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Bangladesh faces three major challenges of achieving MDG goals

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3 key challenges of MDGs ahead | The Daily Star

12:00 AM, September 17, 2015 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:16 AM, September 17, 2015
Bangladesh faces three major challenges of achieving MDG goals
Govt's progress report shows Bangladesh still far from achieving goals of employment, nutrition, environment

mdg_achievemnts.jpg

Staff Correspondent
Bangladesh faces major challenges of creating jobs, preserving ecology and ensuring nutrition in terms of achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) set by the United Nations 15 years ago for its 193 member states.

The country, however, has made impressive progress in poverty reduction, health, education and gender equity.

According to the MDG declaration in 2000, the employment rate of a country's population, aged 15 years and older, should have been 100 percent by now, but it is only 57.1 percent in Bangladesh. The rate was 48.5 percent in 1990-91.

“Unemployment as well as underemployment is especially dominant among the young people between 15 and 24 years of age,” according to a report titled “MDGs: Bangladesh Progress Report 2015”.

There are also challenges with regard to reducing income inequality and addressing low economic participation of women, says the report.

The General Economics Division (GED) of the Planning Commission launched the report yesterday at the Sonargaon Hotel in the capital.

Later this month, the UN will announce Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for 2016-2030 as a follow-up of the MDGs.

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In his presentation, Dr Shamsul Alam, member of the GED, said as per one of the MDG targets, Bangladesh should have 20 percent of land area covered by forest by this year. But the forest-covered area is now only 13.40 percent.


“The proportion of people using improved drinking water sources is 98.5%.
This is on track. However, people using improved sanitary facility is only 64.2 percent though the target is 100 percent,” he said.

The report says ensuring access to safe water for all remains a challenge. Arsenic and salinity intrusion as a consequence of climate change fallout exacerbate availability of safe water, especially for the poor.

“Also, attaining food security and nutritional wellbeing for a populous country like Bangladesh still remains as a challenge,” it says.

According to Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2014, 36 percent children under five suffer from stunting [low height for age].

Also, 16.4 percent people consume dietary energy below the minimum level (1,805 kilo calorie per day) whereas the target was 14 percent.

On the positive fronts, the proportion of people below the upper poverty line has declined to an estimated 24.8 percent this year against the target of 29.

Net enrolment rate in primary education is now 97.7 percent, which is likely to become 100 percent by this year.

About 81 percent of the students, who get enrolled in grade one, reach grade five. Literacy rate of 15-24 year olds is 78.63, while adult literacy rate of people aged 15 years and above is 61 percent.

It would be difficult to achieve 100 percent success in these areas within this year, said Shamsul Alam.

Bangladesh has reached the target in terms of ratio of girls to boys in primary and secondary education. But it is behind the target in tertiary education where the ratio of girls to boys is 0.67:1.00.

Share of women in wage employment (non-agriculture sector) is only 31.6 percent against the target of 50 percent.

On the other hand, only 20 percent seats in the Jatiya Sangsad are held by women while the target was 33 percent.

Under-five child mortality per 1,000 live births is 41 against the target of 48, and the proportion of one-year-old children immunised against measles is 79.9 percent against the target of 100 percent.

When it comes to maternal health, Bangladesh is on track to achieve most of the targets.

Maternal mortality per 100,000 live births is 170 against the target of 143, while 42.1 percent births are attended by skilled health personnel against the target of 50 percent.

The country has also achieved the goal in combating HIV/AIDS and malaria, says the report.

Speaking at the programme, Foreign Minister AH Mahmud Ali said Bangladesh's progress in achieving MDGs proves that Bangladesh could deliver on international commitments.

He, however, voiced concerns over the rise of terrorism and armed conflicts in different countries, threats of climate change, gender inequality and decline in official development assistance (ODA).

Finance Minister AMA Muhith said Bangladesh would focus on South-South cooperation and generating resources from domestic sources, as official development assistance from most of the developed countries was on the decline.

