Enforcing Contracts in Mauritius
This section looks at the efficiency of contract enforcement in Mauritius by following the evolution of a sale of goods dispute between two domestic businesses and tracking the time, cost, and number of procedures involved in the process, from the moment the plaintiff files the lawsuit until actual payment.
The country data appearing on this page was collected as part of the Doing Business project, which measures and compares regulations relevant to the life cycle of a small- to medium-sized domestic business in 183 economies. The most recent round of data collection for the project was completed in June 2009.
The table below shows the three main indicators for enforcing contracts. They are:
- the number of procedures from the moment the plaintiff files a lawsuit in court until the moment of payment,
- time, in calendar days, to resolve the dispute, and
- cost in court fees and attorney fees, where the use of attorneys is mandatory or common, expressed as a percentage of debt value.
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