By GEOFFREY IRUNGU, girungu@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- IFC proposes that steps for starting a business should be reduced to two — an online search and a one-stop shop registration.
- This is meant to improve Kenya’s Doing Business rankings where the country is currently placed 129 out of more than 188 countries.
- The agency wants automated services such as online tax filing and business registration to be linked up across various government levels.
World Bank’s private investment and funding arm
has asked Kenya to devolve the business registry and issue a single
official identification number as a way of improving the business
climate.
The International Finance Corporation (IFC)
proposes that steps for starting a business should be reduced to two —
an online search and a one-stop shop registration — instead of the
current 10 or so to improve Kenya’s Doing Business rankings where the
country is currently placed 129 out of more than 188 countries.
Kenya’s position in the Doing Business 2013 deteriorated from position 121 in 2012.
The agency wants automated services such as online
tax filing and business registration to be linked up across various
government levels.
The services should further be linked up across
borders such that it is possible for the authorities to track the status
of a Kenyan subsidiary in Uganda or Tanzania, IFC consultant Doris
Olutende told a workshop at KICC that discussed business processes.
“The number of procedures could be reduced to just
two instead of having so many that increase the cost of doing business.
Again we could try one identification number instead of the different
ones we have such as PIN for KRA, an ID in other processes and yet still
need the NSSF and NHIF numbers,” said Ms Olutende.
Some of the procedures should be reduced such that
a start-up can search online for a business name and then apply for all
the other necessary services at a one-stop shop.
Such services would include registration with the
Kenya Revenue Authority, the National Social Security Fund, and National
Hospital Insurance Fund.
“You need only one front office desk to which the investors go for their business start-up services,” said Ms Olutende.
Ann Gitonga, a policy analyst at the Kenya
Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (Kippra), said
business procedures are so costly with the business permit alone costing
anywhere between Sh15,000 and Sh100,000 depending on the size and type
of business as well as the number of employees.
Ms Gitonga said some reforms were already in the
pipeline but it was difficult to tell what impact they have had in terms
of the speed of starting a business or costs.
“The cost of starting a business is significantly higher than in South Africa,” said Ms Gitonga.
One-stop shop
Ms Gitonga said Kenya could emulate the best
practices in Singapore, Rwanda and New Zealand, which have one-stop
shops that cut many procedures of starting a business drastically.
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