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Bangladesh Emerging

kobiraaz

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What does Bangladesh aspire to become? A question with million answers. But viewed through a macroeconomist's narrow lens, Bangladesh needs to emerge as the largest-ever manufacturing- and export-led take off in a democracy. Some green shoots are peeking.

The lesson from around the world is development often sprouts out of a mysterious mix of choice and chance; institutions and individuals. Curiously, that mix has only some common ingredients but no common recipe. What worked yesterday may not tomorrow; what works during the low tide may not during the high tide. In short, development is not a destiny.

In a timely reminder, the recently held BIDS conference, titled 'Critical Conversation', prodded us to be confident but also curious and humble about Bangladesh's takeoff. In that spirit, I want to share four observations on our journey.

First, on being the largest-ever manufacturing takeoff in a democracy.

Only seven countries are at least as large as us in this regard. With 100 million or more, Brazil, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Russia are commodity stories, relying on commodity (i.e., oil) exports; India is a service story, trying hard to ignite manufacturing; China and Vietnam are manufacturing stories but in a socialist market economy. That would make Bangladesh a story of the largest manufacturing-led takeoff in a democracy, if the green shoots mature as trees.

Past such takeoffs were few and smaller in size. The prime examples are the UK and the US. In 1800, while moving from agriculture to industry, they together were smaller than Dhaka's population today. Even in the 1870s, with 4-5 times higher per capita than we are at now, when the UK was the political superpower, the US the economic superpower, they combined were only 60 million, smaller than even half of Bangladesh today.

As in aeronautical engineering, macroeconomic management is a function of size: the aerodynamics and the pilots of Boeing 747 are different from those of a small Cessna. Of course, it helps that the world now is bigger and more globalised with technology, trade, and finance than in the 1870s; the stronger wind can help our liftoff. Our large population means domestic demand can be an extra engine of growth. All possible but not preordained.

Second, why the emphasis on manufacturing? The reason is simple: it can create more and better jobs quickly to absorb our 2 million new workers every year.

To contextualise, India's world class IT industry employs only 2.5 million of its 500 million workers. High-end services, like IT, can flame aspirations and absorb educated middle class but not the large mass. Last September, an advertisement for 368 tea boys and night guards in Uttar Pradesh drew 2.3 million applications. Hence the Make in India campaign for manufacturing and for jobs.

Like a necklace of multi-coloured pearls, manufacturing today forms a chain of specialisation. Each country specialises in only some pearls. Unsurprisingly, high-value products mean longer chains. iPhone parts, for example, are made in more than 30 countries before being assembled in one location. No wonder 80 percent of global trade is conducted by transnational companies with productions in more than one country.

With diffused manufacturing, what and how well we produce is important. Equally, if not more, important is how seamlessly we connect with the world. That's why infrastructure, skills, and institutions matter so much, especially as our manufacturing reaches beyond garments.

Third, takeoff in a democracy.
Bangladesh is now in an unprecedented flux amid 4 critical transitions: industrialisation, urbanisation, young demography, and technology (mobile, media). These forces can both unite and fragment societies, straining harmony. During these transitions, changes often do not add up; they multiply.

In a society amid such tectonic shifts on steroids, where culture, family, work, values all are changing fast, trees are becoming hyacinths, identities will invariably face tension, which, if unattended, can interfere with the takeoff.

As we are learning painfully, harmony seems brittle in today's world where cultures and identities are weathering complex pressures; where aspirations and resentments have gone global and digital, with the butterfly effects of the Chaos Theory: small causes can have large effects. Technology, for example, spreads light but also darkness, polarising souls into binary shapes: aspire or despair.

Amid all this, unsurprisingly, the physics of the young, crowded, and connected makes our social equilibrium particularly delicate. Democracy, with liberal and inclusive institutions, offers the least imperfect safety valves and the best hope to negotiate these relentless transition pressures, to glue the society, and to make the long journey less bumpy. The physics also means job, inclusion, and social justice are more than just lofty advocacy goals; they have to anchor every engineering equation.

Good news is our growth drivers - garments, remittance, agriculture - have mostly been inclusive, balancing social harmony. At least till recently.

In 1971, we started out as a poor, rural but an aspirational and more equal society. Despite far lower poverty now, with growth, inequality has been rising in the last two decades through diverging income, education, and land price. True, growth and inequality are often co-passengers but the latter, when unruly, chokes the former and poisons societies. Just look around the world.

Let me digress a bit. In the 1980s, a hybrid public transport with the face of a truck but the body of a bus - seemingly a product of Greek mythology - used to ply between Rampura and Farmgate. It was called “murir tin,” a can of puffed rice, because passengers were packed like rice, actually more like sardines. A high school friend used to joke Bangladesh is the biggest; “murir tin” bus, where if one stinks, we all smell.

