What's new

Pakistan, Bangladesh better than India on inclusive development

Kandari-Hushiyaar

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Nov 14, 2016
Messages
582
Reaction score
0
Country
Bangladesh
Location
Bangladesh
India, with a score of only 3.38, ranks 60th among the 79 developing economies.

India has been ranked 60th among 79 developing economies, even lower than China and Pakistan, in the World Economic Forums latest inclusive development index (IDI) report.

The WEF's Inclusive Growth and Development Report 2017, released here on Monday, said that most countries were missing major opportunities to raise economic growth, as well as reduce inequality at the same time, because the growth model and measurement tools require significant readjustment.

"India, with a score of only 3.38, ranks 60th among the 79 developing economies on the IDI, despite the fact that its growth in GDP per capita is among the top 10 and labour productivity growth has been strong."

"Poverty has also been falling, albeit from a high level," the report said.

The IDI is based on 12 performance indicators, and evaluation is based on three key parameters of Growth and Development, Inclusion and Intergenerational Equity, and Sustainability.

While India is placed at the 60th spot, among its neighbours China is ranked 15th, Nepal is 27th, Bangladesh is ranked 36th and Pakistan is closest ahead of India at 52nd.

Lithuania tops the list of 79 developing economies that also features Azerbaijan and Hungary at second and third positions, respectively.

Others countries in the top ten are Poland (fourth), Romania (fifth), Uruguay (sixth), Latvia (seventh), Panama (eighth), Costa Rica (ninth) and Chile (10th).

The report also noted that India's debt-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio is high, raising some questions about the sustainability of government spending.

Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund has cut India's growth forecast for the current fiscal by as much as one percentage point due mainly to the disruptions caused by demonetisation of 500 and 1,000 rupee currency notes.

The IMF had earlier predicted a 7.6 per cent growth for the Indian economy during the current fiscal ending March 31.

"In India, the growth forecast for the current (2016-17) and next fiscal year were trimmed by one percentage point and 0.4 percentage point, respectively, primarily due to the temporary negative consumption shock induced by cash shortages and payment disruptions associated with the recent currency note withdrawal and exchange initiative," the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in its latest World Economic Outlook (WEO) update released in Washington on on Monday.

In its first projection on India post the demonetisation of high value currency, the World Bank has also lowered the country's GDP growth estimate for this fiscal to 7 per cent, from the 7.6 per cent estimate made in June last year. US firm Fitch Ratings has also reiterated its late November downgrading of India's growth outlook.

"Growth in India is estimated to reach 7 per cent in financial year (FY) 2017 ... reflecting a modest downgrade to India's expansion," the multilateral lender said in its Global Economic Prospects report released last week.

"Unexpected demonetisation -- the phasing out of large denomination currency notes -- weighed on growth in the third quarter of FY 2017," it said.

"Weak industrial production and manufacturing and services purchasing managers' indexes further suggest a setback to activity in the fourth quarter of FY 2017," the report added.

Earlier this month, India's official statistician in New Delhi also lowered the country's gross domestic product growth estimates for 2016-17 to 7.1 per cent, compared with the 7.6 per cent growth in 2015-16.

American rating agency Fitch has also downgraded India's growth outlook to 6.9 per cent for 2016-17, from the earlier 7.4 per cent, citing the "short-term disruptions" caused by demonetisation.

"The demonetisation of large denomination bank notes has caused short-term disruption in India's economy and led us to downgrade our growth forecasts for 2017," Fitch Ratings said in its latest bi-monthly newsletter released last week.

http://www.thenewsminute.com/articl...merging-economies-inclusive-development-55866
 
. . . . . . .
This is very reflective of Indian development, when one Indian is enjoying properties worth billions of dollars, another Indian has to consume rats and defecate in the open field.
well its been like that for centuries... thats actually one way ibn batuta decribed the land of india.
 
. . .
You were the part of that very land he visited, now don't tell me Batuta brought your ancestors along with him :lol:
i am a bangladeshi and pledge my allegiance to bangladesh. but i am not of bengali origin.
my family is biracial...

and while i am not denying india pakistan and bangladesh is essentially the same land he described... pakistan and bangladesh seems to be trying to improve and reduce disparity...
 
.
i am a bangladeshi and pledge my allegiance to bangladesh. but i am not of bengali origin.
my family is biracial...
Yeah, I saw that coming :lol: I am sure you are half Arab, quarter Persian and quarter Turkish :agree:

Jesus, height of insecurity and delusion, never seen a lot with a more complex ridden mindset than you, no offence btw
 
.
Just because you are a bangladeshi you don't have to embarrass yourself you know, Geographically and culturally Bengal has always been considered a part of India, Batuta visited Chittagong and Sylhet in present day Bangladesh, which was a part and parcel of his visit to hind, go read up some historical references of his visit, Vasco da Gama is widely known to be the first to reach India, no one says he only discovered Kerala !!

Although given your mental capacity I don't think you would understand

I knew a mentally dormant bhakt like you will surely come up with some moronic explanation. What's next, calling China culturally part of India due to Buddhism?

It was Bengal Sultanate which was an independent and sovereign state in the Subcontinent. Calling it part of India (despite the fact that there was no India back then) would mean the same as calling Bangladesh and Pakistan as part of current republic of India. But I see low-IQ people like you, who are imbecile enough to believe such jokes like cows exhaling oxygen or fictional mythological characters inventing nuclear weapons, can never get these common facts.
 
Last edited:
. .
I knew it, mental midgets like you will never understand the concept of Geographical entity, my bad.

The geographical entity is called South Asia, nitwit

It is easier to make an elephant wear an underwear than to drill some sense into your thick skull,.

You are right, bangladesh were never a part of India, after years of open defecation by Indian people, all the poops kept piling up underneath the bay of bengal, and one fine day after a tidal wave when the sea level fell down again, bangladesh emerged (pooped up) from the heap of poop.

Did they teach you this story in your sangh shakha? How did India emerge then? Let me guess, when holy cows from all over the world gathered into one place, after years of releasing their holy shit, created the global shit-hole, now known as India!

I told you to throw your textbooks, full of jokes. Humanity is already suffering from a huge burden of you lot!
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom