Investment climate; market competition international comparison 1990-2011
| Countries | Periods | Public procurement Percentage of GDP (%) | Public procurement Percentage of total public procurement (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | 2011 | . | . |
| Austria | 2011 | . | . |
| Belgium | 2011 | . | . |
| Canada | 2011 | . | . |
| Czech Republic | 2011 | . | . |
| Denmark | 2011 | . | . |
| Finland | 2011 | . | . |
| France | 2011 | . | . |
| Germany | 2011 | . | . |
| Hungary | 2011 | . | . |
| Ireland | 2011 | . | . |
| Italy | 2011 | . | . |
| Japan | 2011 | . | . |
| The Netherlands | 2011 | . | . |
| Poland | 2011 | . | . |
| South Korea | 2011 | . | . |
| Spain | 2011 | . | . |
| Sweden | 2011 | . | . |
| United Kingdom | 2011 | . | . |
| United States | 2011 | . | . |
| EU-15 | 2011 | . | . |
| EU-25 | 2011 | . | . |
| EU-27 | 2011 | . | . |
| Source: CBS. | |||
Table explanation
This table gives an indication of the market competition and an overview of legislation, other government measures and barriers that (could) influence market competition for the Netherlands and a dedicated group of benchmark countries. These indicators provide information on mark-up, employment protection legislation, public procurement and state support. For the investment climate it is important that market competition (nationally and internationally) is obstructed as little as possible by legislation or other barriers which make it difficult for enterprises to enter the market.
Note:
Internationally harmonized definitions are used to compare the figures presented internationally. These definitions sometimes differ from definitions used by Statistics Netherlands. The figures in this table could differ from Dutch figures presented elsewhere on the website of Statistics Netherlands.
Data available from: 1990 up to 2011.
Status of the figures:
The external sources of these data frequently supply adjusted figures on preceding periods. These adjusted data are not mentioned as such in the table.
Changes as of 22 December 2017:
No, table is stopped.
When will new figures be published?
Not.
Description topics
- Public procurement
- Public procurement is the purchase of products, services, public works or stocks of an (external) market party by the central or local government, which takes place after comparison of the received registrations (tenders) of several market parties. This indicator is a 'Structural indicator' of Eurostat and measures the value of the part of public purchase of goods or services that are put out to tender in public via the 'Official Journal of the European Communities, Supplement S'. The indicator is expressed as a percentage of the Gross Domestic Product, or as a percentage of all public purchase. The indicator reflects the degree in which the market is influenced by the government, because by buying its goods or services at specific companies, competitors or new entrants to the market are crossed.
Source: Eurostat, Structural Indicators.- Percentage of GDP
- Public procurement as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
- Percentage of total public procurement
- Public procurement as a percentage of all public procurement.