each one of your awami cheer leading lie will be answered, starting with rental power plants.
awami league could not even produce power until 4th year. Awami league could not generate any significant amount of power until end of its 5 year tenure. But Awami league spent 1/3rd tax revenue, sacrificed economic growth,millions of jobs, introduced high inflation for good part of its 8 years in power come to this. BNP on the other hand was in power only for 5 years and did not loot 1/3rd of govt tax revenue, in the name of quick rental power.
Where has all the electricity gone?
M. A. Taslim
In order to make the rental plants sufficiently lucrative to the private players, the government had to provide sovereign guarantees regarding prices at which fuel oil would be supplied to the plant operators, and electricity would be purchased by the government. Since very large gaps have emerged between the guaranteed prices and the prices paid or received by the government, the rental plants have to be provided with enormous amounts in subsidies. It is estimated that during the current fiscal year subsidy payments to the rental power plants might exceed Tk320 billion, i.e. about one-third of the total tax revenue of the government.
This enormous subsidy requirement has put the government finances in a quandary, which has been further intensified by the drying up of expected foreign funds due to difficulties on the foreign policy front. The government was forced to take the unprecedented step to shift part of the current subsidy to the next budget. This may open up a new door to further mismanagement of the economy.
Much hope was pinned on the government's resolve to quickly overcome power shortages. However, within three years the hopes have transmuted into frustration. In attempting to solve a nagging problem, the government seems to have created several more. The hapless people will be forced to bear the consequences of the blunder of their government; they have reasons to be angry.
(The writer is Professor and Chairman, Department of Economics, University of Dhaka.)
http://print.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/old/more.php?news_id=125664&date=2012-04-05
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More rental plants on cards despite fuel crisis
It looks like an insensitive decision; former adviser of the caretaker government Dr Mirza Azizul Islam said about the move pointing to the macroeconomic destabilization that may be arising out of the soaring import bills for oil in one hand and the surging subsidies on the other.
The very fact is that the government is buying fuel at a higher cost and supplying to the rental power plants at a highly subsidised rates thus increasingly forcing the public to bear the burden of cost.
The government is moreover buying electricity from these plants at a soaring rate to sell it to the public at a lower rate, again forcing the public to pay for the loss. The transfer of such billing loads on the public is taking place with frequent increase of the electricity tariff along with upward price adjustment in the prices of fuel.
The government is again paying for the unutilised capacity of the rental power plants as and when the authorities are failing to supply them with necessary fuel, and this is how the rental power plants have appeared as a critical issue having devastating impact on the nation’s macroeconomic fundamentals.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx?ID=2&date=06/22/2012
Do you read through the stuff you post?
So Awami League was able to divert 1/3rd of BD tax revenues in 2012 and also be able to
pay for other things like education, health defence etc?
Let us look at a more neutral article below:
http://www.daily-sun.com/arcprint/d...dy-soars-to-Tk-2092cr-in-6-months-/2017-02-26
"The government’s power subsidy soared to Tk 2,092.32 crore in the first six months of the current 2016-17 fiscal year due to the purchase of costly electricity from 20 rental and quick rental power plants."
This would be around 5% of BD tax receipts for 2016-2017. Yes it may have been higher in 2012 but it would not be anywhere near 1/3rd of BD tax receipts.
Yes there is corruption going on but at least load-shedding has finally come to an end.