Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Vanuatu’s economic freedom


Vanuatu’s economic freedom 

score is 56.4, making it the 108th freest economy in the 2010 Index. Its score has decreased by 2.0 points since last year, reflecting deterioration in six of the 10 economic freedoms, including investment freedom and trade freedom. Vanuatu is ranked 19th out of 41 countries in the Asia–Pacific region, and its overall score is below the world and regional averages.

Vanuatu has undertaken a number of reforms to strengthen its entrepreneurial framework and broaden its economic base. It scores well above the world average in fiscal freedom and monetary freedom. Tax rates are competitive, with a top personal income tax rate of 12.5 percent and no corporate taxes. Monetary stability is relatively well maintained. Vanuatu’s small financial sector has undergone significant reforms in recent years to combat money laundering and inefficiency.

Despite some economic transformation and annual economic expansion of more than 6 percent over the past five years, Vanuatu faces significant constraints on long-term economic development. Most of the labor force works in the agriculture sector, which accounts for only 20 percent of GDP. State interference in the economy is pervasive, and inefficient state-owned enterprises crowd out private-sector investment. Corruption and a weak investment climate remain serious impediments to overall economic freedom.
Background Back to the top

The Republic of Vanuatu is composed of 83 islands spread over 4,500 square miles of the South Pacific. Formerly administered by a British–French condominium, it achieved independence in 1970. Today, it is an electoral democracy that remains divided between its English-speaking and French-speaking citizens. Vanuatu has largely avoided the political unrest experienced by several of its neighbors in the South Pacific. The economy is dominated by tourism and agriculture, and over 80 percent of the population is involved in farming. In the years since 2003, Vanuatu has experienced solid economic growth.
Business Freedom68.7 Back to the top

The overall freedom to start, operate, and close a business is constrained under Vanuatu’s regulatory environment. Starting a business takes slightly more than the world average of 35 days, and the entry cost of launching a business is high. Obtaining a business license requires less than the world average of 18 procedures and 218 days. Bankruptcy is relatively time-consuming and costly.
Trade Freedom55.1 Back to the top

Vanuatu’s weighted average tariff rate was 15 percent in 2008. High tariffs, services market access restrictions, import taxes, import permit requirements, inadequate infrastructure and trade capacity, subsidies, underdeveloped private markets, and state participation in the marketing board for key agriculture exports add to the cost of trade. Fifteen points were deducted from Vanuatu’s trade freedom score to account for non-tariff barriers.
Fiscal Freedom94.9 Back to the top

Vanuatu has low taxes. The top income tax rate is 12.5 percent. There is no corporate tax. Other taxes include a value-added tax (VAT) and import duties. In the most recent year, overall tax revenue as a percentage of GDP was 18.9 percent.
Government Spending84.3 Back to the top

Total government expenditures, including consumption and transfer payments, are relatively low. In the most recent year, government spending equaled 22.9 percent of GDP. Vanuatu’s 24 state-owned enterprises are inefficient and in need of privatization.
Monetary Freedom76.8 Back to the top

Inflation has been relatively low, averaging 4.3 percent between 2006 and 2008. Many of Vanuatu’s state-owned enterprises are heavily subsidized, depleting budget resources and distorting price-setting mechanisms that would encourage private-sector development. Ten points were deducted from Vanuatu’s monetary freedom score to adjust for measures that distort domestic prices.
Investment Freedom20.0 Back to the top

In general, foreign investors receive national treatment, but all foreign investment projects must be screened and approved, and certain sectors are reserved for domestic investment. Foreign investors are generally subject to local hiring and training requirements. Barriers to private-sector development are significant and include inadequate infrastructure, a weak legal system, and a large state presence in the economy. Political unrest also adds to the cost of investment. Access to and use of foreign exchange may be subject to restrictions and approvals. Foreign investors may repatriate capital. Foreign investors may lease but not own land.
Financial Freedom40.0 Back to the top

Vanuatu’s small financial sector has been transformed in recent years. Supervision has been strengthened, facilitating efforts to improve the country’s reputation as a sound financial center. With a new commercial bank opening in 2007, Vanuatu now has four commercial banks, three of which are foreign-owned. The state-owned National Bank of Vanuatu has the largest branch network in the country. However, poor access to finance remains a serious impediment to private-sector development. Only 13 percent of the rural adult population has bank accounts, and without access to modern financial services, much of the population is unable to participate in the formal economy. Non-resident business activities dominate commercial banks’ transaction services. Reflecting the lack of efficiency in the financial system, capital markets remain very rudimentary.
Property Rights40.0 Back to the top

