Public-Private Dialogue in Business Regulation Reform : A Case Study on PEMUDAH

Traditionally, government and business had few incentives to actively collaborate. For the most part, government regulated business, and business lobbied government on areas of economic interest. When partnerships did occur, they were usually under...

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Main Authors: Kuriakose, Smita, Eknath, Varun
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/252321592424170095/Public-Private-Dialogue-in-Business-Regulation-Reform-Case-Study-of-PEMUDAH
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33937
id okr-10986-33937
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-339372021-09-22T05:10:43Z Public-Private Dialogue in Business Regulation Reform : A Case Study on PEMUDAH Kuriakose, Smita Eknath, Varun PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT REGULATORY REFORM SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES INVESTMENT CLIMATE Traditionally, government and business had few incentives to actively collaborate. For the most part, government regulated business, and business lobbied government on areas of economic interest. When partnerships did occur, they were usually undertaken to invest in large infrastructure projects through formal contractual agreements (Rosenbaum, L., Van Buren, E. and Mennel, J., 2013). With the growing complexity and diversity of socio-economic challenges, the nature of public-private collaborations has seen a fundamental change. Both sides realized that business problems are now government problems—and vice versa—and both are proactively intensifying new approaches to forging partnerships at the highest levels. Consequently, public-private dialogues (PPD) as a form of institutional arrangements have been pivotal in stimulating reform activity and improving a country's investment climate. Against this backdrop, this study explores the key tenets of successful public-private dialogues and its importance in the overall development of an economy in its first chapter. This chapter also seeks to study the various challenges associated with PPDs to caution against their poor administration and consequent threat to diminish the anticipated public good. 2020-06-18T14:30:44Z 2020-06-18T14:30:44Z 2020-05 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/252321592424170095/Public-Private-Dialogue-in-Business-Regulation-Reform-Case-Study-of-PEMUDAH http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33937 English The Malaysian Development Experience; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research East Asia and Pacific Malaysia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
REGULATORY REFORM
SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
spellingShingle PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
REGULATORY REFORM
SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
Kuriakose, Smita
Eknath, Varun
Public-Private Dialogue in Business Regulation Reform : A Case Study on PEMUDAH
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Malaysia
relation The Malaysian Development Experience;
description Traditionally, government and business had few incentives to actively collaborate. For the most part, government regulated business, and business lobbied government on areas of economic interest. When partnerships did occur, they were usually undertaken to invest in large infrastructure projects through formal contractual agreements (Rosenbaum, L., Van Buren, E. and Mennel, J., 2013). With the growing complexity and diversity of socio-economic challenges, the nature of public-private collaborations has seen a fundamental change. Both sides realized that business problems are now government problems—and vice versa—and both are proactively intensifying new approaches to forging partnerships at the highest levels. Consequently, public-private dialogues (PPD) as a form of institutional arrangements have been pivotal in stimulating reform activity and improving a country's investment climate. Against this backdrop, this study explores the key tenets of successful public-private dialogues and its importance in the overall development of an economy in its first chapter. This chapter also seeks to study the various challenges associated with PPDs to caution against their poor administration and consequent threat to diminish the anticipated public good.
format Report
author Kuriakose, Smita
Eknath, Varun
author_facet Kuriakose, Smita
Eknath, Varun
author_sort Kuriakose, Smita
title Public-Private Dialogue in Business Regulation Reform : A Case Study on PEMUDAH
title_short Public-Private Dialogue in Business Regulation Reform : A Case Study on PEMUDAH
title_full Public-Private Dialogue in Business Regulation Reform : A Case Study on PEMUDAH
title_fullStr Public-Private Dialogue in Business Regulation Reform : A Case Study on PEMUDAH
title_full_unstemmed Public-Private Dialogue in Business Regulation Reform : A Case Study on PEMUDAH
title_sort public-private dialogue in business regulation reform : a case study on pemudah
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/252321592424170095/Public-Private-Dialogue-in-Business-Regulation-Reform-Case-Study-of-PEMUDAH
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33937
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