No one can beat the Indians when it comes to fake economic data. Their numbers are so absurd, economists have started using their own benchmarks to assess the true ground reality in India. These cheap shots against Bangladesh are a desperate bid to safe face after the per capita income in Bangladesh soared past India.
Economists and investors are increasingly showing that they have little or no confidence in India's official economic data – presenting whoever is elected as the next prime minister with an immediate problem.
www.reuters.com
Thank You. My point exactly.
The fact that there is some level of scrutiny in Bangladesh economic expert circles too.
But if you do that in today's Modi/BJP/RSS India, they will find a way to retaliate and make you pay, either professionally (taking away privileges) or by harassing you with legal encumbrances (fake lawsuits, police harassment, show-cause notices by govt. regulatory departments).
How dare someone question their fake data!!
This was amply demonstrated when they cooked up development and construction numbers and someone asked where is the cement that made this happen? Cement production and consumption numbers did not agree vis-à-vis the glorified development stats.
This is the primary reason that India's numbers are questioned by outsiders often and Indian govt. people have nothing concrete to respond with.
Modi's Bharat must always be Mahaan, even if it take lies to push the idea!
Actually many countries including India over spend their budget.
The only estimation comes from the tax collections based on which budget is planned. If the tax collections becomes less, then India borrows to make up for that deficit. A reason why fiscal deficit is quite high in the last 2 years for India.
If this news is true, then BD does not borrow to make up for the shortfall. If the govt don't spend, then the growth rate won't be as high as projected. Growth rates are also determined based on what govt invests in that particular year. Unless the final growth rate calculation is based on actual spending, then it's alright. If not, what learned members like Nilgiris was telling is true. These guys here simply did not have an answer to his questions.
I will give you an example.
Remember the export incentive India used to provide for assembling and exporting cars?
When this was discontinued some years ago, car assembly activity fell through the roof and hasn't recovered since.
Like this - in India most things and industries are propped up by subsidies and incentive schemes.
We don't have comparable things in Bangladesh. So processes and economic activity in Bangladesh are more sustainable.