Vanuatu has a fairly efficient legal system based on British common law, but the judicial process is extremely slow. The constitution states that village or island courts, presided over by chiefs, should be established by parliament to deal with questions of customary law. Land disputes are a constant source of tension. All land is supposed to belong to traditional customary owners, except for public land. However, investors have acquired and subdivided large parcels of land, angering locals who have lost not only their control of the land, but in some cases direct access to the sea.
Freedom From Corruption29.0 Back to the top

Corruption is perceived as widespread. Vanuatu ranks 109th out of 179 countries in Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index for 2008, a drop from 2007. The law provides criminal penalties for official corruption, but the government has not implemented the law effectively, and officials engage in corrupt practices with impunity. Recently, several high-ranking government officials were charged with forgery and theft in connection with a large-scale fraud scheme involving electoral development funds.
Labor Freedom55.0 Back to the top

Vanuatu’s labor regulations are relatively rigid. The non-salary cost of employing a worker is high, and dismissing an employee is moderately difficult. The agricultural sector remains the most important source of employment, and the formal labor market is not fully developed.

Source:Vanuatu

Friday, February 5, 2010

Best for getting lost: Fez


Every great city is entirely itself and nowhere else. At the same time, they're all like ... somewhere. Somewhere that doesn't exist. A Platonic copy, perhaps; an embodiment of the idea of the city, whatever that may be. Morocco has several versions – all different – but in the end Tangier, Rabat and Marrakesh seem to me just rehearsals for the world's great masterpiece, Fez. In particular, the Bali Medina, the walled Old City, of Fez. The traditional Great City – traditional now, in our post-Enlightenment eyes – is a place of visual harmony, of vistas and prospects, squares, spires and domes. Old Fez is the exact opposite. The alleyways of the medina are so sinuous, straitened and overbuilt that there is, quite literally, no view. You never know what is around the next corner as it tilts down towards the river. You barely know where the next corner is. There is no angle that can lead the eye upwards more than 30ft. The rooflines are a mystery. The medina from the air reveals nothing about the medina on the ground. The eye is made useless.


Instead, you navigate by sound and smell. The clangour of hammers on metal leads you into a narrow defile, where brass-beaters and tinsmiths bang their trade. Here a vegetable steam announces the dyers, the streets robed in scarlet cloth hung to dry. A haunting, literally faecal, fleshy, fatty, ammoniacal smell declares that the great and terrifying Chouara Tannery is nearby – but where? Through what doorway, along which grease-skittered cobbles, up which narrow stairs?

Stay in one of the many riyads in Fez – built for extended families, now often converted into guest-houses where you can dine under the open sky, rooms opening on to balconies overlooking the central courtyards – and ignore the threats of getting irretrievably lost if you venture into the medina. Hire an official guide if you want; go alone if you don't mind your sleeve being plucked every few yards by boys eager for dirhams. Be prepared to be cheated; the oud-wood oil the perfumer offers you will be Firmenich Oud Synthetic 10760E or Black Agar Givco from Roure if you're lucky, a frantically dodgy concocted base (smelling of santalone, maple syrup and old gas-pipes) if you're not. It doesn't matter; you don't know what real oud smells like anyway and nor do your friends. The soft wool djellaba, naturally dyed, will be spun rayon, unnaturally dyed, and anyway you'll never learn to keep the hood pointed up, like a Klansman or a wizard. Bear with it. The medina is not about you.

Source:independent.co.uk/

Kiwanis help school children in Vanuatu


"One man's rubbish is another man's treasure" is the order of the day in a Kiwanis New Zealand initiative that helps the children of Vanuatu.

The Kiwanis Club of Takapuna plays a major role in projects helping Vanuatu.

The latest project involved packing a 12-metre shipping container with old school desks, chairs, children’s books and other items.

Most of the old school furniture was donated by Takapuna Grammar School, after a refit of several of their classrooms.

Many books and other items were donated by North Shore schools and residents, while other items came from further afield.

There were around 30
Kiwanians, including eight from the Takapuna club, present to collate, sort, repack and stack into the container.

Organiser Ewan Beck says the turnout of helpers was the biggest ever and there was a wonderful atmosphere of fellowship and fun.

Home-baked goodies for morning tea and a barbecue lunch kept energy levels
up for the strenuous day’s work.

Kiwanis in New Zealand have been assisting the Port Vila Kiwanis Club for nearly 10 years .

Patsy Hill of the Taka-puna Kiwanis Club says about 100 tonnes of school furniture, computers, books and other items has been shipped to Vanuatu since the project began.

Between shipments Kiwa-nis club members collect items in their communities, accepting almost anything that is suitable for children’s learning requirements.

Kiwanis members are grateful for any donations that help the project – either monetary or items that are no longer needed.

• The Takapuna Kiwanis Club meets at The Birkenhead RSA, Recreation Drive, Birkenhead, on the first and third Wednesday evenings of each month. For more information call Patsy on 410-5631 or Tony, call 443-6223 or call 0800 Kiwanis (0800 549-2647.

