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GDP growth data ‘puzzling’

bluesky

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12:00 AM, May 10, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:25 AM, May 10, 2019
GDP growth data ‘puzzling’

Doesn’t match various economic indicators, says research body

gdp_chart.jpg


Staff Correspondent

Bangladesh’s recent GDP growth data is “puzzling” and inconsistent with various indicators of the economy, South Asian Network on Economic Modeling, a non-profit research organisation, said yesterday.

The drivers of the country’s economic growth are primarily export and remittances. But the high growth rates in recent years do not match with the sluggish growth in export and remittance, said SANEM.

The government data showed a surge in private consumption in the last two fiscal years though export and remittance growth had been slow during the period, it pointed out.

SANEM Executive Director Selim Raihan said it cannot be explained why private consumption saw a sharp rise in the last few years.

“The growth in public consumption can be explained to some extent because the government is spending on big infrastructure projects. But the growth in private consumption remains a puzzle,” he said while presenting ‘SANEM’s Quarterly Review of Bangladesh Economy’ at the Brac Centre Inn in the capital.

SANEM also voiced concerns over the current problems in the banking sector. “High non-performing loans [NPLs], institutional weakness and political patronage characterise the banking sector,” the organisation said in the review. It mentioned that the recent government decisions such as changes in the rules on NPLs and concessions to defaulters would be counterproductive.

The research organisation’s observation came around two weeks after the Centre for Policy Dialogue, a private think tank, questioned the current year’s growth estimate of 8.13 percent, citing incoherency in various indicators of the economy.

“We are walking backwards from the international standards. We will face a bigger problem,” Selim said.

Citing Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS) data, SANEM said the growth in private consumption was estimated at 11.41 percent in fiscal 2017-18 compared to 7.43 percent in the previous year. It was 3 percent in fiscal 2015-16.

“This is a big concern that we see high growth in private consumption despite low growth in export and remittance. The second concern is that the government data shows high growth in the manufacturing sector although the growth in export and private investment has been sluggish,” said Selim, professor of Economics at Dhaka University.

In the review, SANEM mentioned that domestic demand can become a driver of growth with sizeable improvement in per capita income. But in that case, the overall growth rate may fall.

Bangladesh is yet to reach that level. Domestic demand cannot be a driver of growth in a low-income country like Bangladesh, said Selim.

SANEM questioned the high growth rate of 13.4 percent in the manufacturing sector in fiscal 2017-18, saying the export growth was 5.81 percent in that year. Private investment growth was also slow during the period.

“Then what are the drivers of growth in the manufacturing sector and what are the sources?” Selim questioned. “We cannot match the data. We are struggling.”

The organisation said the business environment has not improved to such an extent that could support the data on high growth in the manufacturing sector.

“We do not see any major improvement in the business environment. Rather, we see deterioration in some areas. Then how could we explain the growth in the manufacturing sector? All these led to a very puzzling scenario,” said Selim.

The BBS should revisit its data,” he said.

SANEM Chairman Prof Bazlul Haque Khondker said there have been a lot of questions regarding growth and its sources.

“We are not getting full answers about what are the drivers of our growth,” he said.

SANEM said the pace of poverty reduction is much slower than that of GDP growth rates. Also, the pace of employment generation is slow.

“The growth that we see is creating inequality in the society ... The whole thing raises questions about the quality of growth,” noted Selim.

“It appears that the obsession with GDP growth numbers puts the policy makers in the comfort zone. This has created a reform-averse mentality.”

SANEM said reforms are necessary in tax system, banking sector and trade policy.

Selim stressed that it was high time that the government brought reforms many of which, he said, can be unpopular and go against vested interests.

“We want to see reflections of this in the upcoming budget.”

The organisation pointed out falling tax-GDP ratio and sluggish growth in revenue collection in recent years.

Referring to the new VAT law, Bazlul Haque said it had been passed in 2012 but is yet to be implemented.

