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Ashok Leyland to supply 200 trucks to Bangladesh as part of $2-bn line of credit

hi guys , I am from the engineering side .
why so much hate in a simple trade deal ?
India is without doubt much ahead of all our immediate saarc neighbors in engineering and industrial development.
good that bangladesh is also choosing industrialization for growth , just 50 years post independence.
Ashok Leyland vehicles have a good reputation in India . Not a bad deal for Bangladesh.
 
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Name them and their market share and how will they compete with india products


Now a bangladeshi trolls knows more about India ,cool , first know about Dhaka properly and your companies and their capabilities

Tell you what Kumar, if you are so inclined go right ahead, Google is your friend. Why should we do your work?
 
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Tell you what Kumar, if you are so inclined go right ahead, Google is your friend. Why should we do your work?
Because I posted a fact regarding refrigerator from Google , want similar for other items too ?
 
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hi guys , I am from the engineering side .
why so much hate in a simple trade deal ?
India is without doubt much ahead of all our immediate saarc neighbors in engineering and industrial development.
good that bangladesh is also choosing industrialization for growth , just 50 years post independence.
Ashok Leyland vehicles have a good reputation in India . Not a bad deal for Bangladesh.

The argument was not about AL trucks, which are assembled in Bangladesh. It was about how Indian govt. is blocking Bangladeshi exports on flimsy pretexts.

Using the pretext of 'dumping' and "Rules of Origin"- to assign non-tariff barriers like add'l duty on Bangladesh exports to India.

On Bangladesh side we simply see it as illegal. There is a separate thread on this.

Almost all Bangladesh exports to India face para-tariff barriers.

Because I posted a fact regarding refrigerator from Google , want similar for other items too ?

Knock yourself out.
 
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hi guys , I am from the engineering side .
why so much hate in a simple trade deal ?
India is without doubt much ahead of all our immediate saarc neighbors in engineering and industrial development.
good that bangladesh is also choosing industrialization for growth , just 50 years post independence.
Ashok Leyland vehicles have a good reputation in India . Not a bad deal for Bangladesh.

The issue here is not whether India is ahead or not rather increasing trade gap and including clause with the line of credit that Bangladesh needs to pay back with interest must buy Indian products where better product may be available from other sources.

Another issue is India's imposing of artificial trade barriers and dumping duty on almost any Bangladeshi products which starts to gain Indian market share. Even a mare 8 million USD worth of export of float glass from Bangladesh is in the list when India is exporting billions dollar worth of product.


If you count smuggling products, money laundering by Indian business man, professionals in Bangladesh and in some cases minority community and 2.5 million Bangladeshis that travel to India for vacation and medical reason the trade gap is not less than 20-30 Billion USD at least. But India is not doing anything to reduce the gap. This does not include withdrawal of water by India, releasing water during rainy season and damages it is costing to Bangladesh. Plus obviously border killing.

There are obviously so many reasons for Bangladeshis to be angry on India.
 
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Where 99% are not reported in India published in India?

@Nilgiri come up with something new. A crow can not become a peacock. Stop changing name.
A country like bangladesh will report more and India will not. Riiiiight! Sounds very believable. Both are equally bad hell holes for women.
 
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A country like bangladesh will report more and India will not. Riiiiight! Sounds very believable. Both are equally bad hell holes for women.

Bangladesh is way better than India and only country that ranked in top 100 from South Asia for gender equality index. Bangladesh ranked 65th where as India 140th.

After analysis of the National Family Health Survey of 2015-16, LiveMint reported that over 99.1% of cases of rape go unreported in India.

 
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The issue here is not whether India is ahead or not rather increasing trade gap and including clause with the line of credit that Bangladesh needs to pay back with interest must buy Indian products where better product may be available from other sources.

Another issue is India's imposing of artificial trade barriers and dumping duty on almost any Bangladeshi products which starts to gain Indian market share. Even a mare 8 million USD worth of export of float glass from Bangladesh is in the list when India is exporting billions dollar worth of product.


If you count smuggling products, money laundering by Indian business man, professionals in Bangladesh and in some cases minority community and 2.5 million Bangladeshis that travel to India for vacation and medical reason the trade gap is not less than 20-30 Billion USD at least. But India is not doing anything to reduce the gap. This does not include withdrawal of water by India, releasing water during rainy season and damages it is costing to Bangladesh. Plus obviously border killing.