It's obvious we all are in it together, sharing the same, limited oxygen. We are a land where even improbable lightning strikes can kill 64 people in 48 hours. That makes inequality and polarisation both expensive and explosive.

Fourth, the flight conditions over the coming decade.


The flight records of the last 50 years show two big waves of takeoffs, mostly in Asia: the first was during the 1960-'70s, with Taiwan, Singapore, Korea, followed by Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia; the second in the 1990s: China, India, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Cambodia.

Looking back, our democratic journey since 1991 luckily coincided with the stronger global tailwind from the second wave: the world, especially emerging markets, grew rapidly. So did we, defying predictions, causing surprise, and earning respect.

Looking ahead, global growth will likely be slower over the next 20 years than in the past 20. Think of China's churning, Japan's tepid growth, the US recovering coyly, the Middle East hurting from the low oil price and geopolitics, the EU still coping with the 2008 crisis legacies and now Brexit. With weaker tailwinds on our back, we need to sail harder, reform faster, and implement better.

All told, what do these four observations above mean for our development recipe?

Going forward, the crux of our challenge is how to foster urgency and competency in a democracy; how to anchor identities amid flux, much like floating hyacinths; how to upgrade institutions, industries without waiting for the “cathartic” crises. For example, how to restructure garments industries without Rana Plaza?

I realise these questions about institutions have no simple or single answer. Like a Darwinian ecosystem, institutions have many species. They evolve, rise, and fall too. But let me take a boring and sweeping view of the lessons from other democracies.

An ironic lesson is institutions and reforms often grow out of crises, which help blunt vested interest groups, empower reformers, and forge consensus. Think of the US in the 1800s, with major banking crises almost every 6 years. The Federal Reserve Bank was established only in 1913, six long years after the 1907 banking crisis. The 1929 market crash gave birth to their SEC.

A sad, more complex lesson is not all crises lead to reform: Tazreen did not prevent Rana Plaza.

Reform ultimately hinges on how well we internalise the lessons of the past crises, on how quickly we learn, on how cohesively we travel together. A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.

Many of our successful micro-institutions and social innovations were borne out of the famine, over population, food shortages, and floods in the 1970s-'80s. We did not waste those crises. In defiance and with resilience, we pioneered solutions amid darkness where and when few saw light. Those stubborn crises coupled with the tsunami of inspirations unleashed by 1971 gave us focus, discipline, and consensus, which need extra nutrition and oxygen today, especially amid the problems of plenty.

Now, back to the future. A new phase awaits us, breathing for newer solutions, consensus, and capacity than those in the first three decades. Microfinance, for example, is not scalable to infrastructure financing; NGOs teaching loving mothers orsaline usage to save her dying child is not the same as the government building a four-lane highway on time, with quality, and within costs. With larger scale and higher altitude, capacity and public institutions need to mature exponentially.

In that BIDS Conference, we requested the Director General to continue the 'Critical Conversation' seminar series to study other countries with similar transitions. For example, in a 1956 Pulitzer Prize winning book the Age of Reform, Richard Hofstadter recounts how the US implemented mass reforms during 1880-1920, an era of both great progress and great dislocations, much like ours now.

We are at new waters: the promise of the largest-ever manufacturing- and export-led takeoff in a young, crowded, and connected democracy, navigating a low-growth world. The road ahead is long and the slope is steep.

Let's think about the road ahead, together, and with curiosity and humility.


http://www.thedailystar.net/op-ed/bangladesh-emerging-1270219
 
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The linkages are somewhat illogical, confusingly mixing up anecdotal evidence with presumptions and personal bias.... Bangladesh need to aspire to become a country that is economically sound with a balanced mix of primary/manufacturing/service/4th sector, where its people and education system is globally connected and relevant. Where it has an well informed polity and free media that enforces political discipline and corporate social responsibilities.

This kind of confused drivel is so annoying... Then again it is daily star so not particularly surprised
 
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The future of Bangladesh is certainly bright, but it would be prospering even more if not for corrupt politicians and the large uneducated masses.

Speaking from a real-world view, especially in terms of a Bengali mentality, we cannot eliminate corruption. However, we can promote education and establish full literacy, which will lead to a greater conscience among people about such issues thus leading to decreasing corruption. Lower corruption will lead to a higher developing mentality and this will lead to better spending on required infrastructure.

Then the service, manufacturing, tourism etc sectors will gain pace like never before.
 
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The future of Bangladesh is certainly bright, but it would be prospering even more if not for corrupt politicians and the large uneducated masses.

Speaking from a real-world view, especially in terms of a Bengali mentality, we cannot eliminate corruption. However, we can promote education and establish full literacy, which will lead to a greater conscience among people about such issues thus leading to decreasing corruption. Lower corruption will lead to a higher developing mentality and this will lead to better spending on required infrastructure.

Then the service, manufacturing, tourism etc sectors will gain pace like never before.

Bang on the button.
 
