affairs for mining activities. In fact, all African jurisdictions,
with the exclusion of Namibia, enhanced their policy scores, according to the survey.
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Namibia, the only African jurisdiction that did not better its policy perception index score, experienced a 13-point
decrease in its policy score, descending in the overall policy ranking from 14
th out of 76 jurisdictions in 2019 to 47
th out of 77 jurisdictions in the 2020 survey, whilst nonetheless edging out jurisdictions like Queensland in Australia, British Columbia in Canada and
Colorado in the US.
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In contrast, South Africa ranked 40
th out of 76
jurisdictions in 2019 to 60
th out of 77 jurisdictions in terms of investment attractiveness in the 2020 index report. Further, the country’s investment attractiveness score worsened to 56.33 in 2020, from 64.79 in 2019
respectively, while the country’s standing on the policy perceptions index also worsened to 66 out of 77 jurisdictions, compared with 55 out of 76 in 2019.
However, while it is helpful to measure the attractiveness of a jurisdiction founded on policy elements such as taxing regulations,
taxation levels, the quality of infrastructure among other elements, investment choices are frequently founded on the plain mineral prospective of a jurisdiction. Indeed,
respondents consistently signal that approximately only 40% of their investment selection is ascertained by policy factors, according to the report.
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