58470 Congo, Rep. © 2010 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW Washington, DC 20433 Telephone 202-473-1000 Internet www.worldbank.org All rights reserved. 1 2 3 4 08 07 06 05 A copublication of The World Bank and the International Finance Corporation. This volume is a product of the staff of the World Bank Group. The findings, interpretations and conclusions expressed in this volume do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. Rights and Permissions The material in this publication is copyrighted. Copying and/or transmitting portions or all of this work without permission may be a violation of applicable law. The World Bank encourages dissemination of its work and will normally grant permission to reproduce portions of the work promptly. 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ISBN: 978-0-8213-7960-8 E-ISBN: 978-0-8213-8630-9 DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-7960-8 ISSN: 1729-2638 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data has been applied for. Printed in the United States Current features News on the Doing Business project http://www.doingbusiness.org Rankings How economies rank-from 1 to 183 http://www.doingbusiness.org/rankings/ Contents Reformers Short summaries of DB2011 reforms, lists of reformers since DB2004 Introduction and a ranking simulation tool and Aggregate Rankings http://www.doingbusiness.org/reforms/ 5 - Year Measure of Historical data Cumulative Change Customized data sets since DB2004 http://www.doingbusiness.org/custom-query/ Starting a Business Methodology and research Dealing with The methodologies and research papers underlying Doing Business Construction Permits http://www.doingbusiness.org/Methodology/ Registering Property Download reports Access to Doing Business reports as well as subnational and regional Getting Credit reports, reform case studies and customized country and regional profiles Protecting Investors http://www.doingbusiness.org/reports/ Paying Taxes Subnational and regional projects Differences in business regulations at the subnational and regional Trading Across Borders level http://www.doingbusiness.org/subnational-reports/ Enforcing Contracts Law Library Closing a Business Online collection of business laws and regulations relating to business and gender issues Doing Business 2011 http://www.doingbusiness.org/law-library/ Business Reforms http://wbl.worldbank.org/ Local partners More than 8,200 specialists in 183 economies who participate in Doing Business http://www.doingbusiness.org/Local-Partners/Doing-Business/ Business Planet Interactive map on the ease of doing business http://rru.worldbank.org/businessplanet Doing Business 2011 : Making a Difference for Entrepreneurs is the eighth in a series of annual reports investigating regulations that enhance business activity and those that constrain it. Doing Business presents quantitative indicators on business regulations and the protection of property rights that can be compared across 183 economies, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, over time. A set of regulations affecting 9 stages of a business's life are measured: starting a business, dealing with construction permits, registering property, getting credit, protecting investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and closing a business. Data in Doing Business 2011 are current as of June 1, 2010*. The indicators are used to analyze economic outcomes and identify what reforms have worked, where, and why. The Doing Business methodology has limitations. Other areas important to business such as an economy 's proximity to large markets, the quality of its infrastructure services (other than those related to trading across borders), the security of property from theft and looting, the transparency of government procurement, macroeconomic conditions or the underlying strength of institutions, are not studied directly by Doing Business. To make the data comparable across economies, the indicators refer to a specific type of business, generally a local limited liability company operating in the largest business city. Because standard assumptions are used in the data collection, comparisons and benchmarks are valid across economies. The data not only highlight the extent of obstacles to doing business; they also help identify the source of those obstacles, supporting policymakers in designing reform. The data set covers 183 economies: 46 in Sub-Saharan Africa, 32 in Latin America and the Caribbean, 25 in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, 24 in East Asia and Pacific, 18 in the Middle East and North Africa and 8 in South Asia, as well as 30 OECD high-income economies. The following pages present the summary Doing Business indicators for Congo, Rep.. The data used for this economy profile come from the Doing Business database and are summarized in graphs. These graphs allow a comparison of the economies in each region not only with one another but also with the "good practice" economy for each indicator. The good-practice economies are identified by their position in each indicator as well as their overall ranking and by their capacity to provide good examples of business regulation to other countries. These good -practice economies do not necessarily rank number 1 in the topic or indicator, but they are in the top 10. More information is available in the full report. Doing Business 2011 : Making a Difference for Entrepreneurs presents the indicators, analyzes their relationship with economic outcomes and recommends reforms. The data, along with information on ordering the report, are available on the Doing Business website (www.doingbusiness.org). * Except for the Paying Taxes indicator that refers to the period January to December of 2009. Note: 2008-2010 Doing Business data and rankings have been recalculated to reflect changes to the methodology and the addition of new economies (in the case of the rankings). 