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Guys please don't read this the wrong way if you're from India - but this story broadcast on NPR a few days ago shows how vulnerable to export markets a manufacturing economy like India is, unless propped up by massive currency manipulation and subsidies, even providing jobs to a populace needs to be done carefully, and there are lessons to be learnt here.

Bangladesh got lucky being an unsophisticated supplier of sorts because no matter how bad an economy gets, people still need to buy clothes (and cheap clothes at that), but as soon as you 'upgrade' to making higher value addition things, all bets are off....

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
India's Lagging Manufacturing Sector Slows Job Creation
August 11, 20165:04 AM ET

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

And you often hear about India having the world's fastest-growing economy. And it is growing at 7.6 percent. But beneath that headline is another reality. Manufacturing in the country is lagging, and that's hurting India's ability to create jobs and lift millions of people out of poverty. Let's go to New Delhi and NPR's Julie McCarthy.

JULIE MCCARTHY, BYLINE: Manish Dhariwal, chief financial officer of PPAP Automotive Limited, steps onto the factory floor as a downsized second shift punches in.

MANISH DHARIWAL: Each part has a different design.

MCCARTHY: He sweeps his hand across a display case of strips that seal car doors and windows, components he sells to the largest Japanese car manufacturers. PPAP enjoys a 90 percent market share, but Dhariwal says sales are flat, and his operation is running at just 65 to 70 percent capacity.

DHARIWAL: There's a big problem because facilities are already there, and they are not, then, getting fully utilized. And the cost of manpower increases on an annual basis. So how do I find the money for that if there's no sales growth?

MCCARTHY: Dhariwal's company is hiring no new workers. That undercuts Prime Minister Narendra Modi's pet project, to make manufacturing the engine of employment. Ten million Indians enter the workforce every year. But according to the Labour Bureau, eight labor-intensive sectors, including automobiles, created only 135,000 jobs last year, the lowest in seven years...

RAJIV KUMAR: It's a ticking time bomb.

MCCARTHY: ...Meaning social instability. Rajiv Kumar adds, if you have no new jobs...

KUMAR: You don't, therefore, address poverty in any real sense. And you exaggerate inequalities in our country.

MCCARTHY: Kumar is former head of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce. He says India's nearly 8 percent growth rate reflects a jump in the service sector but disguises sluggishness in manufacturing. Kumar urges the government to stop boasting about the GDP and focus on the number of jobs created.

KUMAR: Because that's what is the key. And if you have that as the key macroeconomic target, then growth will follow.

MCCARTHY: But Mihir Sharma, author of "Restart: The Last Chance For The Indian Economy," says India can unleash growth only if it becomes easier to do business. He says roads here are so bad, the bureaucracy so hidebound, it's often cheaper to fly raw materials in from overseas than to clear the hurdles within India. That includes, he says, India's labor laws, which make it hard to fire workers in shops with more than 100 employees.

MIHIR SHARMA: It might take months. It could take years. And that's to fire one person. We are not competitive because we just can't get the scale and get the flexibility that every other country in the world has.

MCCARTHY: Flexibility in the workforce is useful in the lean periods, says Vishal Lalani, whose factory churns out dashboards for commercial vehicles, a sector that tumbled. A recovery has kicked in. But Lalani says 6 to 8 percent inflation is eating at his bottom line. And Lalani echoes other entrepreneurs who say Prime Minister Modi's campaign, Make in India, is more slogan than substance.

VISHAL LALANI: That's the way I see it. And it's probably boosting India's image and giving people a feel-good factor. But there's not that much happening on the ground.

MCCARTHY: Demand in India's auto sector is picking up, but the number of new jobs created is negligible. Even in aspirational India, demand can only go so far without gainful employment.

Julie McCarthy, NPR News, New Delhi.

Copyright © 2016 NPR

http://www.npr.org/2016/08/11/489584349/india-s-lagging-manufacturing-sector-slows-job-creation
 
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Guys please don't read this the wrong way if you're from India - but this story broadcast on NPR a few days ago shows how vulnerable to export markets a manufacturing economy like India is, unless propped up by massive currency manipulation and subsidies, even providing jobs to a populace needs to be done carefully, and there are lessons to be learnt here.

Bangladesh got lucky being an unsophisticated supplier of sorts because no matter how bad an economy gets, people still need to buy clothes (and cheap clothes at that), but as soon as you 'upgrade' to making higher value addition things, all bets are off....

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
India's Lagging Manufacturing Sector Slows Job Creation
August 11, 20165:04 AM ET

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

And you often hear about India having the world's fastest-growing economy. And it is growing at 7.6 percent. But beneath that headline is another reality. Manufacturing in the country is lagging, and that's hurting India's ability to create jobs and lift millions of people out of poverty. Let's go to New Delhi and NPR's Julie McCarthy.

JULIE MCCARTHY, BYLINE: Manish Dhariwal, chief financial officer of PPAP Automotive Limited, steps onto the factory floor as a downsized second shift punches in.

