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Bangladesh 2nd most economically free nation in South Asia

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Bangladesh 2nd most economically free nation in South Asia

ECONOMY
Mohsin Bhuiyan & Muhammad Nafis Shahriar Farabi
11 March, 2021, 10:35 pm
Last modified: 11 March, 2021, 10:41 pm


A significant improvement in the tax burden score is the key contributor to the country’s increased score in the 2021 Index of Economic Freedom

economic_freedom_index_2021-01_0.jpg

Bangladesh is the only country in South Asia that has seen an improvement in the Heritage Foundation's 2021 Index of Economic Freedom.
The country has been placed at the second most economically free nation in the region, only behind Bhutan.

Bangladesh's score has increased in government integrity, tax burden, business freedom, and labour freedom.

The increase is mainly contributed by a significant improvement in the tax burden score, which has been seen as a positive impact on the overall economic freedom of a nation.

According to the Heritage Foundation, the tax burden includes both the direct tax burden in terms of the top tax rates on individual and corporate incomes, and the overall amount of tax revenue as a percentage of GDP (gross domestic product).

Bangladesh has made slow but steady progress towards a greater economic freedom over the past decade, the Washington-based think tank said in its release.

India stands third, while Nepal ranked the lowest in the region in the economic freedom index.
Except Bangladesh, all South Asian countries have seen their scores decline this year.

However, globally, Bangladesh's economy stands 120th in the index released last week, scoring 56.5 in a scale of 100.

The score is below the global average economic freedom threshold set in the index, putting Bangladesh among 63 economies rated as "mostly unfree" along with its all regional neighbours.

Heritage Foundation evaluated a country's economic freedom in four broad policy areas: rule of law, government size, regulatory efficiency, and open markets.

The index measures 12 specific components: property rights, judicial effectiveness, government integrity, tax burden, government spending, fiscal health, business freedom, labor freedom, monetary freedom, trade freedom, investment freedom, and financial freedom.

"Bangladesh is performing well in the government size and open market category, but the problem lies in the rule of law and regulatory efficiency areas. Regulatory efficiency is very poor, arbitrary and sometimes irrational, while the market is more or less open," said Ahsan H Mansur, executive director of the Policy Research Institute.

Strong prevalence of the private sector in the economy and minimal conflict might have contributed to the improvement in economic freedom, he observed.

Like Bangladesh, other South Asian countries are suffering from similar problems – poor performance on rule of law and regulatory efficiency. There also exists institutional weakness among the nations and that is clearly reflected in the ranking, he further added.

He recommended, "Institutions should be made more stable and independent. They have to do what they are supposed to do, not being dictated by political interference. They also should have the technical capability to make the right and fair judgement on economic issues like the developed countries do."

"Impartiality, objectivity and lesser political interference should be exercised. This will improve institutional framework and enhance economic freedom," he further said.

Of the 178 economies ranked in the 2021 Index of Economic Freedom, five including Singapore, New Zealand and Australia are considered "free," while 33 including the United Kingdom, the United States and South Korea are classified as "mostly free."

Spain, Vietnam and Russia are among 59 economies classified as "moderately free."
On the other hand, 81 economies received scores below 60 and are rated "mostly unfree" or "repressed".

The world's least economically free nation remains North Korea, followed closely by Venezuela and Cuba.
 
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Only goes to show yet again what a joke South Asia is. More reason for BD to ditch SAARC and join ASEAN.

Well idea is fine, but will ASEAN countries approve us joining it?

This would mean most of the less developed countries in ASEAN would lose out business, because our labor cost (for one thing) is much, much lower than them. In most cases, half. Except maybe Cambodia and Vietnam, but the difference is still pretty large. So all ASEAN richer countries will prefer us even more as suppliers and as sourcing of labor value addition, once ASEAN trade preference measures and tariff advantages are accounted for.

We could at least try more lobbying with some of the leader countries in ASEAN such as Thailand/Malaysia/Indonesia.

By the way - the irony is that Ziaur Rahman and Bangladesh came up with the idea of SAARC, India did not.

Zia had farsighted vision but kind of a naïve idealist, to his detriment.

And over the years, India (by one crooked means or another) has been the maximum gainer of SAARC grouping. Part of the reason Islamabad felt compelled to leave the grouping. Not formally, but in spirit.

If you have "friends" like those we have in New Delhi (MOFA mofos) then who needs enemies?
 
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Here is the KPMG guide on manufacturing in Bangladesh. All the info pretty accurate, so far as I can see.

South Asia is absolutely a joke. Its 2 biggest countries are fighting with each other like kids over a line drawn buy a white boy. Toilet of humanity.

I don't think what you say is totally accurate. The biggest player possesses the bigger responsibility to be mature and a team player. Which is not the case right now. You can't bully all the smaller players and try to get away with whatever you feel like. But let's leave this discussion alone, this is off topic.
 