1 Economy Rankings - Ease of Doing Business Congo, Rep. is ranked 177 out of 183 economies. Singapore is the top ranked economy in the Ease of Doing Business. Congo, Rep. - Compared to global good practice economy as well as selected economies: Congo, Rep.'s ranking in Doing Business 2011 Rank Doing Business 2011 Ease of Doing Business 177 Starting a Business 176 Dealing with Construction Permits 83 Registering Property 133 Getting Credit 138 Protecting Investors 154 Paying Taxes 180 Trading Across Borders 180 Enforcing Contracts 158 Closing a Business 128 2 Summary of Indicators - Congo, Rep. Starting a Business Procedures (number) 10 Time (days) 160 Cost (% of income per capita) 111.4 Min. capital (% of income per capita) 129.8 Dealing with Construction Permits Procedures (number) 17 Time (days) 169 Cost (% of income per capita) 241.1 Registering Property Procedures (number) 6 Time (days) 55 Cost (% of property value) 10.7 Getting Credit Strength of legal rights index (0-10) 3 Depth of credit information index (0-6) 2 Public registry coverage (% of adults) 2.9 Private bureau coverage (% of adults) 0.0 Protecting Investors Extent of disclosure index (0-10) 6 Extent of director liability index (0-10) 1 Ease of shareholder suits index (0-10) 3 Strength of investor protection index (0-10) 3.3 Paying Taxes Payments (number per year) 61 Time (hours per year) 606 Profit tax (%) 0.0 Labor tax and contributions (%) 32.9 Other taxes (%) 32.6 Total tax rate (% profit) 65.5 Trading Across Borders Documents to export (number) 11 Time to export (days) 50 Cost to export (US$ per container) 3818 Documents to import (number) 10 Time to import (days) 62 Cost to import (US$ per container) 7709 3 Enforcing Contracts Procedures (number) 44 Time (days) 560 Cost (% of claim) 53.2 Closing a Business Recovery rate (cents on the dollar) 17.8 Time (years) 3.3 Cost (% of estate) 25 The 5 year measure of cumulative change illustrates how the business regulatory environment has changed in 174 economies from Doing Business 2006 to Doing Business 2011. Instead of highlighting which countries currently have the most business friendly environment, this new approach shows the extent to which an economy's regulatory environment for business has changed compared with 5 years ago. This snapshot reflects all cumulative changes in an economy's business regulation as measured by the Doing Business indicators-such as a reduction in the time to start a business thanks to a one-stop shop or an increase in the strength of investor protection index thanks to new stock exchange rules that tighten disclosure requirements for related -party transactions. This figure shows the distribution of cumulative change across the 9 indicators and time between Doing Business 2006 and Doing Business 2011 0.12 0.10 Doing 0.08 business has become easier (DB 0.06 change score) 0.04 0.02 Doing business has 0.00 become more difficult or more -0.02 Angola Cameroon Equatorial Central Congo, Gabon costly Guinea African Rep. Republic 6 1. Benchmarking Starting a Business Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 176 overall for Starting a Business. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Starting a Business - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 7 The following table shows Starting a Business data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Procedures Time (days) Cost (% of Min. capital (number) income per (% of income Economies capita) per capita) Denmark* 0.0 New Zealand* 1 1 0.0 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 10 160 111.4 129.8 Comparator Economies Angola 8 68 163.0 28.7 Cameroon 6 19 51.2 191.8 Central African Republic 8 22 228.4 468.6 Equatorial Guinea 20 136 104.3 21.3 Gabon 9 58 21.9 32.7 * The following economies are also good practice economies for : Procedures (number): Canada Cost (% of income per capita): Slovenia 8 2. Historical data: Starting a Business in Congo, Rep. Starting a Business data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 176 176 Procedures (number) 10 10 10 10 Time (days) 37 160 160 160 Cost (% of income per capita) 150.1 106.4 86.5 111.4 Min. capital (% of income per capita) 206.3 131.2 96.5 129.8 3. The following graphs illustrate the Starting a Business sub indicators in Congo, Rep. over the past 4 years: 9 Starting a Business Summary - Congo, Rep. This table summarizes the procedures and costs associated with setting up a business in the Republic of Congo. STANDARDIZED COMPANY Legal Form: Société à Responsabilité Limitée (SARL) - Limited Liability Company City: Brazzaville Registration Requirements: No: Procedure Time to complete Cost to complete 1 Deposit the legally required capital in a bank and obtain the deposit 1 no charge evidence. 2 Draft and notarize the articles of association with the public notary 3 XAF 312,000 3 Register articles of association with tax authorities 2 XAF 254,186 4 Obtain extracts of criminal record of the company manager 1 XAF 2,000 5 Register articles of association with the commercial registrar at the 1 XAF 100,000 Clerk's Office of the Court 6 Register with the Centre des Formalités des Entreprises 90 XAF 130,000 7 Register with the tax authorities 30 XAF 10,000 8 Publish the notice of company formation in a legal journal 4 XAF 50,000 10 9 * Notify the Ministry of Labor (ONEMO) of the start of operations 2 no charge 10 * Register with the Social Security Authorities 30 no charge * Takes place simultaneously with another procedure. 11 Starting a Business Details - Congo, Rep. Procedure 1 Deposit the legally required capital in a bank and obtain the deposit evidence. Time to complete: 1 Cost to complete: no charge Comment: The bank account deposit is only formalized after presentation of the RCCM, the Carte de Commerçant and the NUI. So in practice the minimum capital requirement is deposited with the notary. Procedure 2 Draft and notarize the articles of association with the public notary Time to complete: 3 Cost to complete: XAF 312,000 Comment: The notary legalizes the articles of association. The entrepreneur pays a registration tax to the notary equivalent to 3% of the initial capital. In addition, notary fees range from XAF 300,000 to XAF 500,000, and stamps fees are about XAF 12,000 (XAF 1,200/page, assuming 10 pages). The notary also issues the authenticated declaration of subscription and payment, which confirms that the entire initial capital has been deposited at the bank. Companies may choose to have the notary draft the articles of association. In this case, the articles would be drafted before the initial capital is deposited. The entrepreneur would then return to the notary to obtain the declaration of subscription (Déclaration notariée de souscription et de versement). Procedure 3 Register articles of association with tax authorities Time to complete: 2 Cost to complete: XAF 254,186 Comment: Annexes are: 1) declaration de souscription (2-3 pages) 10,000 XAF + Stamps 1200 FCFA/page + VAT of 18% on the notary fees (18% des 300,000 XAF); 2) Bulletin de souscription = 10,000 XAF + stamp (1 page); 3) PV to nominate the director of the LLC = 10,000 XAF; 