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Bangladesh a better place to live than India, survey says

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http://thestar.blogs.com/worlddaily...ter-place-to-live-than-india-survey-says.html

Low-lying Bangladesh is prey to typhoons and hurricanes every year. Salty ocean water routinely destroys the flat country's arable farmland.

Many of the millions of garment-factory workers take their lives into their hands when they show up for work at derelict factories, 95 per cent of which are estimated to need structural repairs.

Political strikes paralyze businesses in the capital of Dhaka.

And yet there is some evidence that bedevilled Bangladesh is still a better place to live than India, the big brother next door that has been heralded as a 21st-century superpower.

According to a new study called the Legatum Prosperity Index, Bangladesh fares better than India when it comes to the "joy of everyday life," and "the prospect of being able to build an even better life in the future."

Call it a bit of good news for a country still reeling from bad publicity after the Rana Plaza collapse in April, which killed more than 1,100 people.

The study, released by the U.K.-based Legatum Institute and reported by journalist Heather Timmons on the website Quartz, ranks Bangladesh 103rd out of 142 countries. India is ranked 106th and falling.

In Bangladesh, people “not only live 3.4 years longer than their Indian counterparts, but fewer are undernourished, a lower number die in infancy and more have access to sanitation."

In the eight categories used to measure prosperity, India is ahead of Bangladesh in health, safety and security, and personal freedom. In other categories, such as education and governance, Bangladesh is ahead. (Bangladesh also fared better than Cambodia and Pakistan in the study.)

Norway ranks No. 1, a position it has locked down since 2009, followed by Switzerland and Canada.

Canada had the survey's top score for personal freedom and was third in education, behind New Zealand and Australia. Canada's lowest score was for entrepreneurship and opportunity, where it came in 16th.
 
In India, bottled water may not offer protection from Delhi belly

It’s been a forgettable year for India tourism.
When foreign media aren’t reporting on gang rapes and sexual assaults in the country of 1.2 billion, journalists are documenting the freefalling Indian economy.

Now for some more sour news for every visitor to sprawling India who carefully avoids ice in their drinks, believing that avoiding tap water will help them avoid awkward cases of travelers diarrhea: bottled water may not help prevent Delhi belly.

According to a report in The Times of India, as much as 20 per cent of bottled water tested in New Delhi during 2010-11 and 2011-12 failed quality testing. The results were revealed last week by consumer affairs minister K V Thomas in a written reply to a question posed in Indian parliament, Lok Sabha.

At least 23 of 190 samples in the national capital region failed and the licences of two bottled water companies were revoked.

Bacteria-laden bottled water might sound familiar. In the Academy Award-winning movie Slumdog Millionaire, one of the young characters lands a job at a restaurant, filling water bottles up with tap water, and then using a glue to fix the top it in place and making it seem like a new bottle.

“I have also seen young boys filing up 25 litre Bisleri and Kinley bottles from the roadside taps,” notes one Times of India reader.

So what's a tourist to do?



I just love this guy,Rick Westhead :jester:
 
http://thestar.blogs.com/worlddaily...ter-place-to-live-than-india-survey-says.html

Low-lying Bangladesh is prey to typhoons and hurricanes every year. Salty ocean water routinely destroys the flat country's arable farmland.

Many of the millions of garment-factory workers take their lives into their hands when they show up for work at derelict factories, 95 per cent of which are estimated to need structural repairs.

Political strikes paralyze businesses in the capital of Dhaka.

And yet there is some evidence that bedevilled Bangladesh is still a better place to live than India, the big brother next door that has been heralded as a 21st-century superpower.

According to a new study called the Legatum Prosperity Index, Bangladesh fares better than India when it comes to the "joy of everyday life," and "the prospect of being able to build an even better life in the future."

Call it a bit of good news for a country still reeling from bad publicity after the Rana Plaza collapse in April, which killed more than 1,100 people.

The study, released by the U.K.-based Legatum Institute and reported by journalist Heather Timmons on the website Quartz, ranks Bangladesh 103rd out of 142 countries. India is ranked 106th and falling.

In Bangladesh, people “not only live 3.4 years longer than their Indian counterparts, but fewer are undernourished, a lower number die in infancy and more have access to sanitation."

In the eight categories used to measure prosperity, India is ahead of Bangladesh in health, safety and security, and personal freedom. In other categories, such as education and governance, Bangladesh is ahead. (Bangladesh also fared better than Cambodia and Pakistan in the study.)

Norway ranks No. 1, a position it has locked down since 2009, followed by Switzerland and Canada.

Canada had the survey's top score for personal freedom and was third in education, behind New Zealand and Australia. Canada's lowest score was for entrepreneurship and opportunity, where it came in 16th.
to bahi wahi rakho na sare bangla deshi bhaiyo ko hamare idhar pol vault kyu karate rahte ho.
 
Probably that's why we are receiving heaps of illegal Indians here in Bangladesh. :lol:

People who are migrating to Bangladesh illegally are from West Bengal, Meghalaya, Assam, Tripura and Mizoram. According to the government authorities of the country, most of them come in search of job opportunities and mostly work in NGOs, garments and textile industries.

These Indians remit $3,716 million to their home country and the number is expected to increase in next few years.

http://www.siliconindia.com/news/bu...st-Remittances-to-India-nid-147515-cid-3.html

The slums are full of illegal Indians these days. :sick:
 
Just one question comes to mind , If BD is better , then why do they come here?

Because the so called illegal Bangladeshis are actually Indians.

Samir Guha Roy of the Indian Statistical Institute called these estimates "motivatedly exaggerated". After examining the population growth and demographic statistics, Roy instead states that many of the presumed illegal Bangladeshis are actually Indian citizens migrating from neighboring states.[4]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangladeshis_in_India

Better change your attitude towards them, or wait till these so called Bangladeshis actually start planning to become Bangladeshis by annexing your north east and merging with Bangladesh. :azn:
 
What kind of metric is "joy of everyday life"? How do you measure "joy of everyday life"? Another idiotic ranking by some obscure western journal.
 
Probably that's why we are receiving heaps of illegal Indians here in Bangladesh. :lol:

People who are migrating to Bangladesh illegally are from West Bengal, Meghalaya, Assam, Tripura and Mizoram. According to the government authorities of the country, most of them come in search of job opportunities and mostly work in NGOs, garments and textile industries.

These Indians remit $3,716 million to their home country and the number is expected to increase in next few years.

http://www.siliconindia.com/news/bu...st-Remittances-to-India-nid-147515-cid-3.html

The slums are full of illegal Indians these days. :sick:

According to World bank data Bangladesh remittance outflow is less than 10 million dollars for past one decade. The numbers you quoted is not real.

http://data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/migration-and-remittances
 
Because the so called illegal Bangladeshis are actually Indians.

Better change your attitude towards them, or wait till these so called Bangladeshis actually start planning to become Bangladeshis by annexing your north east and merging with Bangladesh. :azn:

Haha! Good one:rofl:

Nice to see jokes in this thread:p:
 
According to World bank data Bangladesh remittance outflow is less than 10 million dollars for past one decade. The numbers you quoted is not real.

http://data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/migration-and-remittances

Can't see the data there! :undecided:

Moreover, the data presented there are of 2010 while the data which I presented is of 2012! Another thing is that, illegal immigrants remit their earnings through illegal processes i.e hundi etc, hence the sending country couldn't record those amounts while the receiving country properly gets the record. The link I used is from an Indian source.
 
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