WRLC Digital Repository  Georgetown University  Digital Collections (GT)  Electronic Theses and Dissertations (GT-ETD)  Public Policy (GT-ETD) 

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1961/4555

Title: Growth and the Regulation of Entry: How Do Regulatory Obstacles to Starting a Business Impact Growth Rates?
Authors: Cook, Ina
Issue Date: 18-Nov-2008
Abstract: This analysis examines how the regulation of entry effects macroeconomic growth in 101 countries. The data address the number of procedures required to register a new business, the cost of completing the registration process, and the time it takes a new entrant to register the new business. On average, the costs associated with registering a new business are higher in lower income countries than in higher income countries, as are the procedural and time requirements to complete the registration process. The empirical results of this analysis show a negative relationship between the number of procedures required to start a business and GDP per capita. Moreover, contrary to the preliminary tests, the findings show that the costs of regulation are positively associated with economic output. Overall these conclusions do not show clear support for either public choice or public interest theories of regulation, but rather a balance of the two.
URI to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1961/4555
Appears in Collections:Public Policy (GT-ETD)

Files

etd_ikc5.pdf248KbAdobe PDF
View/Open

All items in ALADIN Research Commons are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved.