Finance & economics | Global red tape

The World Bank’s business-rankings mess

The data may have been fiddled

RUNNING A BUSINESS is hard in many parts of the world. So the World Bank gives governments an incentive to make it easier, and ranks them according to where the burden of regulation is lightest. This year, though, its Doing Business (DB) index has itself been ensnared in procedural problems. On August 27th the Bank said that publication of the next set of rankings would be delayed. It comes in a year when, The Economist understands, China was going to be ranked one of the biggest improvers. On that the Bank had no comment.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Unease of Doing Business”

America’s ugly election: How bad could it get?

From the September 5th 2020 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Stacks of gold, silver and bronze coins that look like a sports podium

Which economy did best in 2024?

We rank countries on five measures

Citizens read books at the Gifu Central Library in Gifu, Japan.

Are adults forgetting how to read?

A survey by the OECD suggests a worrying decline in literacy


Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event with the words 'Drill Baby Drill' on a screen behind him, in Philadelphia, USA.

How much oil can Trump pump?

The president-elect wants to be the ultimate energy baron


The hidden cost of Chinese loans

Governments that borrow from China must pay more to borrow from others

Xi Jinping’s campaign against gambling is a failure

Chinese citizens go to great lengths to bet

How sports gambling became ubiquitous

Europe is at the centre of the industry’s growth