MANISH DHARIWAL: Each part has a different design.

MCCARTHY: He sweeps his hand across a display case of strips that seal car doors and windows, components he sells to the largest Japanese car manufacturers. PPAP enjoys a 90 percent market share, but Dhariwal says sales are flat, and his operation is running at just 65 to 70 percent capacity.

DHARIWAL: There's a big problem because facilities are already there, and they are not, then, getting fully utilized. And the cost of manpower increases on an annual basis. So how do I find the money for that if there's no sales growth?

MCCARTHY: Dhariwal's company is hiring no new workers. That undercuts Prime Minister Narendra Modi's pet project, to make manufacturing the engine of employment. Ten million Indians enter the workforce every year. But according to the Labour Bureau, eight labor-intensive sectors, including automobiles, created only 135,000 jobs last year, the lowest in seven years...

RAJIV KUMAR: It's a ticking time bomb.

MCCARTHY: ...Meaning social instability. Rajiv Kumar adds, if you have no new jobs...

KUMAR: You don't, therefore, address poverty in any real sense. And you exaggerate inequalities in our country.

MCCARTHY: Kumar is former head of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce. He says India's nearly 8 percent growth rate reflects a jump in the service sector but disguises sluggishness in manufacturing. Kumar urges the government to stop boasting about the GDP and focus on the number of jobs created.

KUMAR: Because that's what is the key. And if you have that as the key macroeconomic target, then growth will follow.

MCCARTHY: But Mihir Sharma, author of "Restart: The Last Chance For The Indian Economy," says India can unleash growth only if it becomes easier to do business. He says roads here are so bad, the bureaucracy so hidebound, it's often cheaper to fly raw materials in from overseas than to clear the hurdles within India. That includes, he says, India's labor laws, which make it hard to fire workers in shops with more than 100 employees.

MIHIR SHARMA: It might take months. It could take years. And that's to fire one person. We are not competitive because we just can't get the scale and get the flexibility that every other country in the world has.

MCCARTHY: Flexibility in the workforce is useful in the lean periods, says Vishal Lalani, whose factory churns out dashboards for commercial vehicles, a sector that tumbled. A recovery has kicked in. But Lalani says 6 to 8 percent inflation is eating at his bottom line. And Lalani echoes other entrepreneurs who say Prime Minister Modi's campaign, Make in India, is more slogan than substance.

VISHAL LALANI: That's the way I see it. And it's probably boosting India's image and giving people a feel-good factor. But there's not that much happening on the ground.

MCCARTHY: Demand in India's auto sector is picking up, but the number of new jobs created is negligible. Even in aspirational India, demand can only go so far without gainful employment.

Julie McCarthy, NPR News, New Delhi.

Copyright © 2016 NPR

http://www.npr.org/2016/08/11/489584349/india-s-lagging-manufacturing-sector-slows-job-creation

Well if you focus on all the negatives and put them all together and holler thats the whole truth its just as bad as putting all the positives together only.

A balanced article:

http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2016/07/15/indias-job-market-is-looking-up-report-says/

There are some highs and some lows....nothing any economy of similar size and complexity is facing.

The main problems plaguing manufacturing sector comapred to the highs it saw under UPA 1 were due to UPA policy paralysis which the Indian economy is still recovering from. These include: lack of GST, terrible NPA scenario and wasteful debt accumulation and lack of tax and bankruptcy reform....(along with lack of general improvement of ease of doing business).

These are all being tackled seriously by this govt (I don't know if you have been following the news on any of them).

It must also be mentioned that various statistics and indices have to be improved drastically (already underway)...which is no small matter since many pessimistic reports base their analysis on them:

https://defence.pk/threads/indian-economy-news-updates.27787/page-380#post-8581646

The structural outlook has challenges but we now have more technocrats, succesfull business leaders and vastly improving innovation scenario compared to rest of South Asia where we rank at 66 in the recent WIPO index whereas Bangladesh and Pakistan are in the 117 and 119 position....sri lanka somewhere in the 90 rank range.

From McKinsey (outlook for manufacturing):

http://www.mckinsey.com/business-fu...ng-the-promise-of-indias-manufacturing-sector

But the major point is that India has to go through this period of the bad debt cycle and wait as the NPA's get fixed, reduce or bubble off so interest rates can be lowered without causing too much inflation. The groundwork has been laid on this already...and will continue under the new RBI governor.


Now coming to Bangladesh,

Just hedging everything on cheap clothes and saying "the world will always need them" is fine if you want to stay a below 5000 PPP economy and crawl your way to 10,000 PPP after that by putting all your eggs in one basket and then suffering when things like this happen:

http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/bangladesh-may-lose-huge-duty-benefits-1245295

Ask yourself why is Bangladesh still an official least developed country? It is because of this vulnerability among other things, and here you are trumping it up as an advantage.