There are obviously so many reasons for Bangladeshis to be angry on India.
you do seem to have quite a laundry list of complaints.
Trade gap is important but not the most important. BD and India don't have hostile relations, while India and China have pretty hostile relations. USA and China have very hostile relations. But all these countries have flourishing trade. With some countries India has a trade deficit, like China, while with some a trade plus like usa. That's modern economics. Governments cannot ask private sector to buy uneconomical products from abroad and sell finished products at higher prices.
In economics, no point in cutting nose to spite face. We have seen how China reacted to Australians asking for a probe into the virus originating in Wuhan and put blocks on aussie coal . And then started facing massive power shortages at home. Bet the Chinese wished they had not acted in such haste and could reverse the decision, but loss of face , etc.
The BD tourists coming to India is not India's fault. You guys can go to Pakistan or China. This is just complaining for the sake of complaining.
The BD government is doing a pretty good job economically, much smarter ppl then us at the helm of the governments.
 
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you do seem to have quite a laundry list of complaints.
Trade gap is important but not the most important. BD and India don't have hostile relations, while India and China have pretty hostile relations. USA and China have very hostile relations. But all these countries have flourishing trade. With some countries India has a trade deficit, like China, while with some a trade plus like usa. That's modern economics. Governments cannot ask private sector to buy uneconomical products from abroad and sell finished products at higher prices.
In economics, no point in cutting nose to spite face. We have seen how China reacted to Australians asking for a probe into the virus originating in Wuhan and put blocks on aussie coal . And then started facing massive power shortages at home. Bet the Chinese wished they had not acted in such haste and could reverse the decision, but loss of face , etc.
The BD tourists coming to India is not India's fault. You guys can go to Pakistan or China. This is just complaining for the sake of complaining.
The BD government is doing a pretty good job economically, much smarter ppl then us at the helm of the governments.

What India can or could do is stop putting artificial trade barrier or impose dumping duty whenever any Bangladeshi product start to capture market share in India regardless how small it is.

No one has asked for buying Bangladeshi product when it’s not competitive.
 
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Bangladesh : 8.1 per 100,000.
India : 1.8 per 100,000

Guess we know which is the Real rape capital of the world, eh?


Our women have enough helplines to report unlike India where rape victims get paraded around naked and beaten publicly, much to Indian men's enjoyment 😏😏



 
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The issue here is not whether India is ahead or not rather increasing trade gap and including clause with the line of credit that Bangladesh needs to pay back with interest must buy Indian products where better product may be available from other sources.

Another issue is India's imposing of artificial trade barriers and dumping duty on almost any Bangladeshi products which starts to gain Indian market share. Even a mare 8 million USD worth of export of float glass from Bangladesh is in the list when India is exporting billions dollar worth of product.


If you count smuggling products, money laundering by Indian business man, professionals in Bangladesh and in some cases minority community and 2.5 million Bangladeshis that travel to India for vacation and medical reason the trade gap is not less than 20-30 Billion USD at least. But India is not doing anything to reduce the gap. This does not include withdrawal of water by India, releasing water during rainy season and damages it is costing to Bangladesh. Plus obviously border killing.

There are obviously so many reasons for Bangladeshis to be angry on India.
Give data ,not statement about import duties , what percent of duties we apply

What India can or could do is stop putting artificial trade barrier or impose dumping duty whenever any Bangladeshi product start to capture market share in India regardless how small it is.

No one has asked for buying Bangladeshi product when it’s not competitive.
Which product Bangladeshi makes cheap ?
 
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Give data ,not statement about import duties , what percent of duties we apply


Which product Bangladeshi makes cheap ?

Search at Google @Nilgiri instead of creating multiple accounts and asking repeated questions which has been discussed already number of times and spamming the forum again and again repeatedly.
 
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I work in this industry and I know for a fact, BD doesn't have an electronics industry. Canadian/US manufacturers import most 60% of the components from China and the rest from Vietnam, Taiwan, India, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore.

Name any electronics manufacturing major, they have at least one plant in India. Foxconn, Flextronics, Sanmina, Jabil, Celestica, Samsung, Nokia etc with addition of home grown contract manufacturer Dixon. Many of the above has multiple plants. And these are just.the top level dogs. There are many small foreign manufacturer here.

The same companies have 6-8 plants in China, while having just 1-2 in India. And that's our gap. BD is not even in their map. One company do not make an industry.

‘Our vision is to be among the world’s top five brands’​

Ibrahim Hossain Ovi
  • Published at 11:40 pm November 29th, 2020
Walton Infograph


Says Walton MD Golam Murshed in an interview recently.

