Keywords
BUSINESS OWNERSLOAN OFFICERS
NPL
ACCESS TO FINANCE
LONG-TERM FINANCE
WORKING CAPITAL
AVERAGE WAGE
NEW ENTRANTS
CUSTOMS CLEARANCES
LACK OF ACCESS
ACCESS TO LOANS
BALANCE SHEETS
CENTRAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL BANK
PRODUCTIVITY
VENTURE CAPITALISTS
CAR
INCOMES
DEBT
BANKING SUPERVISION
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
PUBLIC FINANCES
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
LARGE FIRM
LARGE FIRMS
FOREIGN FIRMS
TRANSPORT
CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS
OIL PRICES
FINANCIAL NEEDS
TRADE CREDIT
DOMESTIC CAPITAL MARKETS
EXTERNAL FINANCING
TAX
UNEMPLOYED
SOURCES OF FINANCE
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
OVERDRAFT
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT TRAINING
RULE OF LAW
PROFITABILITY
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
CAPITAL MARKETS
MATURITY
SHORT-TERM FINANCING
UNSKILLED WORKERS
COMMODITY
RETAINED EARNINGS
ANGEL INVESTORS
DEPOSIT
BRIBES
SMALLER FIRMS
POLICY RESPONSE
PROBLEMS WITH CREDIT
LOAN APPLICATIONS
INVESTMENT CLIMATE ASSESSMENT
OVERDRAFTS
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
ASSET BASE
FINANCIAL CAPACITY
ECONOMIC REFORMS
CONTRIBUTIONS
CONSOLIDATION
ROAD
DRIVERS
HIGH INTEREST RATES
BOTTLENECKS
BUSINESS CLIMATES
LAND OWNERSHIP
BANKS
REAL INTEREST
CUSTOMS CLEARANCE
FIRM PERFORMANCE
LOAN PORTFOLIO
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
BUSINESS CLIMATE
TRANSPARENCY
GENDER DIFFERENCES
EDUCATION LEVEL
TRANSPORTATION
FORMAL SOURCES OF CREDIT
UNACCEPTABLE COLLATERAL
INDIRECT COST
BORROWING
BANK INTEREST RATES
INTEREST RATES
CONTRIBUTION
TRANSPORTATION NETWORK
BUSINESS OWNER
FINANCES
LABOR COSTS
SUBSIDIARY
EMPLOYEE
TOTAL COMPENSATION
ACCOUNTING
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
BANK BORROWING
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
ANNUAL INTEREST RATE
GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP
TAX ADMINISTRATION
POOR INVESTMENT
TRADING
QUESTIONNAIRE
ACCESS TO FORMAL CREDIT
FORMAL FINANCIAL SECTOR
LINE OF CREDIT
COLLATERAL FOR LOANS
TRANSPORTATION PROBLEMS
DOMESTIC CAPITAL
VALUE OF COLLATERAL
LIMITED ACCESS TO FINANCE
LINES OF CREDIT
REAL INTEREST RATE
AVERAGE INTEREST RATES
UNEMPLOYMENT
TRANSPORT EFFICIENCY
AVERAGE INTEREST
LOAN APPLICATION PROCEDURES
COLLATERAL
INVENTORIES
BANKING SECTOR
ACCESS TO CREDIT
LIMITED ACCESS
LEVEL OF DEBT
TRANSIT
GREATER ACCESS
HUMAN RESOURCE
DIRECT INVESTMENT
INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
JOB CREATION
ACCESS TO BANK
BANK LOANS
BANKING PRACTICES
MATURITIES
COLLECTION PROCESS
LABOR MARKET
NONPERFORMING LOANS
GENDER
INVESTMENT CLIMATES
CONSOLIDATION PROCESS
CAPITAL BASE
TAXATION
DEVELOPMENT BANK
CAPITAL ADEQUACY RATIOS
CAPITAL MARKET
WAGES
SOURCES OF CREDIT
DOMESTIC CREDIT
HEAVY RELIANCE
BANK FINANCING
SHORT-TERM FINANCE
EARNINGS
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
CREDITS
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
EXPENDITURE
ASSET QUALITY
ROAD TRANSPORT
AUDITING
FINANCE ACCESS
APPLICATION PROCEDURES
COLLATERAL REQUIREMENTS
CARS
MARKET SHARE
LOAN MARKETS
LOAN
INCOME
LOAN APPLICATION
CORRUPTION
VENTURE CAPITAL
MARGINAL RATE
PURCHASES
TAX RATE
MACROECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT
PERSONAL ASSETS
EQUIPMENT
CREDIT CULTURE
INDIRECT COSTS
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
INFLATION
ROADS
IMPORT LICENSE
ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
LEVEL OF EDUCATION
INTERNAL FUNDS
LACK OF TRANSPARENCY
CASH FLOW
INTEREST RATE
CREDIT SOURCE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
EMPLOYER
APPLICATION PROCESS
TAX RATES
ACCESS TO BANKS
ENTREPRENEURIALISM
MICRO ENTERPRISES
SALES
FIXED ASSETS
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Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2608Abstract
Nigeria's vision of 2020 is a bold
 desire to be among the top twenty economies by the year
 2020. The economy has posted impressive growth figures since
 2003 driven by higher oil prices and a series of home-grown,
 economic reforms. The country is now firmly on the road to
 middle-income status. This Investment Climate Analysis is
 built on a 2,300 firm survey and provides evidence-based
 recommendations designed to support the vision 2020. Survey
 results represent investment climate status in Nigeria and
 are grouped by the following topics: firm productivity and
