The Modi government's focus on ease of doing business might help India receive some significant points when the new rankings are released. But the government needs to do more as enforcing contracts is one area where it seems to have run up against legal hurdles.
It is shameful that India ranked as low as at 186th position among 189 countries when it comes to enforcing contracts with only Angola, Bangladesh and Timor-Leste placed lower.
According to officials, attitudes have a major role to play but experts reckon that the Indian legal process is long and cumbersome.
On an average, it costs almost 40% of the claim, involves some 46 procedures and takes almost four years, 1,420 days to be precise, in Mumbai or Delhi. Moreover, the Doing Business report has not recorded a single reform move in India for the last eight years.
As a result, when the government prepared a detailed blueprint for all parameters, eight steps were planned, beginning with commercial courts in Delhi and Mumbai - two centres which are studied by IFC team.
But apart from the commercial courts and the recent
The plan also included sensitizing district courts about exploring mediation, arbitration and conciliation under section 89 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Moreover, there should be a limited number of adjournments so that cases are decided in a shorter span of time.
According to government sources, there has been little progress on several of the proposals that have been discussed during the past one year to improve India's ranking on enforcing contracts. And, it is unlikely that the IFC team misses that, making it tougher for India to make significant gains in the Ease of Doing Business Rankings, sources acknowledged.
(Image: Indiatimes)