I mean look how dependent consumption in Bangladesh is on remittances:

http://www.thedailystar.net/business/private-consumption-falls-remittance-slows-1205974

Name me one single country that got from 5000 PPP to 10,000 PPP solely on RMG as its "manufacturing" and exports?

We are definitely going to give you a fight in that sector soon as well:

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...ma-textile-secretary/articleshow/53071265.cms

Expanding the successful Tirupur model (which I have posted before) to more parts of India is the name of the game here.
 
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Well if you focus on all the negatives and put them all together and holler thats the whole truth its just as bad as putting all the positives together only.

The hollering was done by NPR. I'd ask (impartially) what interest an American broadcaster would have in highlighting only negatives in an emerging country like India, albeit one whose govt is known as an 'ally'.

A balanced article:

http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2016/07/15/indias-job-market-is-looking-up-report-says/

There are some highs and some lows....nothing any economy of similar size and complexity is facing.

Here is what it says,

"the telecommunications sector led hiring activity, with a 44% year-over-year increase in June. Activity in outsourcing services rose 42% while software services increased 19%. The healthcare sector saw a 37% increase in new job activity while auto and auto ancillary recorded a 14% gain.

Meanwhile, hiring activity in the construction and engineering sector fell 15%.

That matches the current slowdown in India’s infrastructure development as companies struggle with high debt and find it hard to raise fresh loans to finance projects.

Hiring activity fell 9% in real estate, which too has been under regulatory scrutiny amid lack of transparency, delayed projects and high debt of developers.

New jobs in oil and gas dipped 3% while in the banking, financial services and insurance, or BFSI, and pharmaceuticals sectors they were stagnant.
"

Percentages can be deceiving. You can note that only sectors which hire educated workers (such as outsourcing services, software services and healthcare) saw an increase. These workers are relatively few in number.

However the hiring for the 'unwashed masses' remained dismal in construction and engineering and infrastructure development sectors. These are the million upon millions that actually need these jobs to get out of poverty.

In Bangladesh, Grameen and BRAC exists for solely this purpose.

What this also means is highlighted above in the article I quoted, that to address real poverty and to give jobs to the ten million 'uneducated' Indians that the Indian workforce takes in every year, the Indian Govt. needs to create low wage jobs (even lower wage than garments) which employs them.

The main problems plaguing manufacturing sector comapred to the highs it saw under UPA 1 were due to UPA policy paralysis which the Indian economy is still recovering from. These include: lack of GST, terrible NPA scenario and wasteful debt accumulation and lack of tax and bankruptcy reform....(along with lack of general improvement of ease of doing business).

These are all being tackled seriously by this govt (I don't know if you have been following the news on any of them).

It must also be mentioned that various statistics and indices have to be improved drastically (already underway)...which is no small matter since many pessimistic reports base their analysis on them:

https://defence.pk/threads/indian-economy-news-updates.27787/page-380#post-8581646

The structural outlook has challenges but we now have more technocrats, succesfull business leaders and vastly improving innovation scenario compared to rest of South Asia where we rank at 66 in the recent WIPO index whereas Bangladesh and Pakistan are in the 117 and 119 position....sri lanka somewhere in the 90 rank range.

I am aware of the situation. No need to compare in that scenario.

From McKinsey (outlook for manufacturing):

http://www.mckinsey.com/business-fu...ng-the-promise-of-indias-manufacturing-sector

But the major point is that India has to go through this period of the bad debt cycle and wait as the NPA's get fixed, reduce or bubble off so interest rates can be lowered without causing too much inflation. The groundwork has been laid on this already...and will continue under the new RBI governor.

I am no economist - however I do know one thing. Without infrastructure you cannot become a world class exporter. I don't have to mention China's strength in this regard.


Now coming to Bangladesh,

Just hedging everything on cheap clothes and saying "the world will always need them" is fine if you want to stay a below 5000 PPP economy and crawl your way to 10,000 PPP after that by putting all your eggs in one basket and then suffering when things like this happen:

http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/bangladesh-may-lose-huge-duty-benefits-1245295

Ask yourself why is Bangladesh still an official least developed country? It is because of this vulnerability among other things, and here you are trumping it up as an advantage.

I mean look how dependent consumption in Bangladesh is on remittances:

http://www.thedailystar.net/business/private-consumption-falls-remittance-slows-1205974

Name me one single country that got from 5000 PPP to 10,000 PPP solely on RMG as its "manufacturing" and exports?

We are definitely going to give you a fight in that sector soon as well:

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...ma-textile-secretary/articleshow/53071265.cms

Expanding the successful Tirupur model (which I have posted before) to more parts of India is the name of the game here.

Well more power to you guys in the fight then. :-)

We certainly won't solve this on the pages of PDF....

Even though unskilled people and RMG will start to be less and less the primary export of Bangladesh, it will still remain a major part of exports from here. Because of population, getting up to 10,000 PPP will take some time.