Now that the National Board of Revenue (NBR) is going to implement it from the next fiscal year, the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce & Industries raised questions whether the NBR is prepared to do so, he said.

“These questions are unwarranted. These issues were supposed to be addressed much earlier.”

The organisation suggested that the government take up policies and programmes for employment generation and increase spending on education and health.

SANEM Research Director Prof Sayema Haque Bidisha also spoke at the programme.

https://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/news/recent-gdp-growth-data-puzzling-1741291

@TopCat, @Atlas, @Nilgiri, @Homo Sapiens: Do you guys think BBS is manipulating with the economic data at random to look good the growth? I am a little perplexed.
 
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12:00 AM, May 10, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:25 AM, May 10, 2019
GDP growth data ‘puzzling’

Doesn’t match various economic indicators, says research body

gdp_chart.jpg


Staff Correspondent

Bangladesh’s recent GDP growth data is “puzzling” and inconsistent with various indicators of the economy, South Asian Network on Economic Modeling, a non-profit research organisation, said yesterday.

The drivers of the country’s economic growth are primarily export and remittances. But the high growth rates in recent years do not match with the sluggish growth in export and remittance, said SANEM.

The government data showed a surge in private consumption in the last two fiscal years though export and remittance growth had been slow during the period, it pointed out.

SANEM Executive Director Selim Raihan said it cannot be explained why private consumption saw a sharp rise in the last few years.

“The growth in public consumption can be explained to some extent because the government is spending on big infrastructure projects. But the growth in private consumption remains a puzzle,” he said while presenting ‘SANEM’s Quarterly Review of Bangladesh Economy’ at the Brac Centre Inn in the capital.

SANEM also voiced concerns over the current problems in the banking sector. “High non-performing loans [NPLs], institutional weakness and political patronage characterise the banking sector,” the organisation said in the review. It mentioned that the recent government decisions such as changes in the rules on NPLs and concessions to defaulters would be counterproductive.

The research organisation’s observation came around two weeks after the Centre for Policy Dialogue, a private think tank, questioned the current year’s growth estimate of 8.13 percent, citing incoherency in various indicators of the economy.

“We are walking backwards from the international standards. We will face a bigger problem,” Selim said.

Citing Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS) data, SANEM said the growth in private consumption was estimated at 11.41 percent in fiscal 2017-18 compared to 7.43 percent in the previous year. It was 3 percent in fiscal 2015-16.

“This is a big concern that we see high growth in private consumption despite low growth in export and remittance. The second concern is that the government data shows high growth in the manufacturing sector although the growth in export and private investment has been sluggish,” said Selim, professor of Economics at Dhaka University.

In the review, SANEM mentioned that domestic demand can become a driver of growth with sizeable improvement in per capita income. But in that case, the overall growth rate may fall.

Bangladesh is yet to reach that level. Domestic demand cannot be a driver of growth in a low-income country like Bangladesh, said Selim.

SANEM questioned the high growth rate of 13.4 percent in the manufacturing sector in fiscal 2017-18, saying the export growth was 5.81 percent in that year. Private investment growth was also slow during the period.

“Then what are the drivers of growth in the manufacturing sector and what are the sources?” Selim questioned. “We cannot match the data. We are struggling.”

The organisation said the business environment has not improved to such an extent that could support the data on high growth in the manufacturing sector.

“We do not see any major improvement in the business environment. Rather, we see deterioration in some areas. Then how could we explain the growth in the manufacturing sector? All these led to a very puzzling scenario,” said Selim.

The BBS should revisit its data,” he said.

SANEM Chairman Prof Bazlul Haque Khondker said there have been a lot of questions regarding growth and its sources.

“We are not getting full answers about what are the drivers of our growth,” he said.

SANEM said the pace of poverty reduction is much slower than that of GDP growth rates. Also, the pace of employment generation is slow.

