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Dollar to dollar Bangladesh economy is same as Melbourne City

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nice fact....

if i may add... bangladesh's economy is higher than each individual state in india except maharashtra, had these states been independent countries
Sometimes I think people just google Bangladesh in news and roll with it here. This article has nothing to do with Bangladesh beside the title. BTW @Loafer, 40m population U.S. state of California has bigger GDP than 1.2b India.
 
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Sometimes I think people just google Bangladesh in news and roll with it here. This article has nothing to do with Bangladesh beside the title. BTW @Loafer, 40m population U.S. state of California has bigger GDP than 1.2b India.
lol i knw right.... people in this forum keep trying to sting one another.
 
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What do you expect from an LDC?? Some villages in India have more cars than the whole of dhaka.
The constant wumming by everyone (including Bangladeshis) in this subforum is beyond the pale...But, as long as you're here...

I agree some villages in 1st world India have more cars than all of Dhaka...hell, why stop at cars...more gold, doctors, enginners, cricketers etc etc,. Now if only those same villagers would learn to shit in a toilet and not in the open :(

more than 500 mil people in India defecate in the open

Deshi bhai ra...eta toh, upor diye fitfat, bhitor e shodhorghat-r chhe o kharap :lol:
 
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nice fact....

if i may add... bangladesh's economy is higher than each individual state in india except maharashtra, had these states been independent countries

Wrong. Use PPP (actual physical consumption rather than BoP derived exchange rate) and several Indian states have a larger economy than BD, even though their populations are much lower.

BD would also have a much higher PPP than melbourne as well. Direct exchange rates are poor measure for a developing country's economy....esp one with large underground (non-formal) economy which are often captured somewhat in PPP at least.
 
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Wrong. Use PPP (actual physical consumption rather than BoP derived exchange rate) and several Indian states have a larger economy than BD, even though their populations are much lower.

BD would also have a much higher PPP than melbourne as well. Direct exchange rates are poor measure for a developing country's economy....esp one with large underground (non-formal) economy which are often captured somewhat in PPP at least.
Well, that's certainly true when talking about consumption of household commodities and foodstuff. But as once a Chinese member here posted, PPP means jack-shiit when taliking about non-essential items that are imported. An iPhone costs same if not more in India than U.S.A or China. Incidentally I can give an example of our family as well. We buy various types of nuts. Almonds, pistachios, cashews, walnuts etc. Assuming all of the almonds and walnuts are imported from U.S. and China (largest producers), we are paying same or more (considering profit and transportation) as Americans or Chinese. So PPP is jack-siht.
 
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Well, that's certainly true when talking about consumption of household commodities and foodstuff. But as once a Chinese member here posted, PPP means jack-shiit when taliking about non-essential items that are imported. An iPhone costs same if not more in India than U.S.A or China. Incidentally I can give an example of our family as well. We buy various types of nuts. Almonds, pistachios, cashews, walnuts etc. Assuming all of the almonds and walnuts are imported from U.S. and China (largest producers), we are paying same or more (considering profit and transportation) as Americans or Chinese. So PPP is jack-siht.
And 95%ge of other things does not require to be imported.. So you can say PPP matters most..
 
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What do you expect from an LDC?? Some villages in India have more cars than the whole of dhaka.
Had the Japanese companies gone to your hinterland, India, you would still be using your famous Ambassador cars. We wont buy any made in India cars with their bodies made of MURIR TIN. Do not bother us anymore.
 
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But as once a Chinese member here posted, PPP means jack-shiit when taliking about non-essential items that are imported.

Well tell me what total imports/exports are for India, BD and even China as % of GDP?

BD for example has 50%+ of its average household expenditure on food.

I've talked to the Chinese members on the issue before, it may be of interest for you to read:

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/india-and-china-a-gdp-comparison.455611/page-4#post-8811612

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/india-and-china-a-gdp-comparison.455611/page-4#post-8812159

An iPhone costs same if not more in India than U.S.A or China.

And how much % do iphones (and final white- good consumables in general) figure in the yearly budget for the average household of all these countries?....compared to not only food, but overall steel, cement, energy, transport etc that have far more multiplier effects in practically everything you buy/consume?