Exports are always vulnerable and sometimes you do have to place all your eggs in the same low-value-addition exports basket. Because you don't always have plum choices. Bangladesh has other growing low-wage sectors too, similar to India.

And if you ran Bangladesh, you'd keep it in LDC status as long as it financially and strategically suited you. There is no ego boost or deflation here, the situation is entirely pragmatic.

I would argue, in summation, that you cannot 'decide' your way out of 'under 10000 PPP' or 'LDC' status. A Billion mostly uneducated low wage unemployed workers in India (or 160 million in Bangladesh' case) means you will remain a low-wage exports destination for some time to come. How much difference can 2.5 Million well-paid workers make?
 
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Only seven countries are at least as large as us in this regard. With 100 million or more, Brazil, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Russia are commodity stories, relying on commodity (i.e., oil) exports; India is a service story, trying hard to ignite manufacturing; China and Vietnam are manufacturing stories but in a socialist market economy. That would make Bangladesh a story of the largest manufacturing-led takeoff in a democracy, if the green shoots mature as trees
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comparing BD with Russia, china, India and vietnam
Third, takeoff in a democracy.
read this article as you realize one party dominance can not be called as a proper democracy if so then china is a democracy even in Pakistan PMLN got supermajority but still not completely dominant
What does Bangladesh aspire to become? A question with million answers. But viewed through a macroeconomist's narrow lens, Bangladesh needs to emerge as the largest-ever manufacturing- and export-led take off in a democracy. Some green shoots are peeking.

The lesson from around the world is development often sprouts out of a mysterious mix of choice and chance; institutions and individuals. Curiously, that mix has only some common ingredients but no common recipe. What worked yesterday may not tomorrow; what works during the low tide may not during the high tide. In short, development is not a destiny.

In a timely reminder, the recently held BIDS conference, titled 'Critical Conversation', prodded us to be confident but also curious and humble about Bangladesh's takeoff. In that spirit, I want to share four observations on our journey.

First, on being the largest-ever manufacturing takeoff in a democracy.

Only seven countries are at least as large as us in this regard. With 100 million or more, Brazil, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Russia are commodity stories, relying on commodity (i.e., oil) exports; India is a service story, trying hard to ignite manufacturing; China and Vietnam are manufacturing stories but in a socialist market economy. That would make Bangladesh a story of the largest manufacturing-led takeoff in a democracy, if the green shoots mature as trees.

Past such takeoffs were few and smaller in size. The prime examples are the UK and the US. In 1800, while moving from agriculture to industry, they together were smaller than Dhaka's population today. Even in the 1870s, with 4-5 times higher per capita than we are at now, when the UK was the political superpower, the US the economic superpower, they combined were only 60 million, smaller than even half of Bangladesh today.

As in aeronautical engineering, macroeconomic management is a function of size: the aerodynamics and the pilots of Boeing 747 are different from those of a small Cessna. Of course, it helps that the world now is bigger and more globalised with technology, trade, and finance than in the 1870s; the stronger wind can help our liftoff. Our large population means domestic demand can be an extra engine of growth. All possible but not preordained.

Second, why the emphasis on manufacturing? The reason is simple: it can create more and better jobs quickly to absorb our 2 million new workers every year.

To contextualise, India's world class IT industry employs only 2.5 million of its 500 million workers. High-end services, like IT, can flame aspirations and absorb educated middle class but not the large mass. Last September, an advertisement for 368 tea boys and night guards in Uttar Pradesh drew 2.3 million applications. Hence the Make in India campaign for manufacturing and for jobs.

Like a necklace of multi-coloured pearls, manufacturing today forms a chain of specialisation. Each country specialises in only some pearls. Unsurprisingly, high-value products mean longer chains. iPhone parts, for example, are made in more than 30 countries before being assembled in one location. No wonder 80 percent of global trade is conducted by transnational companies with productions in more than one country.

With diffused manufacturing, what and how well we produce is important. Equally, if not more, important is how seamlessly we connect with the world. That's why infrastructure, skills, and institutions matter so much, especially as our manufacturing reaches beyond garments.

Third, takeoff in a democracy.
Bangladesh is now in an unprecedented flux amid 4 critical transitions: industrialisation, urbanisation, young demography, and technology (mobile, media). These forces can both unite and fragment societies, straining harmony. During these transitions, changes often do not add up; they multiply.

In a society amid such tectonic shifts on steroids, where culture, family, work, values all are changing fast, trees are becoming hyacinths, identities will invariably face tension, which, if unattended, can interfere with the takeoff.

As we are learning painfully, harmony seems brittle in today's world where cultures and identities are weathering complex pressures; where aspirations and resentments have gone global and digital, with the butterfly effects of the Chaos Theory: small causes can have large effects. Technology, for example, spreads light but also darkness, polarising souls into binary shapes: aspire or despair.

