Thanks for your thoughts Loki Bhai, you made some points worth observing and they need further discussion.
1971 IMHO helped India as much as it did us. For starters, it made them rest easy and relieved them of a thorn on their side at the time so they could fight a single front war instead of a two front one. It also gained them a huge regional market worth about seven billion dollars a year formally, and as much informally through smuggling totalling some USD 12 to 14 billion a year (I'd say more lucrative than Nepal or Sri Lanka) than they had previously, with no price paid economically through imports.
We only have to blame Bhutto and gang on what they did in 1971 for selfish reasons, yet they had no vision that Pakistan United, could rival India in manufacturing prowess as it does in defence today. Inclusive development is not a part of our history in the subcontinent (we possess garbage for brains instead of being visionary, we always want to dominate supposedly 'meek' populations) and we will see this further manifest itself in India's north/south egotistical cultural divide. Time will tell.
I don't see India's Chanakya south block diplomacy to dominate us reducing anytime soon, a placating foreign policy will keep India at bay at least until we gain strength economically and properly equip to defend ourselves. Everyone likes to dominate a sitting duck, it's the nature of garbage human beings in South Asia. As long as Indians don't think we're a present or emerging threat (I don't think we will be in that space anytime soon) then they are fine with us and will leave us alone hopefully. Disrupting our trade/manufacturing activity or fomenting unrest in Bangladesh will create an unstable quarter on their eastern flank to spell trouble in their own country and they know that very well.
Lobbying is the need of the hour. Pakistanis and Indians all have strong trade lobbies in Washington, and our lobbying activity is not as strong as theirs. This is a shame and a crying need of the hour. Reestablishing GSP for US markets and establishing new markets in South America is necessary immediately.
Coming back closer to the subject of the thread- Bangladesh is a better destination than any country to replace China's Low-cost manufacturing role which played a big part in making China the second largest economy in the world by 2010, compared to the ninth largest in 1980.
Now China is rapidly moving into medium to high-tech manufacturing as its labor costs have risen. Manufacturing goods in China is now only 4 percent cheaper than in the United States, in large part because yearly average manufacturing wages in China have increased by 80 percent since 2010. It is in response to this that China, backed by billions of dollars in investment from its government, has vigorously moved into higher value manufacturing.
True we are setting up a hundred SEZS and are gearing up rapidly to produce labor-intensive commodity-type products like apparel, shoes, toys, textiles and basic consumer electronics and home electric products. Our two decades of exporting textile and footwear products have put us ahead of a lot of competitors like Malaysia, India, Thailand, Indonesia, and Vietnam, and here's why, in addition to being the lowest cost competitor by far (our labor cost is less than half of India's, and India's labor cost is the lowest in the group).
Thailand and Malaysia : Thailand and Malaysia are more focused on high- and medium-tech manufacturing rather than being the next centers of low-cost manufacturing after China. Thailand has strong automotive, electronics, food, and chemicals industries, while Malaysia has strong chemical, machinery, and rubber processing industries. This is borne out in the relative prosperity as Malaysia and Thailand are by far the richest of the group and their labor costs are almost the highest in that five country group.
They are competitors to China, and simply can't compete with Bangladesh in labor cost. Period.
India: India has many challenges. In order to have a flourishing manufacturing base, workers need to be able to at least read and write to operate machinery. India scores low on general skills attainment, ranking 105th in the world according to the
UN’s Human Capital Index 2016, lower than any other nation in this five nation group.
In fact India ranks below Bangladesh in Human Capital Index and will continue to do so because of its size and the terrible education and health conditions in its lowest developed States like Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh, which will be sources of its low cost labor. India’s infrastructure is woeful, in particular transport and energy supply, where it ranks lower than most other emerging economies. Government inefficiency is also a major stumbling block – delays in land acquisition and environmental clearances have stalled more than 270 projects across the country.
To top it off, Indian wages are double that of Bangladesh. No competition for low wage manufacturing.
Vietnam:
Vietnam wages are half that of China but still about double that of Bangladesh. Vietnam has had a very stable political environment but China will be reticent to encourage investment heavily in Vietnam because of strategic reasons, they are ancient rivals.
Vietnam's recent defence purchases to counter China and overtures to form defense entente with India (especially Indian Navy) will not help things.
Indonesia: The problem for Indonesia is the state’s capacity to implement industrial strategy; the state is highly decentralized and there are huge infrastructure issues. You don’t have these challenges in Bangladesh or Vietnam which are smaller and densely populated countries. Indonesia’s population of over 255 million represents a large potential consumer market but at the end of the day we are talking about export led growth and Chinese investment which the Chinese govt. is and will be reluctant to encourage in Indonesia because of potential future political rivalries. There will be a lot of empty talk but action will be few and far between unfortunately.
Again to top it off, Indonesian wages are triple that of Bangladesh. No competition.