Skill does not come out of blue dumb a$$. As economy grows, technology brought in, industry pop up, people get training then skill develops. Too many graduates are getting employed in industrial sectors and there is no shortage of skills.
Sorry World Economic Forum does not buy your BBS bullcrap. Its confirmed by the terrible IQ BD stock people have when measured in 3rd party countries and the poverty they live in compared to every other immigrant community.
Something is seriously lacking in your education culturally....till that is fixed, the same old problems will persist...made worse by the endemic corruption.
The word industry and BD dont belong in the same sentence. Your consumption of anything is very meagre basically. Its why you are an LDC. 800/mth capacity CV factory is big news in BD. So sad.
Look at this consumption of vehicles (not even accounting what quality they are):
https://www.brta.gov.bd/images/statistics-bd-sept-16.pdf
Seriously like 1/10th or much much less per capita consumption than India in vehicles. BD managed to buy passenger cars in a whole year, what India buys in 2 days. Thats like 27 times less per capita.
And you talking about "industrial sectors"
But don't you think as economy grows....like by 6% by your estimation, more people will get educated and more people will be getting training? Your point is valid......but isn't it also true (up to some extent) for every developing nation? And what do you think could be good way to tackle this? Acknowledging the problem is the first step of solution. And I believe our finance minister has stressed the importance to create skilled workforce more than once. So, I believe some steps will be taken in this regard.
Lets hope so. The problem lies in that there is so much slack in BD economy still that it can push out 6% for a while longer, providing RMG style low cost jobs....but basically it has to formulate a much better education sector from primary to university for moving to the next stage. The current one is very underfunded at all levels according to most metrics of education quality of kids and youth.
Its a problem across the developing world, but BD for some reason is behind the curve more than its income and overall development would suggest....looking at various industrial sector sizes (Even at this stage), its education and training budget, deep lack of institution capability (according to WEF metrics) and projected future quality of its labor (again by WEF)
You are right it can be addressed over time, but the action needs to start right now.