The theme of SDG was to use resources in such a manner that the next generation would not face crises for depletion of resources, he said. “We should act accordingly though it is very difficult.”

Bangladesh Bank Governor Dr Atiur Rahman said the government's inclusive policies, macroeconomic stability and over six percent GDP growth annually for the last several years led to Bangladesh's progress.

He stressed the need for checking corruption, broadening tax net and green financing for sustainable development.

UNDP Country Director Pauline Tamesis termed Bangladesh a role model in achieving MDGs.

She also put emphasis on improving the quality of education, retaining students in schools and ensuring nutrition for sustainable development.

Planning Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal chaired the programme, which was addressed by, among others, State Minister for Finance and Planning MA Mannan.
 
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Net enrolment rate in primary education is now 97.7 percent, which is likely to become 100 percent by this year.

About 81 percent of the students, who get enrolled in grade one, reach grade five. Literacy rate of 15-24 year olds is 78.63, while adult literacy rate of people aged 15 years and above is 61 percent.
Only if we could include 7-15 years old in literacy statistics like in India, :lol: then we could have shown literacy rate of 80 percent. Higher than India. But we choose to follow international norm.
 
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Only if we could include 7-15 years old in literacy statistics like in India, :lol: then we could have shown literacy rate of 80 percent. Higher than India. But we choose to follow international norm.

How exactly would an increase of 20% in overall literacy come from including 7 - 15 year olds?

When calculating with either age (7+ years or 15+ years) you are looking at only that cohort age and older as the base population, since we are not talking about crude literacy rate but effective literacy rate.

Since primary completion rate* in Bangladesh is only now reaching 81%, whereas it has been well above 90% in India for about a decade now (96% in 2011, 82% in 2003, hit 90s somewhere around 2005 - 2006).

unstats | Millennium Indicators

Population pyramid structures are also very similar for India and Bangladesh at this age group:

Population Pyramid of Bangladesh in 2015

Plus expected schooling years is about 12 years in India for some time now, it is just reaching 10 years in Bangladesh:

Expected years of schooling (of children) (years) | Human Development Reports

So be proud of the progress (you are much better than Pakistan, congrats), but dont bring India into the comparison without doing a thorough background research first on the details.


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*Note completion rate is different from enrolment rate which has been well above 100% in gross terms for India for many many years now. I prefer gross over net for developing countries since kids may not start school at the defined official start age in many areas especially rural areas. Do we have Bangladesh gross primary enrollment figure? 97% net enrollment is a very promising figure I have to say.
 
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@Nilgiri check out this article.

How Poorer Bangladesh Outpaces India on Human-Development Indicators

How Poorer Bangladesh Outpaces India on Human-Development Indicators - India Real Time - WSJ

1:09 pm IST
Jun 5, 2015
South Asia
How Poorer Bangladesh Outpaces India on Human-Development Indicators


India is richer, in terms of per-capita economic output, than its smaller neighbor, Bangladesh, and a greater proportion of Indians are connected to the Internet and have cellphones

But if you look more closely at other measures of development such as life expectancy, child survival and the proportion of girls to boys in secondary education, Bangladesh comes out ahead.

The two countries spend the same proportion (1%) of their gross domestic product on healthcare, but India devotes more of its GDP (3%) to education than Bangladesh (2%).

Still, 20 years of targeted financial support in Bangladesh to get girls to go to high school rather than, for example, get married, has helped dramatically shifted the needle on human-development indicators there.

“Gender equality is good for economic growth and good for human development. That is really part of what explains the quite remarkable achievements in Bangladesh,” said Christine Hunter, country representative for U.N. Women in Bangladesh.

AM-BJ327_INDBAN_G_20150605011513.jpg

In pursuit of the 2015 Millennium Development Goal to redress the lopsided gender imbalance in high schools, Bangladesh began the secondary-school subsidy program for girls in 1993.