4) centimes additionnels de 5% (18% X 300,000); 5) the articles of association + stamps depending on the number of pages Procedure 4 Obtain extracts of criminal record of the company manager Time to complete: 1 Cost to complete: XAF 2,000 Comment: This formality is done with the Court of First Instance. Procedure 5 Register articles of association with the commercial registrar at the Clerk's Office of the Court Time to complete: 1 Cost to complete: XAF 100,000 12 Comment: To register the articles of association with the Commercial Registrar, the following documents are required: - Identification of managers. - Criminal record of the managers. - Lease (copy). - Notarized articles of association. Procedure 6 Register with the Centre des Formalités des Entreprises Time to complete: 90 Cost to complete: XAF 130,000 Comment: The Centre des Formalités des Entreprises (CFE) is a one-stop shop that centralizes several registration procedures. By registering with the CFE, the firm obtains its merchant card (La Carte de Commercant) and is registered with the Chamber of Commerce and the Centre National de la Statistique et des Études Économiques (CNSEE). Although the CFE also organizes commercial registration at the court, in practice, it is faster for companies to register directly with the court. Since there are a lot of formalities, it is taking a very long time to obtain the "Carte de commerçant". Fees include: - Registration with the CNSEE: XAF 10,000. - Registration with Chamber of Commerce: XAF 10,000. - Merchant card: XAF 15,000. - Registration with the CFE: XAF 10,000. Procedure 7 Register with the tax authorities Time to complete: 30 Cost to complete: XAF 10,000 Comment: The LLC is registered with the CIU to obtain the NUI. Once this number is obtained, then the payment of the patente can be done. Time to obtain this NUI is very long and can take up to a month. Procedure 8 Publish the notice of company formation in a legal journal Time to complete: 4 Cost to complete: XAF 50,000 Comment: Notice of company formation can be published, either in (a) the Official Gazette, with a 1-month turnaround; or (b) any legal journal, with a 1-week turnaround. The notice includes the company name, capital, and taxpayer identification number (TIN). Procedure 9 Notify the Ministry of Labor (ONEMO) of the start of operations Time to complete: 2 Cost to complete: no charge Comment: Employee contracts must be certified by the labor authorities. Procedure 10 Register with the Social Security Authorities Time to complete: 30 Cost to complete: no charge 13 Comment: To register with the Social Security Authorities, the following documents are required: - Manager's identification - Employees' contracts, certified by the Ministry of Labor. - Manager's commerce card. - Copy of the lease. - Notarized articles of association. Social security contributions are paid one trimester in advance at the rate of 2.8% of the employee's salary and 3.2% of the employer's earnings. 14 15 1. Benchmarking Dealing with Construction Permits Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 83 overall for Dealing with Construction Permits. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Dealing with Construction Permits - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 16 The following table shows Dealing with Construction Permits data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Procedures Time (days) Cost (% of (number) income per Economies capita) Denmark 6 Qatar 0.8 Singapore 25 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 17 169 241.1 Comparator Economies Angola 12 328 694.3 Cameroon 14 213 1235.8 Central African Republic 21 239 259.5 Equatorial Guinea 18 201 220.7 Gabon 16 210 42.9 17 2. Historical data: Dealing with Construction Permits in Congo, Rep. Dealing with Construction Permits data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 77 83 Procedures (number) 17 17 17 17 Time (days) 169 169 169 169 Cost (% of income per capita) 383.3 243.8 179.3 241.1 3. The following graphs illustrate the Dealing with Construction Permits sub indicators in Congo, Rep. over the past 4 years: 18 Dealing with Construction Permits in Congo, Rep. The table below summarizes the procedures, time, and costs to build a warehouse in the Republic of Congo. BUILDING A WAREHOUSE City: Brazzaville Registration Requirements: No: Procedure Time to complete Cost to complete 1 Obtain survey map 3 days XAF 50,000 2 Obtain a geotechnical study 10 days XAF 1,000,000 3 Submit the building permit application 60 days no charge 4 Obtain a building permit and pay the fees 1 day XAF 450,000 5 Receive an inspection from the Ministry of construction 1 day no charge 6 Receive an inspection from the Municipality 1 day no charge 7 Receive an inspection from the fire department 1 day no charge 8 Obtain a certificate de conformite de l'electricite 14 days XAF 130,000 19 9 Apply for connection to water mains 1 day no charge 10 Receive inspection for purposes of drawing up the estimate 7 days no charge 11 Connection to water mains 70 days XAF 73,200 12 * Apply for connection to the electricity mains 1 day XAF 7,000 13 Receive inspection for purposes of drawing up the estimate 1 day no charge 14 Connect to electricity mains 20 days XAF 60,436 15 * Apply for a telephone line 1 day XAF 4,165 16 Receive inspection for purposes of drawing up the estimate 3 days no charge 17 Obtain installation of telephone line 14 days XAF 83,230 * Takes place simultaneously with another procedure. 20 Dealing with Construction Permits Details - Congo, Rep. Procedure 1 Obtain survey map Time to complete: 3 days Cost to complete: XAF 50,000 Agency: Survey Department (Direction des Cadastres) Comment: In Brazzaville, a normal lot is 400m2 , and for the size of the lot in the case study, this will be 2 lots and the cost per lot is 25, 000 XAF. Total cost to obtain the cadastral map is 50 000 XAF. Procedure 2 Obtain a geotechnical study Time to complete: 10 days Cost to complete: XAF 1,000,000 Agency: BCBTP Comment: This is the only agency to do this type of study. For the purpose of this case study, there will be "2 points de sondage". This study is mandatory to enable the civil engineer to do the foundation plan (Plan de beton arme or BA). This study will also be submitted with the request for a building permit Procedure 3 Submit the building permit application Time to complete: 60 days Cost to complete: no charge Agency: Mayor's Office, Brazzaville Comment: The building permit is obtained after notifying the cadastre and curator (conservateur). The