Your single focus on RMG does not mean "industrialisation". Bangladesh cannot produce one major industrial item that matters.
Look at your total industrial output for instance...and look at whats it comprises. It can only really change from 2030 onwards when you have enough economic margins to invest and enough skilled human capital.
Till then you rely on importing Indian talent for many important managerial and high end expertise and the cost of doing that means you have little to expand into major industrial production...be it heavy, medium or light.
Thats why such a thing like a nuclear power plant is something you have to rely on the source to give you a loan (and on their terms and costs - which is again going to sap margins from B'desh over quite a long time).
Define large number? Their suicide rates are actually lower than the overall suicide rate for the whole country.
You really want to compare the agricultural production and consumption between the two countries especially on per capita basis?
Who cares when your population barely has decent access to electricity to begin with?
Access to electricity (% of population) | Data | Table
Besides look at the facts of your crappy electricity infrastructure (BD has "no power cuts" LOL):
ADB Loan Helps Bangladesh Address Severe Power Shortages | Asian Development Bank
UPDATE 2-Bangladesh power cut plunges millions into darkness| Reuters
Electricity sector in Bangladesh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A 2014 news report stated that:
Bangladesh is considered one of the most arousing energy growth nations. More than a third of Bangladesh's 166 million people still have no access to electricity, while the country often is able to produce only some of its 11,500-megawatt generation capacity.
[3]
In generating and distributing electricity, the failure to adequately manage the load leads to extensive load shedding which results in severe disruption in the industrial production and other economic activities. A recent survey reveals that power outages result in a loss of industrial output worth $1 billion a year which reduces the GDP growth by about half a percentage point in Bangladesh. A major hurdle in efficiently delivering power is caused by the inefficient distribution system. It is estimated that the total transmission and distribution losses in Bangladesh amount to one-third of the total generation, the value of which is equal to US $247 million per year.
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Now compare to our clear targets which are being accomplished:
Electrification works in 3,286 villages completed so far: Piyush Goyal | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis
Piyush Goyal pushes Rural electrification at Lightning Speed
India's ambitious plan to electrify all villages by 2017 is now accountable through a mobile app - SocialStory - SocialStory
Besides if I really wanted to embarrass you, all that needs to be done is to compare the per capita use of electricity in both countries.
Electric power consumption (kWh per capita) | Data | Table
744 kwh per capita versus 279 kwh in 2012. Almost 3 times more per capita. In fact its probably at that level (3 or 4 times) by now and growing further apart as we continue to grow way faster than you on all energy consumption parameters.
Thats why I said it helps to balance. But then Indian professionals working in Bangladesh send back a decent amount of money as well back to India....you can ask
@Rain Man and
@Roybot about this....so overall the net money flow is heavily in India's favour.