World Bank and IFC Launch Doing Business 2009 in Virtual World of Second Life
In Washington, D.C.:
Rebecca Ong
Phone: (202) 458-0434
E-mail: rong@worldbank.org
Maria Alexandra Velez
Phone: (202) 458-8789
E-mail: mvelezhenao@ifc.org
Washington, D.C., October 23,
2008—The World Bank and IFC will venture inside the online virtual
world of Second Life to launch the Doing
Business 2009 report to
millions of people in the digital community. The two-hour event will be
held on “This
Second Island” at 11:00
am EST (8:00 am PST/ Second Life Time) 2:00 pm EST (11:00 am PST/Second
Life Time) on Thursday, October 30, 2008.
Second Life is an online, virtual world created by its users, also known
as residents. Besides residents from North America and Europe, more than
one in five residents logs on to the virtual site from Africa, Asia, or
Latin America.
The World Bank and IFC hope to use Second Life to reach business owners,
investors, aid donors, and other people interested in the findings of the
Doing
Business report. The event
will be an open forum where policymakers and the public from around the
world can ask questions, challenge the findings, and contribute to a global
business dialogue aimed at stimulating reforms that help improve the business
environment, creating more business startups, job opportunities, and economic
growth.
“For the second time we are hosting the virtual launch of the Doing
Business report that compares
how easy it is for people to start and operate a business in 181 economies.
Our message is simple—good rules make for good business,” said Dahlia
Khalifa, Senior Private Sector Development Specialist. She also noted that
last year’s virtual launch reached more than 1,000 residents from over
100 countries and was very rewarding.
Doing
Business ranks economies
based on 10 indicators of business regulation that record the time and
cost to meet government requirements in starting and operating a business,
trading across borders, paying taxes, and closing a business. The rankings
do not reflect such areas as macroeconomic policy, quality of infrastructure,
currency volatility, investor perceptions, or crime rates.
For more information about Doing
Business and the virtual
launch, visit www.doingbusiness.org.
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