required documents to obtain a building permit are the following - Occupation permit or land title. - Survey abstract. - Very large-scale boundary plan, drawn up by the Lands and Survey Department (Direction du Cadastre et de la Topographie). - Sketches and drawings of the proposed works, produced by an architect or a certified draftsman. - Building permit application (handwritten). - Authorization for the cutting and clearing of trees, if necessary. - Certification of party walls (walls shared by tenants of adjoining buildings). - A certified undertaking to build and maintain streets adjoining the elevations. Once deposited at the municipality, the file will be internally transmitted to the Ministry of Construction, urbanism and Habitat for technical analysis of the request. Within 1 -2 weeks, the Ministry will deliver the Accord prealable for an amount of 25, 000 XAF. This Ministry will conduct an onsite visit and once the final approval is apposed on the file, it will be transmitted back to the Municipality for the delivery of the final permit. Procedure 4 Obtain a building permit and pay the fees Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: XAF 450,000 Agency: Mayor's Office, Brazzaville 21 Comment: Payment is done at the municipality only after when the permit is approved. 450,000 XAF for the Commune de Brazzaville and 25,000 for the Ministry of Construction, Urbanisme and Habitat Procedure 5 Receive an inspection from the Ministry of construction Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: no charge Agency: Ministry of Construction, Urbanisme, Habitat Comment: Procedure 6 Receive an inspection from the Municipality Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: no charge Agency: Mayor's Office, Brazzaville Comment: The contractor must inform the Municipality when the foundation is being done, so that a team can inspect that the foundation is done according to the plan de Beton Arme. This is the only inspection done by the Municipality. Procedure 7 Receive an inspection from the fire department Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: no charge Agency: Firedepartment of Brazzaville Comment: This is a mandatory requirement for safety purposes. A simple phone call and the fire department will visit the construction regularly (nothing is scheduled and there not a lot of inspections). A certificat de conformite will be delivered at the end of the construction by the Fire department. Procedure 8 Obtain a certificate de conformite de l'electricite Time to complete: 14 days Cost to complete: XAF 130,000 Comment: The inspection is necessary to check that the electrical work is in accordance to the plan and is done in two steps: There is one inspection and then a contre-expertise to ensure that the first inspection was properly done. This is done by a private company. Procedure 9 Apply for connection to water mains Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: no charge Agency: Société Nationale de Distribution d'Eau 22 Comment: Procedure 10 Receive inspection for purposes of drawing up the estimate Time to complete: 7 days Cost to complete: no charge Agency: Société Nationale de Distribution d'Eau Comment: A cost estimate (devis) is needed for both electricity and water. Procedure 11 Connection to water mains Time to complete: 70 days Cost to complete: XAF 73,200 Agency: Société Nationale de Distribution d'Eau Comment: · Study = 5,000 XAF · Connection = 25, 000 XAF · Fixed cost = 28,200 XAF · Labor = 15, 000 XAF Procedure 12 Apply for connection to the electricity mains Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: XAF 7,000 Agency: Société Nationale d'Electricité (SNE) Comment: Procedure 13 Receive inspection for purposes of drawing up the estimate Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: no charge Agency: Société Nationale d'Electricité (SNE) Comment: The contractor may pay XAF 10,000 to cover transport expenses incurred by the building inspectors. Procedure 14 Connect to electricity mains Time to complete: 20 days Cost to complete: XAF 60,436 23 Agency: Société Nationale d'Electricité (SNE) Comment: The fee for electrical connection is XAF 60,436 for aerial connection or XAF 67,273 for underground connection. Procedure 15 Apply for a telephone line Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: XAF 4,165 Agency: Congo Telecom & Communication Comment: Procedure 16 Receive inspection for purposes of drawing up the estimate Time to complete: 3 days Cost to complete: no charge Agency: Congo Telecom & Communication Comment: Procedure 17 Obtain installation of telephone line Time to complete: 14 days Cost to complete: XAF 83,230 Agency: Congo Telecom & Communication Comment: 24 25 1. Benchmarking Registering Property Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 133 overall for Registering Property. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Registering Property - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 26 The following table shows Registering Property data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Procedures Time (days) Cost (% of (number) property Economies value) New Zealand* 2 Norway* 1 Saudi Arabia 0.0 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 6 55 10.7 Comparator Economies Angola 7 184 11.5 Cameroon 5 93 19.3 Central African Republic 5 75 18.5 Equatorial Guinea 6 23 6.3 Gabon 7 39 10.5 * The following economies are also good practice economies for : Procedures (number): United Arab Emirates Time (days): Saudi Arabia, Thailand, United Arab Emirates 27 2. Historical data: Registering Property in Congo, Rep. Registering Property data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 126 133 Procedures (number) 6 6 6 6 Time (days) 76 55 55 55 Cost (% of property value) 22.4 10.8 10.3 10.7 3. The following graphs illustrate the Registering Property sub indicators in Congo, Rep. over the past 4 years: 28 Registering Property in Congo, Rep. This topic examines the steps, time, and cost involved in registering property in the Republic of Congo. STANDARDIZED PROPERTY Property Value: 38,530,988.99 City: Brazzaville Registration Requirements: No: Procedure Time to complete Cost to complete 1 Sale agreement ("protocole de vente") is signed by 2 days 10,000 FCFA parties at Cadaster 2 Evaluation of the property ("enquete parcellaire") 21days 50 FCFA per square meter 3 The notary checks for encumbrances on the property 2 days 20,000 FCFA (land and building) 4 Notary drafts the sale agreement and both parties sign 1 day Notary fees on a