 business environment, comparison of state level investment
 climates, access to finance, entrepreneurship and managerial
 capacity in firms, and investment climate aspects. The
 authors conclude that stakeholder consultations on the
 diagnostic work, policy assessment, and design would improve
 Nigeria's investment climate.Date
2009Type
Publications & Research :: PublicationIdentifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/2608http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2608
978-0-8213-7797-0
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 IGORelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
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An Assessment of the Investment Climate in NigeriaIarossi, Giuseppe; Mousley, Peter; Radwan, Ismail (World Bank, 2012-03-19)Nigeria's vision of 2020 is a bold desire to be among the top twenty economies by the year 2020. The economy has posted impressive growth figures since 2003 driven by higher oil prices and a series of home-grown, economic reforms. The country is now firmly on the road to middle-income status. This Investment Climate Analysis is built on a 2,300 firm survey and provides evidence-based recommendations designed to support the vision 2020. Survey results represent investment climate status in Nigeria and are grouped by the following topics: firm productivity and business environment, comparison of state level investment climates, access to finance, entrepreneurship and managerial capacity in firms, and investment climate aspects. The authors conclude that stakeholder consultations on the diagnostic work, policy assessment, and design would improve Nigeria's investment climate.
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The Investment Climate in South Asia : Volume 2. Country ProfilesWorld Bank (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2013-03-07)This report summarizes the findings of Investment Climate Assessments (ICAs) carried out for all countries in the South Asia region. It compares South Asian countries to countries in other regions, analyzes similarities and differences within the region, and identifies the way forward in improving the investment climate. The first volume analyzes similarities and differences within the region and between South Asia and the comparator countries. Chapter 1 assesses the investment climate in South Asia vis-a-vis a number of comparator countries. Chapter 2 analyzes the dimensions of the South Asian investment climate. Chapter 3 highlights the costs imposed by deficiencies in the investment climate. Chapter 4 reviews the policy recommendations proposed by the various lCA surveys for the different dimensions identified: infrastructure (power, transportation), factors of production (finance, labor market and skills, technology), regulatory burden and corruption, and risk and uncertainty (policy predictability, judicial reforms, security). The second volume provides the detailed and standardized country-specific data underpinning the analysis in Volume 1.
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The Investment Climate in South Asia : Volume 1World Bank (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2013-03-07)This report summarizes the findings of Investment Climate Assessments (ICAs) carried out for all countries in the South Asia region. It compares South Asian countries to countries in other regions, analyzes similarities and differences within the region, and identifies the way forward in improving the investment climate. The first volume analyzes similarities and differences within the region and between South Asia and the comparator countries. Chapter 1 assesses the investment climate in South Asia vis-a-vis a number of comparator countries. Chapter 2 analyzes the dimensions of the South Asian investment climate. Chapter 3 highlights the costs imposed by deficiencies in the investment climate. Chapter 4 reviews the policy recommendations proposed by the various lCA surveys for the different dimensions identified: infrastructure (power, transportation), factors of production (finance, labor market and skills, technology), regulatory burden and corruption, and risk and uncertainty (policy predictability, judicial reforms, security). The second volume provides the detailed and standardized country-specific data underpinning the analysis in Volume 1.