Amid all this, unsurprisingly, the physics of the young, crowded, and connected makes our social equilibrium particularly delicate. Democracy, with liberal and inclusive institutions, offers the least imperfect safety valves and the best hope to negotiate these relentless transition pressures, to glue the society, and to make the long journey less bumpy. The physics also means job, inclusion, and social justice are more than just lofty advocacy goals; they have to anchor every engineering equation.

Good news is our growth drivers - garments, remittance, agriculture - have mostly been inclusive, balancing social harmony. At least till recently.

In 1971, we started out as a poor, rural but an aspirational and more equal society. Despite far lower poverty now, with growth, inequality has been rising in the last two decades through diverging income, education, and land price. True, growth and inequality are often co-passengers but the latter, when unruly, chokes the former and poisons societies. Just look around the world.

Let me digress a bit. In the 1980s, a hybrid public transport with the face of a truck but the body of a bus - seemingly a product of Greek mythology - used to ply between Rampura and Farmgate. It was called “murir tin,” a can of puffed rice, because passengers were packed like rice, actually more like sardines. A high school friend used to joke Bangladesh is the biggest; “murir tin” bus, where if one stinks, we all smell.

It's obvious we all are in it together, sharing the same, limited oxygen. We are a land where even improbable lightning strikes can kill 64 people in 48 hours. That makes inequality and polarisation both expensive and explosive.

Fourth, the flight conditions over the coming decade.


The flight records of the last 50 years show two big waves of takeoffs, mostly in Asia: the first was during the 1960-'70s, with Taiwan, Singapore, Korea, followed by Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia; the second in the 1990s: China, India, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Cambodia.

Looking back, our democratic journey since 1991 luckily coincided with the stronger global tailwind from the second wave: the world, especially emerging markets, grew rapidly. So did we, defying predictions, causing surprise, and earning respect.

Looking ahead, global growth will likely be slower over the next 20 years than in the past 20. Think of China's churning, Japan's tepid growth, the US recovering coyly, the Middle East hurting from the low oil price and geopolitics, the EU still coping with the 2008 crisis legacies and now Brexit. With weaker tailwinds on our back, we need to sail harder, reform faster, and implement better.

All told, what do these four observations above mean for our development recipe?

Going forward, the crux of our challenge is how to foster urgency and competency in a democracy; how to anchor identities amid flux, much like floating hyacinths; how to upgrade institutions, industries without waiting for the “cathartic” crises. For example, how to restructure garments industries without Rana Plaza?

I realise these questions about institutions have no simple or single answer. Like a Darwinian ecosystem, institutions have many species. They evolve, rise, and fall too. But let me take a boring and sweeping view of the lessons from other democracies.

An ironic lesson is institutions and reforms often grow out of crises, which help blunt vested interest groups, empower reformers, and forge consensus. Think of the US in the 1800s, with major banking crises almost every 6 years. The Federal Reserve Bank was established only in 1913, six long years after the 1907 banking crisis. The 1929 market crash gave birth to their SEC.

A sad, more complex lesson is not all crises lead to reform: Tazreen did not prevent Rana Plaza.

Reform ultimately hinges on how well we internalise the lessons of the past crises, on how quickly we learn, on how cohesively we travel together. A crisis is a terrible thing to waste.

Many of our successful micro-institutions and social innovations were borne out of the famine, over population, food shortages, and floods in the 1970s-'80s. We did not waste those crises. In defiance and with resilience, we pioneered solutions amid darkness where and when few saw light. Those stubborn crises coupled with the tsunami of inspirations unleashed by 1971 gave us focus, discipline, and consensus, which need extra nutrition and oxygen today, especially amid the problems of plenty.

Now, back to the future. A new phase awaits us, breathing for newer solutions, consensus, and capacity than those in the first three decades. Microfinance, for example, is not scalable to infrastructure financing; NGOs teaching loving mothers orsaline usage to save her dying child is not the same as the government building a four-lane highway on time, with quality, and within costs. With larger scale and higher altitude, capacity and public institutions need to mature exponentially.

In that BIDS Conference, we requested the Director General to continue the 'Critical Conversation' seminar series to study other countries with similar transitions. For example, in a 1956 Pulitzer Prize winning book the Age of Reform, Richard Hofstadter recounts how the US implemented mass reforms during 1880-1920, an era of both great progress and great dislocations, much like ours now.

We are at new waters: the promise of the largest-ever manufacturing- and export-led takeoff in a young, crowded, and connected democracy, navigating a low-growth world. The road ahead is long and the slope is steep.

Let's think about the road ahead, together, and with curiosity and humility.


http://www.thedailystar.net/op-ed/bangladesh-emerging-1270219
nevertheless Bangladesh is indeed emerging hastily they need to emerge rapidly
current crisis of terrorism and criticism of Hasina govt might slow down the economic growth but best of luck to our bengali brethren they are indeed doing way better than most of the region including NE India
 
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The hollering was done by NPR. I'd ask (impartially) what interest an American broadcaster would have in highlighting only negatives in an emerging country like India, albeit one whose govt is known as an 'ally'.