sliding scale 0 to 5 000 000 7%5 000 001 to 20 000 000 5%20 000 001 to 50 000 000 3%50 000 001 to 100 000 000 2%100 000 001 and over 0.50% 29 5 Register the sale agreement with the Property 1 day 5% property value Registry (registration fee) + 5% of the registration fee + 0.5% property value (transfer tax) + 0.2% Frais de conservation + Frais de depot 10,000 CFA + Publication fees 10, 000 CFA + Frais d'ordonnance 10, 000 CFA + Transcription fees 5,000 CFA + Copy fees 10,000 CFA + Stamp duty 1300 CFA/page (maximum of 6 pages and the notary must do 4 copies of the sale agreement = 6 *4 *1300) 6 Land title is prepared and issued to the new owner 28 days (included in procedure 5) 30 Registering Property Details - Congo, Rep. Procedure 1 Sale agreement ("protocole de vente") is signed by parties at Cadaster Time to complete: 2 days Cost to complete: 10,000 FCFA Agency: Departement des affaires foncieres, du cadastre et de la topographie Comment: Both buyer and seller must go first to the Cadastre and sign a protocol de vente, without mentioning the sale price. The Cadastre will make sure that the buyer is the rightful owner and is entitled to sell this property. Procedure 2 Evaluation of the property ("enquete parcellaire") Time to complete: 21days Cost to complete: 50 FCFA per square meter Agency: Cadastre Comment: The cadastre will do the evaluation of the property (enquete parcellaire) to draw a `plan de bornage' or delimitation of the land.The cost at 50 CFA/square meter was fixed by the Law No 4-2007 of May 11, 2007 (Financial Law). Procedure 3 The notary checks for encumbrances on the property (land and building) Time to complete: 2 days Cost to complete: 20,000 FCFA Agency: Property Registry (Conservation Fonciere) Comment: The notary will check for encumbrances at the Conservation Fonciere and obtain a certificate "de non-inscription d'hypotheques". The cost is fixed by the Art.94. Régime de la propriété foncière - Loi n°17-2000 du 30 décembre 2000 (2000 CFA/year) Procedure 4 Notary drafts the sale agreement and both parties sign Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: Notary fees on a sliding scale 0 to 5 000 000 7%5 000 001 to 20 000 000 5%20 000 001 to 50 000 000 3%50 000 001 to 100 000 000 2%100 000 001 and over 0.50% Comment: The parties can draw the sale agreement among themselves, but this sale agreement must be notorize. Therefore most parties will retain the services of a notary to draw the sale agreement. Procedure 5 Register the sale agreement with the Property Registry 31 Time to complete: 1 day Cost to complete: 5% property value (registration fee) + 5% of the registration fee + 0.5% property value (transfer tax) + 0.2% Frais de conservation + Frais de depot 10,000 CFA + Publication fees 10, 000 CFA + Frais d'ordonnance 10, 000 CFA + Transcription fees 5,000 CFA + Copy fees 10,000 CFA + Stamp duty 1300 CFA/page (maximum of 6 pages and the notary must do 4 copies of the sale agreement = 6 *4 *1300) Agency: Property Registry (Conservation Fonciere) Comment: The Conservateur will check the file and transmit it to one colleague to calculate if all costs are accurate Procedure 6 Land title is prepared and issued to the new owner Time to complete: 28 days Cost to complete: (included in procedure 5) Agency: Property Registry (Conservation Fonciere) Comment: The Land registrar (conservateur des titres fonciers) will change the name on the property title ("transcription") and issue a copy of the land title ("Titre Foncier") to the Limited Liability Company and keep the technical file. First-time registrations only will be published as a legal announcement in the Semaine Africaine. According to the law, 17/200 du 30 decembre 2000, article 93 -94, only first time registration ("immatriculation") is subject to a publication as a legal notice in the newspaper( La Semaine Africaine). This announcement is made by the Conservateur and there is a two months wait period to receive any disputes to the registration. After this period the registrar writes a certificate of contestation or no contestation and gives the relevant file to the president of the court in the area where the property is located. In case of no contestation, the president of said court orders the registration and the transcription of the rights of the buyer to the property. After publication, the land title is prepared and issued in the name of the Company. Official cost for publication is FCFA 20,000 32 33 1. Benchmarking Getting Credit Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 138 overall for Getting Credit. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Getting Credit - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 34 The following table shows Getting Credit data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Strength of Depth of Public Private legal rights credit registry bureau Economies index (0-10) information coverage (% coverage (% index (0-6) of adults) of adults) New Zealand* 100.0 Portugal 67.1 Singapore* 10 United Kingdom 6 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 3 2 2.9 0.0 Comparator Economies Angola 4 3 2.4 0.0 Cameroon 3 2 2.9 0.0 Central African Republic 3 2 2.0 0.0 Equatorial Guinea 3 2 2.5 0.0 Gabon 3 2 22.5 0.0 * The following economies are also good practice economies for : Strength of legal rights index (0-10): Hong Kong, China, Kenya, Kyrgyz Republic, Malaysia Private bureau coverage (% of adults): Argentina, Australia, Canada, Iceland, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom, United States 27 countries have the highest credit information index. 