Seeing the rising anti-China sentiment in India, the US and much of the world, local electronics giant Walton has now set its sight on attracting buyers who are shifting away from China for procuring electronics and home appliance goods, said its top executive recently.

“But for that, branding Bangladesh is very crucial,” Golam Murshed, managing director of Walton Hi-Tech Industries, told Dhaka Tribune in an interview recently.

Globally, Bangladesh is still known as a third-world country.

But given the present economic status and growth, in absolute terms, Bangladesh is not a third world country anymore, he said.
“This is a big challenge for us in grabbing market share abroad. People simply don’t know about Bangladesh as a manufacturer of home appliances or electronic products.”

And that is where branding comes in, said Murshed, who was appointed the MD last month by the Walton board.

walton-md-murshed-1-1606671071025.jpg

“Bangladesh badly needs to showcase its strength in manufacturing electronics products.”

Other than that, it would not be difficult to match Walton’s foreign counterparts in terms of quality.

“It will not be tough for us as we have a pool of talented engineers who work relentlessly to improve the product quality,” said Murshed, who himself joined Walton in 2010 as an assistant engineer and quickly climbed the ranks.

For quality control and to reach world-class standards, Walton has hired talent from renowned global brands such as LG, Panasonic and Samsung.
And it sends engineers abroad on a regular basis so that they are on top of the latest technology.

Murshed went to cite the case of Walton’s recent export of television to Germany and compressor to Turkey amid the pandemic as a sign of the growing acceptance of its products abroad.

“Before importing from us, these companies were used to importing from other countries and they chose us for sourcing. This shows our strength.”
Murshed also cited Walton’s ascension in the domestic market over the decade to further his point.

“The dominance of foreign brands and imported goods have almost come to an end. This has been possible due to the quality of Walton goods and our affordable price.”

Walton has cornered 75 per cent of the market for refrigerators, 50 per cent for television and 20 per cent for air conditioners, according to Murshed, a mechanical engineering graduate from the Islamic University of Technology.

“In the last decade, we have conquered the domestic market and in the next decade, our vision is to become a global brand.

At present, Walton -- which manufactures a mindboggling array of gadgets ranging from mobile phones to laptops, washing machines to microwave ovens, blender to gas stoves, electric fans to LED bulbs -- exports to 40 countries in Africa, Europe and Asia.

The African countries and the Middle East could be big markets for Walton, according to Murshed, who previously served an additional MD at the company.
“There is a huge potential for finished goods there. Those countries prefer to import finished goods as there is manpower shortage and labour cost is high there.”

Closer to home, India, Nepal and Sri Lanka have good prospects.

“Considering the price and quality of products, Bangladesh will be the next destination for electronic goods and home appliances,” he said, adding that Walton has been taking advantage of the duty-free market access to the US, the EU and elsewhere that Bangladesh currently enjoys as a least-developed country.

But for now, Walton’s main focus is to ride out the pandemic, which has cost it a quarter of missed sales and that too at a time when the sales for certain items like refrigerators and ACs typically surge.

Its sales crashed a whooping 78 per cent to Tk 489 crore between April and June.

Subsequently, its profit in the 2019-20 financial year that ended on June 30 dropped 47.2 per cent to Tk 733.4 crore.

Even as the economy opened up from June, Walton’s sales are not springing back to pre-COVID level on account of pent-up demand.

In the July-September quarter, its profit declined 12 per cent year-on-year to Tk 401.7 crore.

“The pandemic is an unprecedented one for the world and it has also hit the sales of Walton. During the shutdown, our focus was on how to remain afloat and save our employees, who are like our family members.”

The homegrown electronic giant did not lay off a single worker or slashed salaries.


Walton’s second focus during the countrywide shutdown from March 26 to May 30 was on how to keep the supply chain operations to serve the customers.

“Giving priorities to customer’s demands, we delivered products on time maintaining a health safety protocol, which helped to rebound the sales,” Murshed added.

The share price of Walton, which made its stock market debut earlier this year, has been on a descent in recent days. Since November 12, its share price dropped 15.3 per cent. It closed at Tk 708.7 on Sunday.
 
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What India can or could do is stop putting artificial trade barrier or impose dumping duty whenever any Bangladeshi product start to capture market share in India regardless how small it is.

No one has asked for buying Bangladeshi product when it’s not competitive.
with china we have a massive deficit, inspite of the conflict and animosity.
Do you think India wants to unnecessarily antagonize it's ally like BD with unfair tariffs ?
Rerouting is a common practice to bypass barriers and India cannot be blamed for protecting its industry from further Chinese products flooding the market.
 