“The growth that we see is creating inequality in the society ... The whole thing raises questions about the quality of growth,” noted Selim.

“It appears that the obsession with GDP growth numbers puts the policy makers in the comfort zone. This has created a reform-averse mentality.”

SANEM said reforms are necessary in tax system, banking sector and trade policy.

Selim stressed that it was high time that the government brought reforms many of which, he said, can be unpopular and go against vested interests.

“We want to see reflections of this in the upcoming budget.”

The organisation pointed out falling tax-GDP ratio and sluggish growth in revenue collection in recent years.

Referring to the new VAT law, Bazlul Haque said it had been passed in 2012 but is yet to be implemented.

Now that the National Board of Revenue (NBR) is going to implement it from the next fiscal year, the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce & Industries raised questions whether the NBR is prepared to do so, he said.

“These questions are unwarranted. These issues were supposed to be addressed much earlier.”

The organisation suggested that the government take up policies and programmes for employment generation and increase spending on education and health.

SANEM Research Director Prof Sayema Haque Bidisha also spoke at the programme.

https://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/news/recent-gdp-growth-data-puzzling-1741291

@Top Cat, @Atlas, @Nilgiri, @Homo Sapiens: Do you guys think BBS is manipulating with the economic data at random to look good the growth? I am a little perplexed.

Significant portion of remittance is coming via black channel. Which is fueling private consumption which has not been considered in this report. There may be many other factors.
 
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Significant portion of remittance is coming via black channel. Which is fueling private consumption which has not been considered in this report. There may be many other factors.
Many of the small economies rely on export for growth thus lower export growth does not explain higher gdp growth.

I hope their finance minister also isnt in same league as Mr Dar of ours.
 
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The position in this paper is simply that internal economic engine can not drive growth. Simply speaking that is a retarded position and contrary to economic logic.

BD is a nation of 165m people its primary economic driver has always been the internal multiplier effect. Our economy is not FDI driven nor do we sell natural resources like oil or gas and nor are we a knowledge driven service economy.

Absolute gibberish of epic proportion. Simply looking at import which is primarily raw materials and machinery, coupled with low indebetedness verifies that the productive capacity is increasing. Looking also as luxury import again coupled with low indebtedness suggests a massive informal economy.

There maybe some manipulation but the underlying strength of BD economy is verified by every major reputable international financial institution and credit rating agency. One suggests there are better economists employed there than this third rate institution looking for a headline and relevance.
 
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Significant portion of remittance is coming via black channel. Which is fueling private consumption which has not been considered in this report. There may be many other factors.

Not enough Taka liquidity stationed outside BD for this to be a huge effect.

Remittances would extract from local taka liquidity inside BD (given legal tender in BD is only Taka for remittance type folks)....so the majority of mismatch would be from the actual inflation going on inside BD.

Can easily correlate with every other developing country pattern first, as these people likely have. Or you going to make the case BD is yet again a special case outlier country like with TFR vs teenage birth rate?

Do you guys think BBS is manipulating with the economic data at random to look good the growth? I am a little perplexed.

Yes there is inflation laundering going on (i.e price inflation counted as real quantity increase in something).

Bangladesh govt actually has to reform and submit to high frequency data release standards to improve on this.

It seems to have learned zero from the earlier stock collapse and just want to pump more bubble to keep more "nice" data to get loans and project image of everything ok...because credit rating is already junk (and such international groups that determine it do not work for BAL or are influenced by it)....so rather than do the hard reform work, its easier to keep kicking the can and then simply find some scapegoats later when reality finally catches up in bad way.

How else does a bottom 10% percentile in corruption country really operate you think? Fix the corruption (which would incriminate the majority of its bureaucracy and leadership).....or just suppress the dissonance and debate and release "good" numbers?

Still to this day, there has not been one response by govt on the real household income decline (prompted by such inflation as it manifests in BBS own data)....not one actual debate in BD TV etc since mr. Taslim pointed it out in the article.

