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The Best Countries For Business

http://www.forbes.com/sites/kurtbadenhausen/2011/10/03/the-best-countries-for-business/


During the run-up to every U.S. presidential election, countless Americans threaten to move to Canada if their preferred candidate does not emerge victorious. Of course, few follow through with a move north. Maybe it is time to reconsider.

Canada ranks No. 1 in our annual look at the Best Countries for Business. While the U.S. is paralyzed by fears of a double-dip recession and Europe struggles with sovereign debt issues, Canada’s economy has held up better than most. The $1.6 trillion economy is the ninth biggest in the world and grew 3.1% last year. It is expected to expand 2.4% in 2011, according to the Royal Bank of Canada.


Canada skirted the banking meltdown that plagued the U.S. and Europe. Banks like Royal Bank of Canada, Bank of Nova Scotia and Bank of Montreal avoided bailouts and were profitable during the financial crises that started in 2007. Canadian banks emerged from the tumult among the strongest in the world thanks to their conservative lending practices.

Canada is the only country that ranks in the top 20 in 10 metrics that we considered to determine the Best Countries for Business (we factored in 11 overall). It ranks in the top five for both investor protection as well as lack of red tape, which measures how easy it is to start a business.

Canada moves up from No. 4 in last year’s ranking thanks to its improved tax standing. It ranks ninth overall for tax burden compared to No. 23 in 2010. Credit a reformed tax structure with a Harmonized Sales Tax introduced in Ontario and British Columbia in 2010. The goal is to make Canadian businesses more competitive. Canada’s tax status also improved thanks to reduced corporate and employee tax rates.

Canada leans on the U.S. economy heavily: it’s the biggest oil supplier to Uncle Sam and three-quarters of its exports end up in the U.S. each year. Yet while U.S. unemployment has stayed above 9%, it’s only 7.3% in Canada compared to the 25-year average of 8.5%. The eurozone unemployment rate is 10%.

We determined the Best Countries for Business by looking at 11 different factors for 134 countries. We considered property rights, innovation, taxes, technology, corruption, freedom (personal, trade and monetary), red tape, investor protection and stock market performance.
Forbes leaned on research and published reports from the Central Intelligence Agency, Freedom House, Heritage Foundation, Property Rights Alliance, Transparency International, the World Bank and World Economic Forum to compile the rankings.
Denmark dropped from the top spot in 2010 to No. 5 this year as its relative monetary freedom declined as measured by the Heritage Foundation. Denmark’s stock market also fell 14%, which was the worst performance of any of our top 10 countries. Four other European countries in last year’s top 20 also dropped in the rankings, with Finland sliding to No. 13, the Netherlands to No. 15 Netherlands, Germany to No. 21 and Iceland to No. 23.

The U.S. ranked No. 10, down from No. 9 in 2010. The world’s largest economy at $14.7 trillion continues to be one of the most innovative, ranking sixth in patents per capita among all countries (No.7 overall Sweden ranks tops for innovation).

What hurts the U.S. is its heavy tax burden. This year it surpassed Japan to have the highest corporate tax rate among developed countries. The U.S. also gets dinged for a poor showing on monetary freedom as measured by the Heritage Foundation. Heritage gauges price stability and price controls and the U.S. ranks No. 50 out of 134 countries.

Bringing up the rear are three countries where the economies are smaller than $10 billion. No. 132 Burundi, No. 133 Zimbabwe and No. 134 Chad all fare poorly when it comes to trade and monetary freedom as well as innovation and technology. Chad has the highest GDP per capita of the three at $1,600, but scores last among all countries on both corruption and red tape.

Full List: The Best Countries For Business
前英國殖民地香港華裔漢族加拿大藉人
"現在談愛國,那是愛誰的國...少數人的國,他們少數人去愛吧"

I agree that Canada is a business friendly place. Taxation and market size are the main concerning facts. However, taxation has kept improving along the years and population has been increasing as well.

I still miss the HST. It would be a huge plus to the BC's economy and ordinary families. However, the Liberal government screwed it up. If the Liberal could implement the reduction of HST 1% immediately and another 1% in 3 years. It could be a different situation now.

The old outdated taxation system should be reformed if Canada still wants to maintain on the top of the list.

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x2 about the HST , totally agree with u
前英國殖民地香港華裔漢族加拿大藉人
"現在談愛國,那是愛誰的國...少數人的國,他們少數人去愛吧"

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Diu,去中國做生意?中央同地方政府嘅政策朝令夕改,而中央同地方嘅指令亦成日自相矛盾對着幹。最大檸樂嘅係,政策、官場、同業界裡面嘅潛規則五花百門,往往就連行內人都唔知到幾時同點樣先至可以擺平件事。一陣阿爺一句嚴打,你無啦啦就特然由正當商人變成打擊對象。再唔係你生意做得好、做得大,跟住領導就會就來查你,然後你被PK、被拉落馬嘅機會就機乎係接近100%。

一個無制度、無法治、無公義嘅社會,中小商戶要做生意只有一個「難」字。

-力

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回復 5# Lik

In running a business there's such a factor called "relationship"... The big part is, can this override the law?

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吓???
不如咁講,你呢家入中國借到錢做生意先算~~~
S Internatsionalom
Vospryanet rod lyudskoy!

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喂,答我囉~~~知唔知呢家大陸銀行唔肯借錢俾中小企啫???
借唔到錢點做生意啫???????
S Internatsionalom
Vospryanet rod lyudskoy!

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回復  Lik

In running a business there's such a factor called "relationship"... The big part is, ca ...
lo_pak 發表於 2011-10-5 15:37



    Yes .. somehow ..  

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