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‘Our vision is to be among the world’s top five brands’​

Ibrahim Hossain Ovi
  • Published at 11:40 pm November 29th, 2020
Walton Infograph


Says Walton MD Golam Murshed in an interview recently.

Seeing the rising anti-China sentiment in India, the US and much of the world, local electronics giant Walton has now set its sight on attracting buyers who are shifting away from China for procuring electronics and home appliance goods, said its top executive recently.

“But for that, branding Bangladesh is very crucial,” Golam Murshed, managing director of Walton Hi-Tech Industries, told Dhaka Tribune in an interview recently.

Globally, Bangladesh is still known as a third-world country.

But given the present economic status and growth, in absolute terms, Bangladesh is not a third world country anymore, he said.
“This is a big challenge for us in grabbing market share abroad. People simply don’t know about Bangladesh as a manufacturer of home appliances or electronic products.”

And that is where branding comes in, said Murshed, who was appointed the MD last month by the Walton board.

walton-md-murshed-1-1606671071025.jpg

“Bangladesh badly needs to showcase its strength in manufacturing electronics products.”

Other than that, it would not be difficult to match Walton’s foreign counterparts in terms of quality.

“It will not be tough for us as we have a pool of talented engineers who work relentlessly to improve the product quality,” said Murshed, who himself joined Walton in 2010 as an assistant engineer and quickly climbed the ranks.

For quality control and to reach world-class standards, Walton has hired talent from renowned global brands such as LG, Panasonic and Samsung.
And it sends engineers abroad on a regular basis so that they are on top of the latest technology.

Murshed went to cite the case of Walton’s recent export of television to Germany and compressor to Turkey amid the pandemic as a sign of the growing acceptance of its products abroad.

“Before importing from us, these companies were used to importing from other countries and they chose us for sourcing. This shows our strength.”
Murshed also cited Walton’s ascension in the domestic market over the decade to further his point.

“The dominance of foreign brands and imported goods have almost come to an end. This has been possible due to the quality of Walton goods and our affordable price.”

Walton has cornered 75 per cent of the market for refrigerators, 50 per cent for television and 20 per cent for air conditioners, according to Murshed, a mechanical engineering graduate from the Islamic University of Technology.

“In the last decade, we have conquered the domestic market and in the next decade, our vision is to become a global brand.

At present, Walton -- which manufactures a mindboggling array of gadgets ranging from mobile phones to laptops, washing machines to microwave ovens, blender to gas stoves, electric fans to LED bulbs -- exports to 40 countries in Africa, Europe and Asia.

The African countries and the Middle East could be big markets for Walton, according to Murshed, who previously served an additional MD at the company.
“There is a huge potential for finished goods there. Those countries prefer to import finished goods as there is manpower shortage and labour cost is high there.”

Closer to home, India, Nepal and Sri Lanka have good prospects.

“Considering the price and quality of products, Bangladesh will be the next destination for electronic goods and home appliances,” he said, adding that Walton has been taking advantage of the duty-free market access to the US, the EU and elsewhere that Bangladesh currently enjoys as a least-developed country.

But for now, Walton’s main focus is to ride out the pandemic, which has cost it a quarter of missed sales and that too at a time when the sales for certain items like refrigerators and ACs typically surge.

Its sales crashed a whooping 78 per cent to Tk 489 crore between April and June.

Subsequently, its profit in the 2019-20 financial year that ended on June 30 dropped 47.2 per cent to Tk 733.4 crore.

Even as the economy opened up from June, Walton’s sales are not springing back to pre-COVID level on account of pent-up demand.

In the July-September quarter, its profit declined 12 per cent year-on-year to Tk 401.7 crore.

“The pandemic is an unprecedented one for the world and it has also hit the sales of Walton. During the shutdown, our focus was on how to remain afloat and save our employees, who are like our family members.”

The homegrown electronic giant did not lay off a single worker or slashed salaries.


Walton’s second focus during the countrywide shutdown from March 26 to May 30 was on how to keep the supply chain operations to serve the customers.

“Giving priorities to customer’s demands, we delivered products on time maintaining a health safety protocol, which helped to rebound the sales,” Murshed added.

The share price of Walton, which made its stock market debut earlier this year, has been on a descent in recent days. Since November 12, its share price dropped 15.3 per cent. It closed at Tk 708.7 on Sunday.
Now read their research budget too , with that amount of money in research , at vest you can make toys , so do enlighten us how they managed to develop this world class quality with low research 😂
 
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