So with this attitude, such dissonance will only continue when you compare the hard data that cannot be faked/laundered to the data that is vulnerable to it (especially in low frequency data standard country).

and credit rating agency.

Any of them give BD an investment grade rating? LOL. You are such an idiot. VERIFIED!!!!

BD is a nation of 165m people its primary economic driver has always been the internal multiplier effect.

"In BAL we trust" to determine what is real and what is inflation. Such high quality non-corrupt people!
 
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The position in this paper is simply that internal economic engine can not drive growth. Simply speaking that is a retarded position and contrary to economic logic.

BD is a nation of 165m people its primary economic driver has always been the internal multiplier effect. Our economy is not FDI driven nor do we sell natural resources like oil or gas and nor are we a knowledge driven service economy.

Bangladesh has not reach such level of wealth that it can sustain economic growth with domestic consumption alone.

China is in phase of shifting to domestic consumption whereas it was export orientated prior to that and Bangladesh no special case.

Good luck to Bangladesh if the growth is high as predicted but one must also not get sucked into false believe which can wreck hovac down the track.
 
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Not enough Taka liquidity stationed outside BD for this to be a huge effect.

Remittances would extract from local taka liquidity inside BD (given legal tender in BD is only Taka for remittance type folks)....so the majority of mismatch would be from the actual inflation going on inside BD.

Can easily correlate with every other developing country pattern first, as these people likely have. Or you going to make the case BD is yet again a special case outlier country like with TFR vs teenage birth rate?



Yes there is inflation laundering going on (i.e price inflation counted as real quantity increase in something).

Bangladesh govt actually has to reform and submit to high frequency data release standards to improve on this.

It seems to have learned zero from the earlier stock collapse and just want to pump more bubble to keep more "nice" data to get loans and project image of everything ok...because credit rating is already junk (and such international groups that determine it do not work for BAL or are influenced by it)....so rather than do the hard reform work, its easier to keep kicking the can and then simply find some scapegoats later when reality finally catches up in bad way.

How else does a bottom 10% percentile in corruption country really operate you think? Fix the corruption (which would incriminate the majority of its bureaucracy and leadership).....or just suppress the dissonance and debate and release "good" numbers?

Still to this day, there has not been one response by govt on the real household income decline (prompted by such inflation as it manifests in BBS own data)....not one actual debate in BD TV etc since mr. Taslim pointed it out in the article.

So with this attitude, such dissonance will only continue when you compare the hard data that cannot be faked/laundered to the data that is vulnerable to it (especially in low frequency data standard country).



Any of them give BD an investment grade rating? LOL. You are such an idiot. VERIFIED!!!!



"In BAL we trust" to determine what is real and what is inflation. Such high quality non-corrupt people!

Country who depend on internal consumption growth usually has a clear and verified periodic data release about their economic performance. Without that they can't catch up with what is happening within their economy scope, and without that they tends to be failed.
 
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12:00 AM, May 10, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:25 AM, May 10, 2019
GDP growth data ‘puzzling’

Doesn’t match various economic indicators, says research body

gdp_chart.jpg


Staff Correspondent

Bangladesh’s recent GDP growth data is “puzzling” and inconsistent with various indicators of the economy, South Asian Network on Economic Modeling, a non-profit research organisation, said yesterday.

The drivers of the country’s economic growth are primarily export and remittances. But the high growth rates in recent years do not match with the sluggish growth in export and remittance, said SANEM.

The government data showed a surge in private consumption in the last two fiscal years though export and remittance growth had been slow during the period, it pointed out.

SANEM Executive Director Selim Raihan said it cannot be explained why private consumption saw a sharp rise in the last few years.

“The growth in public consumption can be explained to some extent because the government is spending on big infrastructure projects. But the growth in private consumption remains a puzzle,” he said while presenting ‘SANEM’s Quarterly Review of Bangladesh Economy’ at the Brac Centre Inn in the capital.

