Nilgiri
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What I was saying that I don't understand how things add up.
BD's exports + Remittance is certainly higher than imports. Yet lately Forex has been stagnant/slightly decreasing.
Well in your calculation you probably forgot service trade.
For 2017 BD (World Bank figures):
In goods the deficit is about 12 billion USD (35.5 - 47.6)
In services the deficit is about 5.5 billion USD (3.9 - 9.3)
Remittance, surplus is about 13.5 billion USD
So just from that the total deficit generated is around 4 billion USD for 2017.
Add to this various other net incomes/investment components from abroad (things regarding loans, investments etc...remember capital account surplus equals current account deficit, just the specific components are tallied up different) and the deficit totals to 10 billion for 2017.
This is partly why forex is now stagnant. What BD used to accrue before (when Cur. A was in small surplus or near zero) in forex (i.e foreign investment into Govt bonds largely) is now I would assume breaking even with the larger (and growing) current Account deficit....hence forex remains about the same for last cpl years.
Couple of years ago we used to see news like 'Forex reserve record high' in every 2-3 month in this section of PDF. Have you noticed how they disappeared?
Yes..but need give a chunk of more time til 2020 I would say for a firmer trend to base on. It is start of phase 2 for BD economy (transitioning from phase 1).
Cur. Account deficit is not automatically bad thing...it really depends. In fact it can be argued to be good thing as well if its private company driven (and of things with long term economic chain inside BD). South Asia should not be seeking to blindly follow SEZ/export model of East Asia (given bulk of China I mentioned before...that is now going to be stuck there even longer courtesy of the trade war brewing now)...rather it should be hedging in all aspects and models of growth. The key is free markets...and govt focusing only on things where govt is proven net positive.
Banking sector is going down the drain. Govt are giving approving way too many banks and the bank owners are using this opportunity to plunder the capital of the banks. Then ask govt to bail out......BD need to reduce the number of banks. Someday ago the finance minister expressed his frustration about govt giving approval to five new banks despite his disagreement.
Stocks are doing okay for now I guess.
BD needs a hard reset in economic sectors. Even if it cause some short term problems. But not likely. Even if BNP or someother gains power they're likely to continue the same sort of economic policies.
Yes bank capitalization is big issue in BD. My friend updates me on it a lot...his family scaling of their successful business is affected in various ways with credit flows. There is not balance and stability....and this is major dissonance given the sentiment of political stability being argued for in favour of BAL.
You need institution stability (esp finance and legal frameworks) and reform stability (i.e long term bureaucratic reform drive, merit based policy prescriptions and hirings/firings) first....then only political stability/competition even enters the discussion.
Bureaucrats are untouchable in BD. Because they help the govt to keep their power. No govt will touch them. What happens, when a new govt comes, the bureaucrats that are deemed loyalists of the previous govt are transferred to less important places or made OSD(Officer in Special Duty, in other words, no duty just collect your paycheck every month).
Yup common thing in developing world. But even with this basic model in operation, improvements can be made by having some clear merit based process as 2nd driver....but problem is BD is not really even trying there...it treats the swap out/swap in as only thing that needs to happen.
It needs more kinds of industries man...thats the final thing that will kick it up a gear or two in this whole system. I say this because its what worked in TN....once you have the govt thugs competing across a whole swathe of labour unions etc...they are forced to run calculations and achieve more efficiency (as greedy as their intent still is) to stay in power against the other parties. When you have just one industry (RMG) and thus just one pool of "new" labour allocation (outside agriculture and retail which are traditional heritage stuff) essentially...you make it too easy for political thugs to dictate absolute terms....to me this explains why BD is not simply reducing excise rates on other industries like 10 years ago itself (and still not doing it now)....everything is to just be one controlled route to gaining some wealth....because thats the best for big bureaucratic govt.
I don't have problems with BD borrowing money for building infrastructures. But BD has to gain the knowledge and expertise too. Tell me, after Dhaka metro rail, will we be able to develop Chittagong metro rail without foreign involvement? Will we be able to develop the 2nd nuclear power plant, bridges like Padma bridge ourselves? If not than more money should be put into education and industrial training than those infrastructures. One reason I support the nucelar power plant is at least BD people will learn how to operate a nuclear power plant. It's not the structure that is necessary but the knowledge and expertise.
Problem is the money could be put into way more useful (and immediately and long term more relevant) knowledge and expertise at far greater scale for BD. Nuclear is very very niche and very very specific/limited as to its impact (on labour pool)...you need far more things driving its development (at larger strategic levels) than just the energy demand to have it really make sense. Otherwise you just end up subsidizing those that have invested into those strategies...with little to show for it yourself. There are a million different technical and research capacities that should be picked from (for BD) before you come to nuclear, esp sinking in 18 billion dollars into it...imo.