Dyankov has worked for the World Bank since 1995, initially focusing on
privatization and enterprise restructuring. In 1997, he participated in a World Bank enterprise restructuring project in
Georgia. For his work in the transformation of the Georgian economy, he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the
Free University of Tbilisi in June 2021. Dyankov also led
World Bank projects on
state-owned enterprise restructuring in
Moldova. This work restarted after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, under the aegis of the
European Commission, with a state-owned enterprise strategy published in February 2023. Dyankov led two
World Bank projects in
Ukraine and continues to be involved in proposals on financing the post-war recovery. These proposals involve large amounts of aid from Western donors as well as reparations by Russia. The priorities uniformly focus on rebuilding human capital and infrastructure.
1997 Asian Financial Crisis Dyankov participated in several
World Bank financial sector restructuring projects during the
1997 Asian financial crisis. Based on these projects, he published a series of articles on corporate governance in East Asia with
Stijn Claessens.
The World Development Report 2002 World Development Report 2002 analyzed how to build effective institutions. The study was guided by
Joseph Stiglitz, with
Simeon Djankov as a principal author. Several background papers, including by
Nobel Prize winners
Robert Shiller,
Amartya Sen and
Gabriel García Márquez, were published in academic journals or books.
The World Development Report 2019 The
World Development Report 2019 was led by Djankov and Federica Saliola. A summary of the main arguments and data is provided in the
Journal of International Affairs. Fears that robots will take jobs from people have dominated the discussion over the future of work, but the
World Development Report 2019 finds that on balance this appears to be unfounded.
Doing Business report and scandal Dyankov is the creator of the annual
Doing Business report, the top-selling publication of the World Bank Group. The report came out of joint research work with Professor
Andrei Shleifer at
Harvard University and was inspired by Dyankov's experience in overly-regulated socialist economies. In a 2016 article for the
Journal of Economic Perspectives, Dyankov explains how Doing Business started and lists academic papers that serve as background research for the report. The report has its origins in a 2002 paper published in the
Quarterly Journal of Economics under the title "The Regulation of Entry". The study presents data on the regulation of entry of
start-up firms in 85 countries covering the number of procedures, official time and official cost that a start-up must bear before it can operate legally. The main findings of the paper are that: "Countries with heavier regulation of entry have higher
corruption and larger unofficial economies, but no better quality of public or private goods. Countries with more democratic and limited governments have lighter regulation of entry." The paper became widely known, with over seven thousand academic references, because it provides quantitative evidence that entry regulation benefits politicians and
bureaucrats without adding value to the private sector or granting any additional protection. The reports were discontinued following an independent audit of the data irregularities. The audit documented how Dyankov, along with the World Bank CEO Georgieva, pressured staff to manipulate the results, in particular making data for China and Saudi Arabia look better. The board of the IMF, after a separate review, found that Georgieva had not "played an improper role". Georgieva is managing director of the IMF. An improved
Doing Business analysis is proposed in
Fraser Institute's 2022
Economic Freedom of the World report. This analysis outlines the start of a new report, to be housed at a top research institution. In October 2023,
The Economist summarized the impact of the project, tracing its origins back to Austrian economist
Friedrich Hayek. Both Hayek and the Doing Business authors over-promised on the effects of regulatory reform.
Women Business and the Law The World Bank's annual study,
Women Business and the Law, was inspired by the book
Women and the Law. The study is based on methodology described in Djankov,
Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg and Marie Hyland in
Gendered Laws and Women in the Workforce. The study extends to country reform cases, for example in
Burundi,
Rwanda,
Zambia and
Zimbabwe, all countries where customary law prevails.
Human Capital Index The
Human Capital Index is an annual measurement prepared by the World Bank. The applications to measuring human capital are developed by Noam Angrist, Simeon Djankov, Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg and Harry Patrinos in the scientific journal
Nature. These findings are extended in a 2021 article. The index is used in country studies of employment and wages, for example in Ukraine after Russia's invasion. ==Political career==