves access to loans, generates more jobs, makes it easier to comply with rules, and reduces administrative burdens, thus increasing productivity. In a broader perspective, this helps attract investors, boost the economy in general, and reduce poverty. Implementation of good governance has revealed a general need to enhance transparency and integrity standards in public administrations and private entities. Availability of official, high-quality business information is crucial in this context. By granting the legal identity of a business, most register solutions go a step further. In doing so, they increase the predictability of economic interaction and provide contractual partners with core protection against abuse. This also reduces the costs of resolving disputes and leads to greater judicial fairness because of faster contract enforcement. Moreover, improved transparency contributes to more effective tracing of financial crime and therefore constitutes a means to prevent and discourage financial crime in general. In the Norwegian register solution, the aim of enhancing transparency is strongly interlinked with the objective of using public business information efficiently and reducing reporting obligations for businesses. Information sharing is an important building block in this strategy. This case study describes how reforms aimed at simplifying and streamlining business registration were implemented in Norway. It is based on desk research and interviews.
format Report
author International Finance Corporation
author_facet International Finance Corporation
author_sort International Finance Corporation
title Business Registration Reform Case Study : Norway
title_short Business Registration Reform Case Study : Norway
title_full Business Registration Reform Case Study : Norway
title_fullStr Business Registration Reform Case Study : Norway
title_full_unstemmed Business Registration Reform Case Study : Norway
title_sort business registration reform case study : norway
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/344371542776270745/Norway-Business-Registration-Reform-Case-Study
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31026
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