Dont know much about this group. Plenty of broadcasters under free speech highlight all kinds of things. I'm not going to post the hundreds of videos by US media groups that sing blah blah blah praises for India and Modi either.

I care only about the truth and facts....and its pretty easy to see when something is skewed. It may not be intentional or part of an agenda....its simply raising and focusing on one (important issue)....but its hardly something you can base an entire complete analysis on of an entire country.

Percentages can be deceiving. You can note that only sectors which hire educated workers (such as outsourcing services, software services and healthcare) saw an increase. These workers are relatively few in number.

However the hiring for the 'unwashed masses' remained dismal in construction and engineering and infrastructure development sectors. These are the million upon millions that actually need these jobs to get out of poverty.

In Bangladesh, Grameen and BRAC exists for solely this purpose.

What this also means is highlighted above in the article I quoted, that to address real poverty and to give jobs to the ten million Indians that the Indian workforce takes in every year, the Indian Govt. needs to create jobs which employs them.

Is this the reason that the Garments initiative was a big part of 'Make in India'? Who knows?

First of all the credit and GST environment have to improve for India job growth to return in various sectors affected by certain large companies.

2nd, startups and informal jobs play a very large role in absorbing the number of surplus labour. You talk about Grameen and such....well India now has a successful and growing scheme called MUDRA which specifically helps startup companies at the small and medium level.

Thats a large part of the reason why India is now growing close to 8%. Thats why Indian unemployment rate stays low (check with the economist) even with the lower "high value" job growth. A lot of labour simply does not get registered in their sectors similar to the IIP weightage issue. Job statistics are still a very imperfect science in India that needs much more improvement....given the sampling rates involved (tend to focus only around large companies when it has been proven the job market is swelling in the medium and small sized companies recently).

I mean do these 8 labour intensive sectors represent even the entire formal job market of India? Do they represent the entire labour intensive sector even (a large part of which is in the informal "black" economy that only tends to appear somewhat in the new GDP measurement system?

Its not an immediate crunch crisis (though it will be worrying if it persists for some more years) since much of the informal and semi formal sectors of the economy have similar or higher output per person than RMG making...its not some poverty death trap....especially going by the World Bank surveys of Indian consumption based absolute poverty which was listed at 12% in 2011 (and would be lower more currently).....a rate much reduced from the 90s and much lower than the one in Bangladesh.

3rd, You skirt around the fact that we are talking about job augmentation. Like ok so there was 15% less number of new jobs in construction and engineering for example. ...thats still 85% of the previous years total amount being added to jobs that already exist (i.e its not the total employment that is decreasing by 15% or something). So we have to look at the actual base numbers of all these sectors.

In the end what matters most is the total GVA of the economy however it is spread across the population....since India is still at the stage where we need to keep growing the cake as quickly as possible than worry about how much of a share everyone has. Economies of scale and productivity will be achieved most optimally if free market dynamics are left to their own operation with minimal govt interference. This govt gets it more than the ones before.

But it is undeniable we need to return to better formal growth figures for jobs again...rather than absolute poverty fixing (which has already been fixed to a large degree in the 90s and 2000s....it is essential to get the people into the middle class from their relative poverty compared to most of the world (by consumption or whatever other metric). But as far as socioeconomics go, I would put that below things like health, basic infrastructure and education since a) the future generations need the best start possible to continue the long term momentum of the country and b) the worst forms of poverty are quickly vanishing....and its easier to develop a kid right than break down and fix the parents back up again.

I am no economist - however I do know one thing. Without infratsructure you cannot become a world class exporter. I don't have to mention China's strength in this regard.

And the govt realises that too

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India improved massively in the logistics index which you can look up.

Well more power to you guys in the fight then. :-)

We certainly won't solve this on the pages of PDF....

However I gather unskilled people and RMG will start to be less and less the primary export of Bangladesh.

And if you ran Bangladesh, you'd keep it in LDC status as long as it financially and strategically suited you. There is no ego boost or deflation here, the situation is entirely pragmatic.

Yup the way I see it...Bangladesh will move up the chain and start to hedge in other industries (no option really to get past 5000 PPP per capita speedily) and India will explore and improve the fundamentals of the economic base of high-intensity labour jobs and make these more formalised and organised etc so that more of the black economy can be brought into the light and expanded through better economies of scale etc... This is essential for the areas of India that are underdeveloped like the bimaru states which need more productive organised but relatively low skills required employment before they can also be vaulted down the road to what states in the West and South are doing.

With GST coming online, things should get a lot easier for the logistics side of things so that successeful models in one state can easily "hopscotch" into another one with minimal fuss.

We will have to wait and see.
 
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