Funded by the government, the Asian Development Bank, the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation and the European Union, the education-payment program contributed to a tripling of participation rates of girls in secondary school between 1991 and 2005, according to a World Bank analysis. Bangladesh met the goal ahead of time.


Some 88% of women are literate in Bangladesh, compared to 68% of women in India. Though the overall adult literacy rate is lower in Bangladesh (59%) than in India (63%).


“The moment that there was education equality, there was power of the mind, then there was financial power,” said Joyeeta Bhattacharjee, research fellow on Bangladesh from Observer Research Foundation, a New Delhi based think tank. “That is really helping Bangladesh to change.”

The gains in female education have, along with the booming garment industry, helped boost female participation in the paid labor force.

Around 36% of women were in paid jobs in Bangladesh in 2010, up from just 14% in 1990, according to the International Labor Organization.


By comparison, in India, female employment has gone backwards in recent years — from 37% in 2004-05 to 29% in 2009, according to the ILO.


Empowering women financially and establishing a thriving micro-credit system for female led small businesses, has also meant women have more say over financial decisions in the family.

“They try to prioritize health and education across everyone in their family,” said Ms. Hunter of the U.N.


From roughly the same base as India, Bangladesh has brought its life expectancy for both men and women up from 47 years to 70 years since 1970. Indians, on average, live to 66, according to United Nations’ data.

Child mortality rates too have come down, from 144 deaths per 1,000 under-fives in 1990 in Bangladesh, to 41 in 2013.

In that time, India has moved the dial on child mortality from 126 deaths per 1,000 children aged under five years old to 53 per 1,000.

India ranks 13 places below Bangladesh in child mortality globally.

“India can learn from the support that the government in Bangladesh has given to NGOs,” said Ms. Bhattacharjee. “It is trying to learn from the microcredit system.”

For breaking news, features and analysis from India, click here and follow WSJ In
 
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no need to be so happy, there,s a long - long way to go. we should keep working hard to develop our country batter. one day Bangladesh will be the 1st world country (insallaha)................:coffee:
 
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India is going to have Hasina now :)
but good to see we are doing good
 
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@Nilgiri check out this article.

How Poorer Bangladesh Outpaces India on Human-Development Indicators

How Poorer Bangladesh Outpaces India on Human-Development Indicators - India Real Time - WSJ

1:09 pm IST
Jun 5, 2015
South Asia
How Poorer Bangladesh Outpaces India on Human-Development Indicators


India is richer, in terms of per-capita economic output, than its smaller neighbor, Bangladesh, and a greater proportion of Indians are connected to the Internet and have cellphones

But if you look more closely at other measures of development such as life expectancy, child survival and the proportion of girls to boys in secondary education, Bangladesh comes out ahead.

The two countries spend the same proportion (1%) of their gross domestic product on healthcare, but India devotes more of its GDP (3%) to education than Bangladesh (2%).

Still, 20 years of targeted financial support in Bangladesh to get girls to go to high school rather than, for example, get married, has helped dramatically shifted the needle on human-development indicators there.

“Gender equality is good for economic growth and good for human development. That is really part of what explains the quite remarkable achievements in Bangladesh,” said Christine Hunter, country representative for U.N. Women in Bangladesh.

AM-BJ327_INDBAN_G_20150605011513.jpg

In pursuit of the 2015 Millennium Development Goal to redress the lopsided gender imbalance in high schools, Bangladesh began the secondary-school subsidy program for girls in 1993.

Funded by the government, the Asian Development Bank, the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation and the European Union, the education-payment program contributed to a tripling of participation rates of girls in secondary school between 1991 and 2005, according to a World Bank analysis. Bangladesh met the goal ahead of time.


Some 88% of women are literate in Bangladesh, compared to 68% of women in India. Though the overall adult literacy rate is lower in Bangladesh (59%) than in India (63%).