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Bangladesh 2nd most economically free nation in South Asia

ECONOMY
Mohsin Bhuiyan & Muhammad Nafis Shahriar Farabi
11 March, 2021, 10:35 pm
Last modified: 11 March, 2021, 10:41 pm


A significant improvement in the tax burden score is the key contributor to the country’s increased score in the 2021 Index of Economic Freedom

economic_freedom_index_2021-01_0.jpg

Bangladesh is the only country in South Asia that has seen an improvement in the Heritage Foundation's 2021 Index of Economic Freedom.
The country has been placed at the second most economically free nation in the region, only behind Bhutan.

Bangladesh's score has increased in government integrity, tax burden, business freedom, and labour freedom.

The increase is mainly contributed by a significant improvement in the tax burden score, which has been seen as a positive impact on the overall economic freedom of a nation.

According to the Heritage Foundation, the tax burden includes both the direct tax burden in terms of the top tax rates on individual and corporate incomes, and the overall amount of tax revenue as a percentage of GDP (gross domestic product).

Bangladesh has made slow but steady progress towards a greater economic freedom over the past decade, the Washington-based think tank said in its release.

India stands third, while Nepal ranked the lowest in the region in the economic freedom index.
Except Bangladesh, all South Asian countries have seen their scores decline this year.

However, globally, Bangladesh's economy stands 120th in the index released last week, scoring 56.5 in a scale of 100.

The score is below the global average economic freedom threshold set in the index, putting Bangladesh among 63 economies rated as "mostly unfree" along with its all regional neighbours.

Heritage Foundation evaluated a country's economic freedom in four broad policy areas: rule of law, government size, regulatory efficiency, and open markets.

The index measures 12 specific components: property rights, judicial effectiveness, government integrity, tax burden, government spending, fiscal health, business freedom, labor freedom, monetary freedom, trade freedom, investment freedom, and financial freedom.

"Bangladesh is performing well in the government size and open market category, but the problem lies in the rule of law and regulatory efficiency areas. Regulatory efficiency is very poor, arbitrary and sometimes irrational, while the market is more or less open," said Ahsan H Mansur, executive director of the Policy Research Institute.

Strong prevalence of the private sector in the economy and minimal conflict might have contributed to the improvement in economic freedom, he observed.

Like Bangladesh, other South Asian countries are suffering from similar problems – poor performance on rule of law and regulatory efficiency. There also exists institutional weakness among the nations and that is clearly reflected in the ranking, he further added.

He recommended, "Institutions should be made more stable and independent. They have to do what they are supposed to do, not being dictated by political interference. They also should have the technical capability to make the right and fair judgement on economic issues like the developed countries do."

"Impartiality, objectivity and lesser political interference should be exercised. This will improve institutional framework and enhance economic freedom," he further said.

Of the 178 economies ranked in the 2021 Index of Economic Freedom, five including Singapore, New Zealand and Australia are considered "free," while 33 including the United Kingdom, the United States and South Korea are classified as "mostly free."

Spain, Vietnam and Russia are among 59 economies classified as "moderately free."
On the other hand, 81 economies received scores below 60 and are rated "mostly unfree" or "repressed".

The world's least economically free nation remains North Korea, followed closely by Venezuela and Cuba.
Congratulations
 
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So Afghanistan is ranked above Pakistan. So much IK’s ...
 
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South Asia is absolutely a joke. Its 2 biggest countries are fighting with each other like kids over a line drawn buy a white boy. Toilet of humanity.

Because the larger countries created by white boy are unnatural and should not exist. They have to keep fighting to justify their existence and maintain some unity.
 
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Only goes to show yet again what a joke South Asia is. More reason for BD to ditch SAARC and join ASEAN.
IMHO ... multilateral arrangements are fluffy. You're going to be much better off negotiating iron-clad bilateral agreements with each ASEAN member. BD should be at the center.
 
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Pot stocks might be trading in the US markets !
Who knows, the pot industry just might recover the US economy from Covid fallout!

As George Washington in his wisom stated:
"99% of failures come from people who make excuses. The rest smoke gummies."
 
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South Asia is absolutely a joke. Its 2 biggest countries are fighting with each other like kids over a line drawn buy a white boy. Toilet of humanity.
I wonder how you guys feel now for turning down the offer to become a founding member of ASEAN.

Instead you have joined the South Asian Anarchy of Racial Conflict (SAARC).
 
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Because the larger countries created by white boy are unnatural and should not exist. They have to keep fighting to justify their existence and maintain some unity.
You can travel 100 years into the future and those 2 countries will still be the same. A bunch of idiots who don't want to change while the white and this time even yellow boys selling weapons to both sides.
I wonder how you guys feel now for turning down the offer to become a founding member of ASEAN.

Instead you have joined the South Asian Anarchy of Racial Conflict (SAARC).
I think Singapore opposed it. tbh SL also needs to get its shit together. Its economy run on rubber, tea and remittance form slave workers in GCC. Absolutely pathetic. Educated people don't want to stay there.
 
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