35 2. Historical data: Getting Credit in Congo, Rep. Getting Credit data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 135 138 Strength of legal rights index (0-10) 3 3 3 3 Depth of credit information index (0-6) 2 2 2 2 Private bureau coverage (% of adults) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Public registry coverage (% of adults) 2.4 6.9 3.0 2.9 3. The following graphs illustrate the Getting Credit sub indicators in Congo, Rep. over the past 4 years: 36 Getting Credit in Congo, Rep. The following table summarize legal rights of borrowers and lenders, and the availability and legal framework of credit registries in the Republic of Congo. Getting Credit Indicators (2010) Indicator Private credit Public credit Private bureau coverage (% of adults) 2 bureau registry Are data on both firms and individuals distributed? No Yes 1 Are both positive and negative data distributed? No No 0 Does the registry distribute credit information from retailers, trade No No 0 creditors or utility companies as well as financial institutions? Are more than 2 years of historical credit information distributed? No No 0 Is data on all loans below 1% of income per capita distributed? No Yes 1 Is it guaranteed by law that borrowers can inspect their data in the No No 0 largest credit registry? Coverage 0.0 2.9 Number of individuals 0 58,232 Number of firms 0 4,060 37 Strength of legal rights index (0-10) 3 Can any business use movable assets as collateral while keeping possession of the assets; and any financial Yes institution accept such assets as collateral ? Does the law allow businesses to grant a non possessory security right in a single category of movable assets, No without requiring a specific description of collateral? Does the law allow businesses to grant a non possessory security right in substantially all of its assets, without Yes requiring a specific description of collateral? May a security right extend to future or after-acquired assets, and may it extend automatically to the products, No proceeds or replacements of the original assets ? Is a general description of debts and obligations permitted in collateral agreements, so that all types of obligations Yes and debts can be secured by stating a maximum amount rather than a specific amount between the parties ? Is a collateral registry in operation, that is unified geographically and by asset type, as well as indexed by the No grantor's name of a security right ? Do secured creditors have absolute priority to their collateral outside bankruptcy procedures? No Do secured creditors have absolute priority to their collateral in bankruptcy procedures? No During reorganization, are secured creditors' claims exempt from an automatic stay on enforcement? No Does the law authorize parties to agree on out of court enforcement? No 38 39 1. Benchmarking Protecting Investors Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 154 overall for Protecting Investors. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Protecting Investors - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 40 The following table shows Protecting Investors data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Strength of investor Economies protection index (0-10) New Zealand 9.7 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 3.3 Comparator Economies Angola 5.7 Cameroon 4.3 Central African Republic 4.0 Equatorial Guinea 3.7 Gabon 3.3 41 2. Historical data: Protecting Investors in Congo, Rep. Protecting Investors data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 153 154 Strength of investor protection index (0-10) 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.3 3. The following graph illustrates the Protecting Investors index in Congo, Rep. compared to best practice and selected Economies: 9.7 5.7 4.3 4.0 3.7 3.3 3.3 n a oo ep ica al nd . on ne al ol ep A entr er ui tori ng ab a ub n ,R am al A G a lic C ua Ze go fr C Eq on ew G C N R Note: The higher the score, the greater the investor protection. 42 Protecting Investors in Congo, Rep. The table below provides a full breakdown of how the disclosure, director liability, and shareholder suits indexes are calculated in the Republic of Congo. Protecting Investors Data (2010) Indicator Extent of disclosure index (0-10) 6 3 What corporate body provides legally sufficient approval for the transaction? 0 Whether immediate disclosure of the transaction to the public and/or shareholders is required? 2 Whether disclosure of the transaction in published periodic filings (annual reports) is required? 1 Whether disclosure of the conflict of interest by Mr. James to the board of directors is required? 0 Whether an external body must review the terms of the transaction before it takes place? Extent of director liability index (0-10) 1 0 Whether shareholders can hold Mr. James liable for the damage that the Buyer-Seller transaction causes to the company? 0 Whether shareholders can hold the approving body (the CEO or board of directors) liable for the damage that the Buyer-Seller transaction causes to the company? 0 Whether a court can void the transaction upon a successful claim by a shareholder plaintiff? 0 Whether Mr. James pays damages for the harm caused to the company upon a successful claim by the shareholder plaintiff? 43 0 Whether Mr. James repays profits made from the transaction upon a successful claim by the shareholder plaintiff? 0 Whether fines and imprisonment can be applied against Mr. James? 1 Whether shareholders can sue directly or derivatively for the damage that the Buyer-Seller transaction causes to the company? Ease of shareholder suits index (0-10) 3 3 Whether the plaintiff can obtain any documents from the defendant and witnesses during trial? 0 Whether the plaintiff can directly question the defendant and witnesses during trial? 0 Whether the plaintiff can request categories of documents from the defendant without identifying specific ones? 0 Whether shareholders owning 10% or less of Buyer's shares can request an inspector to investigate the transaction? 0 Whether the level of proof required for civil suits is lower than that of criminal cases? 0 Whether shareholders owning 10% or less of Buyer's shares can inspect transaction documents before filing suit? Strength of investor protection index (0-10) 3.3 44 45 1. Benchmarking Paying Taxes Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 180 overall for Paying Taxes. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Paying Taxes - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 46 The following table shows Paying Taxes data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Payments Time (hours Total tax rate (number per per year) (% profit) Economies year) Maldives* 3 0 Timor-Leste 0.2 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 61 606 65.5 Comparator Economies Angola 31 282 53.2 Cameroon 44 654 49.1 Central African Republic 54 504 203.8 Equatorial Guinea 46 492 59.5 Gabon 26 488 43.5 * The following economies are also good practice economies for : Payments (number per year): Qatar 47 2. Historical data: Paying Taxes in Congo, Rep. Paying Taxes data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 180 180 Total tax rate (% profit) 65.4 65.5 65.5 65.5 Payments (number per year) 61 61 61 61 Time (hours per year) 606 606 606 606 3. The following graphs illustrate the Paying Taxes sub indicators in Congo, Rep. over the past 4 years: 48 Paying Taxes in Congo, Rep. The table below addresses the taxes and mandatory contributions