“The moment that there was education equality, there was power of the mind, then there was financial power,” said Joyeeta Bhattacharjee, research fellow on Bangladesh from Observer Research Foundation, a New Delhi based think tank. “That is really helping Bangladesh to change.”

The gains in female education have, along with the booming garment industry, helped boost female participation in the paid labor force.

Around 36% of women were in paid jobs in Bangladesh in 2010, up from just 14% in 1990, according to the International Labor Organization.


By comparison, in India, female employment has gone backwards in recent years — from 37% in 2004-05 to 29% in 2009, according to the ILO.


Empowering women financially and establishing a thriving micro-credit system for female led small businesses, has also meant women have more say over financial decisions in the family.

“They try to prioritize health and education across everyone in their family,” said Ms. Hunter of the U.N.


From roughly the same base as India, Bangladesh has brought its life expectancy for both men and women up from 47 years to 70 years since 1970. Indians, on average, live to 66, according to United Nations’ data.

Child mortality rates too have come down, from 144 deaths per 1,000 under-fives in 1990 in Bangladesh, to 41 in 2013.

In that time, India has moved the dial on child mortality from 126 deaths per 1,000 children aged under five years old to 53 per 1,000.

India ranks 13 places below Bangladesh in child mortality globally.

“India can learn from the support that the government in Bangladesh has given to NGOs,” said Ms. Bhattacharjee. “It is trying to learn from the microcredit system.”

For breaking news, features and analysis from India, click here and follow WSJ In

Bangladesh does better than India in most health parameters (because of Indian averages severely brought down by BIMARU).

I was referring only to Education parameters since you were talking about literacy rates etc.
 
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Bangladesh does better than India in most health parameters (because of Indian averages severely brought down by BIMARU).

I was referring only to Education parameters since you were talking about literacy rates etc.
You are right. Southern states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala are miles ahead than northern BIMARU states. Actually states like Tamil Nadu are being dragged down by the large backward states in northern India. I think Tamil Nadu will do much much better if it achieve independence. What do think?:-)
 
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You are right. Southern states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala are miles ahead than northern BIMARU states. Actually states like Tamil Nadu are being dragged down by the large backward states in northern India. I think Tamil Nadu will do much much better if it achieve independence. What do think?

The better developed states simply show the way for the underdeveloped ones. No question of separating. The only issue we had was proper recognition of the Tamil language. This has been addressed, the militant "No-Hindi" movement is pretty much a faded memory....all school kids generally these days learn it alongside their mother tongue and english. In fact, when DMK party about 10 years back... tried to limit start of Hindi education past class 10, there was more protest and almost no support....and they had to backtrack.

Much of TN economy makes products for rest of India and much also comes from rest of India to TN. As urbanisation increases and labour in the farms are depleted, TN also needs much more manual labour to come from other parts of India...even with mechanisation taking place. From strictly economic point of view, all this would become much more difficult and expensive with any form of "independence". Also we will be absorbing many highly skilled people over the next decade and beyond as the economy grows and diversifies...and our highly skilled people also need to have access to entire India to properly fulfill their potential and ambition.

It is like getting Dhaka district to become independent just because it is more economically advanced than rest of Bangladesh.

We do not feel any part of India is dragging us (TN) down, their performance is only dragging down Indian averages in development etc. With political change there over time, they will also start to recover. If the disparity increases, there will only be more pressure for change and reform. Look at Bihar for example....it was fully mired in casteist politics for more than 50 or so years....but now they are changing in their attitude....they want development...they see it as a shame their youth have to leave to go elsewhere to find a wage. Thats why they booted out that crook Lalu, brought in Nitish Kumar and now BJP is also becoming very popular on development oriented politics.

We only benefit from being part of the Indian union....can we really measure the value of shared national security, access to economies of scale and abundant resources?

This is completely external to the discussion of feeling patriotic, feeling Indian etc which is another dimension as well.
 
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We are still in the midst of mid 19th century in those parameters.
 
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