Source:stuff.co.nz/

Vanuatu: Dancing to the beat of an island haven


Chief Nelson is waiting on the beach. You can't really tell from this distance that the diminutive figure in a blue Hawaiian-style shirt with missing front teeth is the big kahuna at this village on the waterfront of a sandy bay so beautiful that in my eyes it blitzes the competition.

As our small cruise ship, the Island Passage, had motored closer to Asanvari Bay on the island of Maewo in the remote Vanuatu chain of volcanic islands, we had seen a glimpse of an idyllic golden sand beach flanked by steep banks of jungle tumbling down to the water's edge.

Then we had caught movement to the left of the sandy beach and realised this was Asanvari Bay's own spectacular waterfall, also right on the water's edge and, we found out later, a waterfall which is apparently inhabited by small, hairy, evil spirits.

Although no one admits to having seen one of the spirits, the word is everyone knows someone who has seen one.

Chief Nelson is not the only one keen to welcome us. It seems the whole village has turned out.

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A string band is in full force to welcome us. There are a couple of guitars and a harp-type instrument of a single string and a bendy piece of wood.

Every now and then the band stops, then starts up again with the same thumping, twanging beat and young men singing in harmony "we welcome you, we welcome you, we welcome you, to Asanvari", then they start over.

This is the Island Passage's first tourist visit to Asanvari Bay and we are honoured to be receiving the full welcome.

After a while Chief Nelson gestures us to the yacht club. Did I say yacht club?

Turns out Chief Nelson is a bit of an entrepreneur and has built an open-sided yacht club, complete with flags from around the world, for yachties sheltering in the bay to come ashore for a cold beer.

The band starts up again and leads first Chief Nelson then the honoured guests (us) to the yacht club.

We sit in green plastic chairs arranged around the edge of the building with a bit of a tattered map of the world on the wall and the flags which on closer inspection look a little worse for wear but of which the chief is very proud.

The band strikes up another round of "we welcome you" and Chief Nelson keeps a keen eye on the singers for no missed beats.


Source:nzherald.co.nz/

Inmates: The Real Survivors on Vanuatu


VANUATU, Feb. 3 /Christian Newswire/ -- Crossroad Bible Institute is expanding its outreach in the islands of the South Pacific through its Australian Distribution Center. Field workers are providing CBI's program in two new island nations: Vanuatu and Tonga. In the islands of Vanuatu prisoners have been in a spiritual black hole for two years while the Tongan islands are embroiled in a race war.

Vanuatu became famous in 2004 when the reality show Survivor filmed contestants trying to survive in the wild, but right now people who are behind bars are the ones struggling to survive spiritually. The island prisons do not have any Bible study programs, church visits or chaplains. The inmates have been starved of religious instruction for the past two years. CBI will be the first to offer a solid curriculum for people yearning for salvation.

"The corrections officials are thrilled to be able to offer CBI's program to the prisoners," CBI president Dr. David Schuringa explained. "They have tried to set up religious services with little success in recent years, but they understand how vitally important a faith-based program is in an inmate's life and how it can increase their chances for success when released."

The Tongan islands have their own challenges: a race war is brewing between indigenous Tongans and Chinese businessmen relocating to the area. Many of the people behind bars are serving time for taking part in a violent riot that occured in recent years. Corrections officials hope a strong Bible study program can help promote forgiveness and tolerance so the two races can live together in peace.

CBI continues to be active on the Fiji and Solomon islands in the South Pacific as well. Field workers visited with students on Fiji and found that God is present and constantly promoted through song and discussion. Many of the prisons also display Bible verses on large banners outside the prison walls as a constant reminder that God is a vital part of the inmates' lives.

Crossroad Bible Institute is a prison ministry in its 26th year of operation. With over 40,000 students, Crossroad has ten international distribution sites with two more openings pending. CBI also offers a Bible study program for the children of prisoners. Go to www.cbi.fm for enrollment forms or more information. CBI's programs are provided at no cost to prisoners and their families

Source:christiannewswire.com

Govt signs $1.6m Pacific cricket deal

Australia has signed up to a $1.6 million cricket partnership program to build stronger communities in the Pacific.

The partnership, signed between the government, Cricket Australia and the International Cricket Council, is to run over four years and will focus on communities in Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Vanuatu, Samoa and the Solomon Islands.

The program is part of the government's Australian Sports Outreach Program, which works with local authorities and communities to deliver sporting programs.

"Sport is widely recognised as a vital tool in building stronger communities, not least through providing opportunities for youth leadership and achievement," Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said in a statement.

Mr Rudd signed the first partnership - which was based on football - at the Pacific Islands forum last year.

Agreements with netball, rugby league and rugby union are expected to be completed early this year.

Source:news.smh.com.au/

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