that a medium-size company must pay or withhold in a given year in Congo, Rep., as well as measures of administrative burden in paying taxes. Tax or mandatory Payments Notes on Time Statutory tax Tax Totaltax rate Notes on contribution (number) Payments (hours) rate base (% profit) TTR Stamp duty 1 fixed fee or amount of proportional transaction fee Tax on insurance 1 various amount of contracts brackets insurance contract Value added tax (VAT) 12 181 18.0% value added Tax on rental value 0 Paid jointly 14.0% rental value 0.00 with business tax Registration fees on lease 1 5.0% annual rental 0.20 agreements value Municipal employees tax 1 fixed fee 0.40 (XAF 2000 per employee) Vehicle tax 1 various rates horse power 0.60 of engine 49 Fuel tax (Irrecoverable 18.0% value of fuel 0.60 VAT) consumption Apprenticeship tax 12 1.0% gross salaries 1.10 Environmental taxes 1 various 2.40 brackets Sales tax 0 Paid jointly 0.9% value added 2.70 with VAT Payroll tax 12 5.0% gross salaries 5.60 Business tax 1 Various rates depending on 11.10 core business Minimum flat tax 1 1.0% turnover 17.70 Corporate income tax 5 275 38.0% taxable profit 18.70 Social security 12 150 22.785-23% gross salaries 25.70 contributions Totals 61 606 65.5 50 51 1. Benchmarking Trading Across Borders Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 180 overall for Trading Across Borders. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Trading Across Borders - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 52 The following table shows Trading Across Borders data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Documents to Time to Cost to Documents to Time to Cost to export export (days) export (US$ import import (days) import (US$ Economies (number) per (number) per container) container) Denmark* 5 France 2 2 Malaysia 450 Singapore 4 439 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 11 50 3818 10 62 7709 Comparator Economies Angola 11 52 1850 8 49 2840 Cameroon 11 23 1379 12 26 1978 Central African Republic 9 54 5491 17 62 5554 Equatorial Guinea 7 29 1411 7 48 1411 Gabon 7 20 1945 8 22 1955 * The following economies are also good practice economies for : Time to export (days): Estonia 53 2. Historical data: Trading Across Borders in Congo, Rep. Trading Across Borders data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 176 180 Cost to export (US$ per container) 2201 2490 2490 3818 Cost to import (US$ per container) 2201 2959 2959 7709 Documents to export (number) 11 11 11 11 Documents to import (number) 10 10 10 10 Time to export (days) 50 50 50 50 Time to import (days) 62 62 62 62 3. The following graphs illustrate the Trading Across Borders sub indicators in Congo, Rep. over the past 4 years: 54 55 Trading Across Borders in Congo, Rep. These tables list the procedures necessary to import and export a standardized cargo of goods in Congo, Rep.. The documents required to export and import the goods are also shown. Nature of Export Procedures (2010) Duration (days) US$ Cost Documents preparation 32 813 Customs clearance and technical control 8 400 Ports and terminal handling 4 365 Inland transportation and handling 6 2240 Totals 50 3818 Nature of Import Procedures (2010) Duration (days) US$ Cost Documents preparation 42 813 Customs clearance and technical control 10 400 Ports and terminal handling 6 896 Inland transportation and handling 4 5600 Totals 62 7709 56 Documents for Export and Import Export Bill of lading Cargo release order Certificate of origin Commercial invoice Customs examination Customs export declaration Export license Inspection report (from SGS or COTECNA) Packing list Technical standard/health certificate Terminal handling receipts Import Bill of lading Certificate of origin Commercial invoice Cargo Tracking Note Customs import declaration Cargo release order Inspection Report (COTECNA) Packing list Technical standard/health certificate Terminal handling receipts 57 58 1. Benchmarking Enforcing Contracts Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 158 overall for Enforcing Contracts. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Enforcing Contracts - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 59 The following table shows Enforcing Contracts data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Procedures Time (days) Cost (% of (number) claim) Economies Bhutan 0.1 Ireland 20 Singapore 150 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 44 560 53.2 Comparator Economies Angola 46 1011 44.4 Cameroon 43 800 46.6 Central African Republic 43 660 82.0 Equatorial Guinea 40 553 18.5 Gabon 38 1070 34.3 60 2. Historical data: Enforcing Contracts in Congo, Rep. Enforcing Contracts data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 158 158 Procedures (number) 44 44 44 44 Time (days) 560 560 560 560 Cost (% of claim) 53.2 53.2 53.2 53.2 3. The following graphs illustrate the Enforcing Contracts sub indicators in Congo, Rep. over the past 4 years: 61 Enforcing Contracts in Congo, Rep. This topic looks at the efficiency of contract enforcement in Congo, Rep.. Nature of Procedure (2010) Indicator Procedures (number) 44 Time (days) 560 Filing and service 18.0 Trial and judgment 242.0 Enforcement of judgment 300.0 Cost (% of claim)* 53.20 Attorney cost (% of claim) 34.7 Court cost (% of claim) 12.5 Enforcement Cost (% of claim) 6.0 62 Court information: Brazzaville Commercial Court ("Tribunal de Commerce de Brazzaville") * Claim assumed to be equivalent to 200% of income per capita. 63 64 1. Benchmarking Closing Business Regulations: Congo, Rep. is ranked 128 overall for Closing a Business. Ranking of Congo, Rep. in Closing Business - Compared to good practice and selected economies: 65 The following table shows Closing Business data for Congo, Rep. compared to good practice and comparator economies: Good Practice Recovery rate Time (years) Cost (% of (cents on the estate) Economies dollar) Ireland 0.4 Japan 92.7 Singapore* 1 Selected Economy Congo, Rep. 17.8 3.3 25 Comparator Economies Angola 8.4 6.2 22 Cameroon 13.6 3.2 34 Central African Republic 0.0 4.8 76 Equatorial Guinea 0.0 no practice no practice Gabon 15.2 5.0 15 * The following economies are also good practice economies for : Cost (% of estate): Colombia, Kuwait, Norway 66 2. Historical data: Closing Business in Congo, Rep. Closing a Business data Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business Doing Business 2008 2009 2010 2011 Rank .. .. 