Regulatory Capacity Review of Tanzania [electronic resource]

By: International Finance CorporationContributor(s): International Finance Corporation | Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency | World BankMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Institutional and Governance Review | World Bank e-LibraryPublication details: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2010Subject(s): Accountability | Administrative Procedures | Advisory Services | Bureaucracy | Capital Markets | Constituencies | Constitutions | Corruption | Corruption & anticorruption Law | Decentralization | Developed Countries | Economic Development | Expenditures | Financial Institutions | Financial Management | Financial Sector | Foreign Direct Investment | Good Governance | Governance | Human Resources | Income Tax | Informal Sector | Insolvency | Investment Climate | Judicial Reform | Judiciary | Law and Development | Legal Framework | Legal Reform | Legal System | Legislative Process | National Governance | Population Growth | Private Sector Development | Public Finance | Public Investment | Public Policy | Public Procurement | Public Sector | Public Sector Development | Public Sector Management and Reform | Public Spending | Regulators | Securities | Socialism | State-Owned Enterprises | Tax Administration | Tax Policy | Tax Reform | Townships | TransparencyOnline resources: Click here to access online Abstract: Regulatory reform has emerged as an important policy area in developing countries. For reforms to be beneficial, regulatory regimes need to be transparent, coherent, and comprehensive. They must establish appropriate institutional frameworks and liberalized business regulations; enforce competition policy and law; and open external and internal markets to trade and investment. This report analyses the institutional set-up and use of regulatory policy instruments in Tanzania. It is one of five reports prepared on countries in East and Southern Africa (the others are on Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Zambia), and represents an attempt to apply assessment tools and the framework developed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in its work on regulatory capacity and performance to developing countries.
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Regulatory reform has emerged as an important policy area in developing countries. For reforms to be beneficial, regulatory regimes need to be transparent, coherent, and comprehensive. They must establish appropriate institutional frameworks and liberalized business regulations; enforce competition policy and law; and open external and internal markets to trade and investment. This report analyses the institutional set-up and use of regulatory policy instruments in Tanzania. It is one of five reports prepared on countries in East and Southern Africa (the others are on Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Zambia), and represents an attempt to apply assessment tools and the framework developed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in its work on regulatory capacity and performance to developing countries.

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