SANEM also voiced concerns over the current problems in the banking sector. “High non-performing loans [NPLs], institutional weakness and political patronage characterise the banking sector,” the organisation said in the review. It mentioned that the recent government decisions such as changes in the rules on NPLs and concessions to defaulters would be counterproductive.

The research organisation’s observation came around two weeks after the Centre for Policy Dialogue, a private think tank, questioned the current year’s growth estimate of 8.13 percent, citing incoherency in various indicators of the economy.

“We are walking backwards from the international standards. We will face a bigger problem,” Selim said.

Citing Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS) data, SANEM said the growth in private consumption was estimated at 11.41 percent in fiscal 2017-18 compared to 7.43 percent in the previous year. It was 3 percent in fiscal 2015-16.

“This is a big concern that we see high growth in private consumption despite low growth in export and remittance. The second concern is that the government data shows high growth in the manufacturing sector although the growth in export and private investment has been sluggish,” said Selim, professor of Economics at Dhaka University.

In the review, SANEM mentioned that domestic demand can become a driver of growth with sizeable improvement in per capita income. But in that case, the overall growth rate may fall.

Bangladesh is yet to reach that level. Domestic demand cannot be a driver of growth in a low-income country like Bangladesh, said Selim.

SANEM questioned the high growth rate of 13.4 percent in the manufacturing sector in fiscal 2017-18, saying the export growth was 5.81 percent in that year. Private investment growth was also slow during the period.

“Then what are the drivers of growth in the manufacturing sector and what are the sources?” Selim questioned. “We cannot match the data. We are struggling.”

The organisation said the business environment has not improved to such an extent that could support the data on high growth in the manufacturing sector.

“We do not see any major improvement in the business environment. Rather, we see deterioration in some areas. Then how could we explain the growth in the manufacturing sector? All these led to a very puzzling scenario,” said Selim.

The BBS should revisit its data,” he said.

SANEM Chairman Prof Bazlul Haque Khondker said there have been a lot of questions regarding growth and its sources.

“We are not getting full answers about what are the drivers of our growth,” he said.

SANEM said the pace of poverty reduction is much slower than that of GDP growth rates. Also, the pace of employment generation is slow.

“The growth that we see is creating inequality in the society ... The whole thing raises questions about the quality of growth,” noted Selim.

“It appears that the obsession with GDP growth numbers puts the policy makers in the comfort zone. This has created a reform-averse mentality.”

SANEM said reforms are necessary in tax system, banking sector and trade policy.

Selim stressed that it was high time that the government brought reforms many of which, he said, can be unpopular and go against vested interests.

“We want to see reflections of this in the upcoming budget.”

The organisation pointed out falling tax-GDP ratio and sluggish growth in revenue collection in recent years.

Referring to the new VAT law, Bazlul Haque said it had been passed in 2012 but is yet to be implemented.

Now that the National Board of Revenue (NBR) is going to implement it from the next fiscal year, the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce & Industries raised questions whether the NBR is prepared to do so, he said.

“These questions are unwarranted. These issues were supposed to be addressed much earlier.”

The organisation suggested that the government take up policies and programmes for employment generation and increase spending on education and health.

SANEM Research Director Prof Sayema Haque Bidisha also spoke at the programme.

https://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/news/recent-gdp-growth-data-puzzling-1741291

@TopCat, @Atlas, @Nilgiri, @Homo Sapiens: Do you guys think BBS is manipulating with the economic data at random to look good the growth? I am a little perplexed.

I didn't see this guy citing his sources, it would be interesting to see what data he is referring to.
I am also curious about the funding of his organization in other words who pays his bills ? He has got a lot going with World Bank.

This guy is big on neo-liberal economics and equality issues.

