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Bangladesh: Canada’s best alternatives to China

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Bangladesh: Canada’s best alternatives to China
George McLeod
  • Published at 06:27 pm October 2nd, 2021
Canada Michael Spavor

Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, accompanied by Canada's Ambassador to China, Domenic Barton, are greeted on arrival by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau after being released from detention in China, in Calgary, Alberta, Canada September 25, 2021 Reuters

For Canadians addicted to Chinese products and their one-billion-strong market, the latest dispute causes many of us to wonder whether it’s worth the personal and geopolitical risk
After 1,019 days in captivity by Chinese authorities, Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Korvig arrived home last week; marking the end of the most acrimonious Sino-Canadian diplomatic rowin history.

China arrested the businessman and former diplomat in December 2018 after Huawei executive Weng Wanzhou was detained in Vancouver on a US extradition request.

The row over ‘The Two Michaels’ as it’s known locally was not a one-off; but the product of years of tensions that will little-doubt resume after this brief draw down.

For Canadians addicted to Chinese products and their one-billion-strong market, the latest dispute causes many of us to wonder whether it’s worth the personal and geopolitical risk to do business with the PRC.

But Canada has an alternative that offers both market opportunities and no geopolitical risk: Bangladesh.

Although often ignored by mainstream market commentators, Bangladeshis the emerging world’s fastest-expanding economy and is a growing force as a manufacturer for export and a market for Canadian goods.

Bangladesh’s products are often more price-competitive and better quality; and have superior human rights track records than Chinese counterparts.

For example, Bangladeshi garment factories are independently inspected for labour practices and unlike in China, Bangladeshi products are not tainted by political prison labour.

Canadian companies in China that complain of rampant intellectual property theft and demands for technology transfer should look to Bangladesh.

Bangladesh has a history of ethical treatment of foreign investors and rather than copying foreign products, Bangladesh is already a leader in homegrown medical breakthroughs and logistics.

The strengthening Bangladesh-Canadian relationship is bearing out in the numbers.

Trade more than tripled between 2004 and 2019 to nearly $3 billion and most of Bangladesh’s agricultural imports are from Canada.

As Bangladesh continues to develop, it offers more opportunity for Canadian companies wanting to tap the consumer market.

The Bangladeshi public is undergoing a historic transformation as wealth increases and buying power grows.

With this comes a consumer market of over 200 million in a country expected to transition from least-developed to middle income in the coming years. Canada needs to be a part of that.

Bangladesh is hitting the ground running with its greatest asset: its people. Bangladeshisare becoming better-educated and local curriculums are not infused with Cultural Revolution-style propaganda.

Bangladeshis have strong international connections through a diaspora that often returns home with international credentials to capiatlize on their booming homegrown economy.

Over 6,500 Bangladeshis study in Canada – a 150% increase over 2014, say government figures. Canada has a Bangladeshi community of over 100,000 that maintains strong links with their homeland.

And on the development front - Canada is a strong partner for Bangladesh’s outreach for the Rohingya refugee crisis.

For Canadians, Bangladesh carries none of China’s geopolitical risks.

Unlike China, Bangladesh has no territorial ambitions against its neighbours, nor does it carry out predatory intelligence-gathering operations in Canada.

Bilateral disputes between Canada and Bangladesh are ironed out through professional dialogue; not hostage diplomacy.

The Canadian government should do its part to discourage our companies from doing business in China, while encouraging closer links with Bangladesh.

George McLeod is a Canadian political analyst and managing partner at Access Asia – a regional risk consultancy. George has worked closely with Bangladesh since 2011 and appears in the BBC, Bloomberg, The New York Times and other global outlets.

 
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Well this is a Canadian's opinion. Mr. McLeod has been a friend to Bangladesh (which we appreciate) and we can of course say his opinion is a bit biased. :-)

I don't think Bangladesh is in a position to compete with (or worse, antagonize) China which is a manufacturing juggernaut. But I guess we are doing okay on apparel exports.