Therein lies the basic answer to why PPP is especially more important to developing countries that have small representation of trade in their total economy. BD definitely counts as one.

Almonds, pistachios, cashews, walnuts etc. Assuming all of the almonds and walnuts are imported from U.S. and China (largest producers), we are paying same or more (considering profit and transportation) as Americans or Chinese.

And how much do these figure in the average BD household consumption pattern? Is BD a totally import driven and dominated market? A cursory glance of import/GDP and trade balance/GDP ratio should tell you the answer.

You want to tell me what will happen if all the BD people exchange every taka they have for USD so they can import all their needs from the outside world? What that would do to the Taka value as that exercise is underway? That in effect is what nominal represents at a snapshot. It thus has limited direct utility for any developing country.

As a country becomes move developed and integrated with all levels and manner of supply/demand chains globally, the PPP/Nominal difference is also reduced over time. Thats what we see in full flow in the case of China and starting in India. It does nothing for countering the basic fact that PPP is a much more suitable measure for a country that has low trade/GDP, large informal economy and one's who's consumption profile (and thus appropriate price level basket) is largely based on local food, local basic goods and local basic services rather than what it trades through relative insulation from the world economy.

Effectively the demand/supply for your external trade is not 1 to 1 correlated (and actually no where close) with the demand/supply of your domestic economy. How does the ratio of the former (which is essentially what an exchange rate is given currencies are the intermediaries) totally govern the latter ratio? As long as this transfer coefficient exists in any appreciable way, there will be a big reason to apply PPP over nominal.

So PPP is jack-siht.

Says someone who hasn't read the ICP papers....and probably doesn't even know what the ICP is and how it calculates the PPP using a price level basket.
 
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What do you expect from an LDC?? Some villages in India have more cars than the whole of dhaka.
Hey go and learn to use Toilet first. Heck do you even know what a Toilet is? The BRITSH must have forgotten to teach you about that. May be you guys did not receive enough DANDA.
 
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Well tell me what total imports/exports are for India, BD and even China as % of GDP?

BD for example has 50%+ of its average household expenditure on food.

I've talked to the Chinese members on the issue before, it may be of interest for you to read:

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/india-and-china-a-gdp-comparison.455611/page-4#post-8811612

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/india-and-china-a-gdp-comparison.455611/page-4#post-8812159



And how much % do iphones (and final white- good consumables in general) figure in the yearly budget for the average household of all these countries?....compared to not only food, but overall steel, cement, energy, transport etc that have far more multiplier effects in practically everything you buy/consume?

Therein lies the basic answer to why PPP is especially more important to developing countries that have small representation of trade in their total economy. BD definitely counts as one.



And how much do these figure in the average BD household consumption pattern? Is BD a totally import driven and dominated market? A cursory glance of import/GDP and trade balance/GDP ratio should tell you the answer.

You want to tell me what will happen if all the BD people exchange every taka they have for USD so they can import all their needs from the outside world? What that would do to the Taka value as that exercise is underway? That in effect is what nominal represents at a snapshot. It thus has limited direct utility for any developing country.

As a country becomes move developed and integrated with all levels and manner of supply/demand chains globally, the PPP/Nominal difference is also reduced over time. Thats what we see in full flow in the case of China and starting in India. It does nothing for countering the basic fact that PPP is a much more suitable measure for a country that has low trade/GDP, large informal economy and one's who's consumption profile (and thus appropriate price level basket) is largely based on local food, local basic goods and local basic services rather than what it trades through relative insulation from the world economy.

Effectively the demand/supply for your external trade is not 1 to 1 correlated (and actually no where close) with the demand/supply of your domestic economy. How does the ratio of the former (which is essentially what an exchange rate is given currencies are the intermediaries) totally govern the latter ratio? As long as this transfer coefficient exists in any appreciable way, there will be a big reason to apply PPP over nominal.



Says someone who hasn't read the ICP papers....and probably doesn't even know what the ICP is and how it calculates the PPP using a price level basket.


Forget it. Like I said, you can never convince some of them, facts be damned.

According to some Bangladeshis, their country of 160+ million has an economy the size of Melbourne, Australia. A city of 5 million people. Bravo.
 
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