From the website sanemnet.org ,

South Asian Network on Economic Modeling (SANEM), a leading think-tank of South Asia, announces the competitive call for papers and participation for the “Third SANEM-World Bank North America Discussion Forum 2019″ to be jointly organized by SANEM and the World Bank Group on July 12, 2019 at the World Bank premises in Washington, D.C., USA. SANEM proudly announces the success of The First SANEM-World Bank North America Discussion Forum held on June 12, 2017, in Washington DC, USA, and The Second SANEM-World Bank North America Discussion Forum held on September 7, 2018, in Washington DC, USA.

The core objective of this event is to promote quality economic research among academicians, policy advocates, researchers, students and young aspiring economists living in the North American region as well as in other parts of the globe. Through this event, SANEM sets its footprint on the North American region.

Themes:

Papers should be relevant to any of the following themes:

  • ** Emerging challenges in global trade and implications for South Asia
  • ** Challenges of financing inclusive development in South Asia
  • ** Structural transformation in South Asia
  • ** Challenges for industrialization in South Asia
  • ** Labor market, employment and demographic challenges in South Asia
  • ** Macroeconomic policies in South Asia in the context of emerging global challenges
  • ** Social policies in South Asia in the context of emerging global challenges
  • ** Environment policies in South Asia in the context of emerging global challenges
 
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Bangladesh has not reach such level of wealth that it can sustain economic growth with domestic consumption alone.

China is in phase of shifting to domestic consumption whereas it was export orientated prior to that and Bangladesh no special case.

Good luck to Bangladesh if the growth is high as predicted but one must also not get sucked into false believe which can wreck hovac down the track.

BD economy is tiny for its population. its growth rate is high because it is operating with such low base. There really is no mystery here.

Look up the phenomena known as the BD paradium.... with a low level economy BD has improved its social indicators by encompassing its entire population with grassroot action. It does not take a massive leap of imagination to link the dots that greater economic activity will take place in a nation where education is spreading, where female participation in job sector is encouraged, where micro credit has given a life line to the poorest of the poor,where telecommunications and internet have facilated greater internal connections and cohesions, where rudimentary social safety net is being implemented and where the nation is now self sufficient in food which it was not only a generation ago. BD and its polulace have pulled themselves up..... it is a level when compared to developed nations is laughable but improvements there has been nevertheless and it is no longer the proverbial basket case.

BD have not enjoyed much FDI, our economy is not export orientated. Agriculture and SME serving internal demands remains to date the overwhelming contributory source of our GDP. BD internal growth engine is the main reason for economic sucess such it is that has been achieved to date.
 
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@TopCat, @Atlas, @Nilgiri, @Homo Sapiens: Do you guys think BBS is manipulating with the economic data at random to look good the growth? I am a little perplexed.
GDP growth will always be proportional to export and remittance growth, this is a stupid proposition. Economy can grow at high rate even with stagnant export and remittance if internal consumption and spending remain robust. And how can they say our export and remittance are not growing?
Bangladesh exports grow 12.6% on strong apparel earnings
https://bdnews24.com/business/2019/04/08/bangladesh-exports-grow-12.6-on-strong-apparel-earnings
Strong dollar prompts remittance to increase by 10% in 8 months
https://www.dhakatribune.com/busine...mpts-remittance-to-increase-by-10-in-8-months

Is not 12.6 percent export growth and 10 percent remittance growth enough for producing 7-8 percent GDP growth?

Rather than believing this one sided report about such thing, it is always better to hear a debate from both side of the arguments and decide for itself. Here are the debate participated by both CPD guy and Planning commission guy.
 