Chinese entrepreneurs can use Bangladesh to bypass the US trade tariffs recently imposed, and at excellent labor cost ratios. That is how we should see this.

Bangladesh is open for business to all. All major Asian countries have their own dedicated Export Zones in Bangladesh - mainly Korea (at least a couple that I know of) and Japan (three to date, Araihazar, Mirsarai and soon, Matarbari). Chinese are planning to have their own zone, probably within Mirsarai, which is 35,000 acres in size.
 
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Smart businessman. Make full use of the trend when people look for China alternatives.
 
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কোথায় তাল গাছ, আর কোথায় তিল গাছ। কোথায় চীন, আর কোথায় সোনার বাঙলা।

Canada should more worry about the repercussion of the Chinese Huawei company already dismissing 4500 Canadians from its payroll. The company is closed there. Canada will suffer from not getting Huawei's 5G technology, not anytime soon.

Other things will follow and Bd is not a country to substitute for the Canadian loss at the whims of America.

Rather, I hope the Canadian govt does not stop sending its regular donations to BD.
 
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There is no doubt that the West still has a dominant position in the real world and holds a lot of power, one of which is to hold the power of media discourse. Every country, whether it is the people or the official, the information they get is controlled by the West. Whether it is the media world, the academic world, the political world, the NGO world, it is all dominated by the West .

These journalists, academics, are warriors who help the West rule the world. I hope that journalists and scholars from developmental countries will learn from their Western counterparts and be able to speak for their own countries, instead of speaking for the West like a parrot.


This article has a lot of reporting skills, and it's worth learning to see how the article expresses ideas, and guides the audience. The West is really the undisputed king of the battle in the media. Provoke, divide, smear, divide, hate, these are areas where the Western media does a great job.



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Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, accompanied by Canada's Ambassador to China, Domenic Barton, are greeted on arrival by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau after being released from detention in China, in Calgary, Alberta, Canada September 25, 2021 Reuters
They returned to Canada. Why didn't they declare that they were not spies?
Because they are really spies and China has the evidence
:omghaha: :omghaha: :omghaha:
 
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There is no doubt that the West still has a dominant position in the real world and holds a lot of power, one of which is to hold the power of media discourse. Every country, whether it is the people or the official, the information they get is controlled by the West. Whether it is the media world, the academic world, the political world, the NGO world, it is all dominated by the West .

These journalists, academics, are warriors who help the West rule the world. I hope that journalists and scholars from developmental countries will learn from their Western counterparts and be able to speak for their own countries, instead of speaking for the West like a parrot.


This article has a lot of reporting skills, and it's worth learning to see how the article expresses ideas, and guides the audience. The West is really the undisputed king of the battle in the media. Provoke, divide, smear, divide, hate, these are areas where the Western media does a great job.



View attachment 781786




View attachment 781787

Canada was forced by idiot trump for all this. They were not real spy.
 
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কোথায় তাল গাছ, আর কোথায় তিল গাছ। কোথায় চীন, আর কোথায় সোনার বাঙলা।

Canada should more worry about the repercussion of the Chinese Huawei company already dismissing 4500 Canadians from its payroll. The company is closed there. Canada will suffer from not getting Huawei's 5G technology, not anytime soon.

Other things will follow and Bd is not a country to substitute for the Canadian loss at the whims of America.

Rather, I hope the Canadian govt does not stop sending its regular donations to BD.

Govt. of Canada provides more in remittances to Bangladesh compared to Aid. Some say five times more. Either way, Canada is a large development partner.


 
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Canada was forced by idiot trump for all this. They were not real spy.
exactly, Canada was forced by USA .

They were real spy . The two have pleaded guilty and the Chinese government has substantive evidence .

We can look at their Wikipedia, where it is written very clear, except that it does not directly state that it is a spy.

If an intelligence officer in the forum gives us an analysis of their Wikipedia entry, we'll be able to better understand what those descriptions in Wikipedia mean.


This curriculum vitae is obvious.


1633491182270.png
 
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