127 128 Time (years) 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.3 Cost (% of estate) 25 25 25 25 Recovery rate (cents on the dollar) 17.8 17.8 17.8 17.8 3. The following graphs illustrate the Closing Business sub indicators in Congo, Rep. over the past 4 years: 67 Since 2004 Doing Business has been tracking reforms aimed at simplifying business regulations, strengthening property rights, opening access to credit and enforcing contracts by measuring their impact on 10 indicator sets . * Nearly 1,000 reforms have had an impact on these indicators. Doing Business 2011, covering June 2009 to June 2010, reports that 117 economies implemented 216 reforms to make it easier to start a business. 64% of economies measured by Doing Business have reformed this year, focusing on easing business start-up, lightening the tax burden, simplifying import and export regulations and improving credit information systems. The top 10 most-improved in Doing Business 2011 Dealing with Construction Trading Across Borders Positive Change Registering Property Enforcing Contracts Protecting Investors Starting a Business Closing a Business Negative Change Getting Credit Paying Taxes Permits Economy Kazakhstan Rwanda Peru Vietnam Cape Verde Tajikistan Zambia Hungary Grenada Brunei Darussalam * For Doing Business 2011 the Employing Workers indicator is not included in the aggregate ease of doing business ranking. 68 Summary of changes to business regulation in top 10 most improved economies in Doing Business 2011 and selected comparator economies. Angola Angola reduced the time for trading across borders by making investments in port infrastructure and administration. Brunei Darussalam Brunei Darussalam made starting a business easier by improving efficiency at the company registrar and implementing an electronic system for name searches. Brunei Darussalam reduced the corporate income tax rate from 23.5% to 22% while also introducing a lower tax rate for small businesses, ranging from 5.5% to 11%. The introduction of an electronic customs system in Brunei Darussalam made trading easier. Cameroon Cameroon made starting a business easier by establishing a new one-stop shop and abolishing the requirement for verifying business premises and its corresponding fees. Cape Verde Cape Verde made start-up easier by eliminating the need for a municipal inspection before a business begins operations and computerizing the system for delivering the municipal license. Cape Verde eased property registration by switching from fees based on a percentage of the property value to lower fixed rates. Cape Verde abolished the stamp duties on sales and checks. Congo, Rep. The Republic of Congo reduced its corporate income tax rate from 38% to 36% in 2010. Grenada Grenada eased business start-up by transferring responsibility for the commercial registry from the courts to the civil administration. The appointment of a registrar focusing only on property cut the time needed to transfer property in Grenada by almost half. Grenada's customs administration made trading faster by simplifying procedures, reducing inspections, improving staff training and enhancing communication with users. Hungary Hungary implemented a time limit for the issuance of building permits. Hungary reduced the property registration fee by 6% of the property value. Hungary simplified taxes and tax bases. Amendments to Hungary's bankruptcy law encourage insolvent companies to consider reaching agreements with creditors out of court so as to avoid bankruptcy. Kazakhstan Kazakhstan eased business start-up by reducing the minimum capital requirement to 100 tenge ($0.70) and eliminating the need to have the memorandum of association and company charter notarized. Kazakhstan made dealing with construction permits easier by implementing a one-stop shop related to technical conditions for utilities. Kazakhstan strengthened investor protections by requiring greater corporate disclosure in company annual reports. Kazakhstan speeded up trade through efforts to modernize customs, including implementation of a risk management system and improvements in customs automation. Peru Peru eased business start-up by simplifying the requirements for operating licenses and creating an online one-stop shop for business registration. Peru streamlined construction permitting by implementing administrative reforms. Peru introduced fast-track procedures at the land registry, cutting by half the time needed to register property. Peru made trading easier by implementing a new web-based electronic data interchange system, risk-based inspections and payment deferrals. Rwanda Rwanda made dealing with construction permits easier by passing new building regulations at the end of April 2010 and implementing new time limits for the issuance of various permits. Rwanda enhanced access to credit by allowing borrowers the right to inspect their own credit report and mandating that loans of all sizes be reported to the central bank's public credit registry. Rwanda reduced the number of trade documents required and enhanced its joint border management procedures with Uganda and other neighbors, leading to an improvement in the trade logistics environment. Tajikistan Tajikistan made starting a business easier by creating a one-stop shop that consolidates registration with the state and the tax authority. Tajikistan strengthened investor protections by requiring greater corporate disclosure in the annual report and greater access to corporate information for minority investors. Tajikistan lowered its corporate income tax rate. 69 Vietnam Vietnam eased company start-up by creating a one-stop shop that combines the processes for obtaining a business license and tax license and by eliminating the need for a seal for company licensing. Vietnam made dealing with construction permits easier by reducing the cost to register newly completed buildings by 50% and transferring the authority to register buildings from local authorities to the Department of National Resources and Environment. Vietnam improved its credit information system by allowing borrowers to examine their own credit report and correct errors. Zambia Zambia eased business start-up by eliminating the minimum capital requirement. Zambia eased trade by implementing a one-stop border post with Zimbabwe, launching web-based submission of customs declarations and introducing scanning machines at border posts. Zambia improved contract enforcement by introducing an electronic case management system in the courts that provides electronic referencing of cases, a database of laws, real-time court reporting and public access to court records. 70 71