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@Black_cats @mb444 @TopCat @Atlas @fallstuff

This graph is a perfect example of deceiving the public eyes. Even some sophisticated mind who works with economy may fall into deception by seeing this. Look at the range of GDP growth in the graph- 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 and look at the range of Export and Remittance growth:-20,0,20,40,60. Such a high difference in range between these two parameter means that any graph which compare the relative performance of GDP vs Export+Remittance will always show GDP growth at the top and Export+Remittance growth at the bottom of the graph, and a huge gap between them. In such a case, even 20 percent annual growth of Export+Remittance will show a big gap. But if the range for Export+Remittance growth was just 0,2,4,8,10,12 then? It would have shown a harmonized growth between GDP vs Export+Remittance. This type of cynical graph or other statistical exercise are a common tactic commonly employs by the media to push their agenda to the public. How media create a false illusion in public mind is superbly demonstrated in this video. I urge you all to see this video from first to last.
 
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This graph is a perfect example of deceiving the public eyes. Even some sophisticated mind who works with economy may fall into deception by seeing this. Look at the range of GDP growth in the graph- 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 and look at the range of Export and Remittance growth:-20,0,20,40,60. Such a high difference in range between these two parameter means that any graph which compare the relative performance of GDP vs Export+Remittance will always show GDP growth at the top and Export+Remittance growth at the bottom of the graph, and a huge gap between them. In such a case, even 20 percent annual growth of Export+Remittance will show a big gap. But if the range for Export+Remittance growth was just 0,2,4,8,10,12 then? It would have shown a harmonized growth between GDP and Export+Remittance. This type of cynical graph or other statistical exercise are a common tactic commonly employs by the media to push their agenda to the public. How media create a false illusion in public mind is superbly demonstrated in this video. i urge you to see this video from first to last.
@Black_cats @mb444 @TopCat @Atlas @fallstuff

I don’t know why this @bluesky has something to say bad about Bangladesh? Is it because of his inferiority complex or political agenda he is doing this, I am not sure. To him all Bangladeshis will be dark and short, to become advanced country it will require 1000 years such absurd reasoning is beyond my understanding.
 
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Country who depend on internal consumption growth usually has a clear and verified periodic data release about their economic performance. Without that they can't catch up with what is happening within their economy scope, and without that they tends to be failed.

BBS can give us those nice bright colours, they give us the greens of summers...make you think all of BD a sunny daaay!

They got a nikon camera, they love to take a photograph.....so dont take their kodachrome awaaay!

 
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Not enough Taka liquidity stationed outside BD for this to be a huge effect.

Remittances would extract from local taka liquidity inside BD (given legal tender in BD is only Taka for remittance type folks)....so the majority of mismatch would be from the actual inflation going on inside BD.

Can easily correlate with every other developing country pattern first, as these people likely have. Or you going to make the case BD is yet again a special case outlier country like with TFR vs teenage birth rate?



Yes there is inflation laundering going on (i.e price inflation counted as real quantity increase in something).

Bangladesh govt actually has to reform and submit to high frequency data release standards to improve on this.

It seems to have learned zero from the earlier stock collapse and just want to pump more bubble to keep more "nice" data to get loans and project image of everything ok...because credit rating is already junk (and such international groups that determine it do not work for BAL or are influenced by it)....so rather than do the hard reform work, its easier to keep kicking the can and then simply find some scapegoats later when reality finally catches up in bad way.

How else does a bottom 10% percentile in corruption country really operate you think? Fix the corruption (which would incriminate the majority of its bureaucracy and leadership).....or just suppress the dissonance and debate and release "good" numbers?

Still to this day, there has not been one response by govt on the real household income decline (prompted by such inflation as it manifests in BBS own data)....not one actual debate in BD TV etc since mr. Taslim pointed it out in the article.

So with this attitude, such dissonance will only continue when you compare the hard data that cannot be faked/laundered to the data that is vulnerable to it (especially in low frequency data standard country).



Any of them give BD an investment grade rating? LOL. You are such an idiot. VERIFIED!!!!



"In BAL we trust" to determine what is real and what is inflation. Such high quality non-corrupt people!
Indian export is stagnant for the last 10 years.. how it can even post any gdp growth is beyond my imagination.
 
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