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Featured India and Pakistan are now poorer than Bangladesh

Bangladesh deserved credit for what it's done. Someone mentioned Sri Lanka. I have no doubt that if not for a 25 year old Civil War, the per capital income of Lanka would have made it a middle income country.
 
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South Asia Should Pay Attention to Its Standout Star

India and Pakistan have much to learn from their once-poorer neighbor Bangladesh.

By Mihir Sharma

May 31, 2021, 7:30 PM EDTCorrected May 31, 2021, 11:29 PM EDT


Bangladeshi women have been key to the country’s rise.

Bangladeshi women have been key to the country’s rise.

Photographer: Munir Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty Images

Half a century ago, in March 1971, Bangladesh’s founders declared their independence from richer and more powerful Pakistan. The country was born amid famine and war; millions fled to India or were killed by Pakistani soldiers. To the Pakistani military’s American backers, the new country seemed destined to fail: Henry Kissinger, then Secretary of State, famously called it a “basketcase.” George Harrison and Ravi Shankar organized the first-ever super-benefit to raise money for UNICEF relief work in the struggling country.

This month, Bangladesh’s Cabinet Secretary told reporters that GDP per capita had grown by 9% over the past year, rising to $2,227. Pakistan’s per capita income, meanwhile, is $1,543. In 1971, Pakistan was 70% richer than Bangladesh; today, Bangladesh is 45% richer than Pakistan. One Pakistani economist glumly pointed out that “it is in the realm of possibility that we could be seeking aid from Bangladesh in 2030.”

India — eternally confident about being the only South Asian economy that matters — now must grapple with the fact that it, too, is poorer than Bangladesh in per capita terms. India’s per capita income in 2020-21 was a mere $1,947.

Don’t hold your breath expecting India to acknowledge Bangladesh’s success: Right-wing figures in India are convinced Bangladesh is so destitute that illegal migrants from there are overrunning the border. In reality, Bangladesh is far richer than the depressed Indian states where Hindu nationalist politicians have been railing against Bangladeshi “termites.” It’s as if Mississippi were fretting about illegal immigration from Canada.

Perhaps that explains why Indian social media exploded with indignation and denial when the GDP numbers were announced. Meanwhile, Bangladeshi media have made little of the comparison. That’s the sort of self-confidence that comes from growing consistently.


Bangladesh’s growth rests on three pillars: exports, social progress and fiscal prudence. Between 2011 and 2019, Bangladesh’s exports grew at 8.6% every year, compared to the world average of 0.4%. The success is largely due to the country’s relentless focus on products, such as apparel, in which it possesses a comparative advantage.

Meanwhile, the share of Bangladeshi women in the labor force has consistently grown, unlike in India and Pakistan, where it has decreased. And Bangladesh has maintained a public debt-to-GDP ratio between 30% and 40%. India and Pakistan will both emerge from the pandemic with public debt close to 90% of GDP. Fiscal restraint has allowed Bangladesh’s private sector to borrow and invest.

Bangladesh’s success brings its own set of problems. For one, its exports benefit from the country’s participation in various mechanisms that allow tariff-free access to developed economies, such as the U.S.’s Generalized System of Preferences. These groupings are only open to the world’s least developed countries. Thanks to its growth, Bangladesh will likely have to give up these privileges by 2026 or so.

As its economy matures, its comparative advantages will also change. Like Vietnam and others, it will then have to shift emphasis away from garments to higher-value exports. The transition will test Bangladesh as it has those other nations.

The government needs a strategy for the next decade that focuses on new forms of global integration and on a continued transformation of the economy. The smartest thing to do would be to retain access to the developed world’s markets by signing free-trade agreements. Work has started on an FTA with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, according to Bangladeshi officials, but there’s a lot more to be done.

Once again, Bangladesh should benchmark itself against Vietnam, which is not only part of the China-centric Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership and the successor to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, but also signed an FTA with the European Union in 2019. Transforming the terms of Bangladesh’s trade won’t be easy, which is why the effort needs to start now. Dhaka will have to beef up its negotiating capacity in particular: It doesn’teven have a dedicated set of trade negotiators in its commerce ministry.

Nevertheless, the past 50 years have shown how unwise it is to bet against Bangladesh. In 1971, success seemed well beyond a long shot. Today, the country’s 160 million-plus people, packed into a fertile delta that’s more densely populated than the Vatican City, seem destined to be South Asia’s standout success.

(Correction in second paragraph to remove repetition of the word “Pakistan.”)

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story:
Mihir Sharma at msharma131@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Nisid Hajari at nhajari@bloomberg.net

Mihir Swarup Sharma is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is a senior fellow at the Observer Research Foundation in New Delhi and head of its Economy and Growth Programme. He is the author of "Restart: The Last Chance for the Indian Economy," and co-editor of "What the Economy Needs Now."

Read more opinionFollow @mihirssharma on Twitter


Whatever floats your boat mate. Deep down every Bangladeshi knows that they are a mere vassal state of India and nothing more.

At the global level, Bangladesh has as much importance as Chad or Paraguay. So while sitting on the kids table, you have every right to make yourself feel important.
 
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Unfortunately the thread starter has a habit of repeatedly posting this kind of news and while BD is doing ok it still has a good 10-15 years to go like this before it can consider itself to have been an economic success story.
Yes but that doesn't change the success of Bangladesh. It seems you guys are underestimating your own success(which isn't a bad thing actually since humility is good). Bangladesh gained independence after a brutal war of independence from Pakistan, back then Bangladesh was regarded as the POOREST COUNTRY IN SOUTH ASIA AND PROBABLY ONE OF THE POOREST/MOST BACKWARD COUNTRIES IN THE WHOLE OF ASIA IN GENERAL . it was so bad that even Henry Kissinger once joked that Bangladesh was a bottomless basket case. Lol I red that even many Pakistanis and Indians used to make fun of you Bengalis and looked down on you guys as a poor destitute pit. When even poor countries like India and Pakistan look down on a country you can only imagine how poor/bad it was for Bangladesh. Lol

So you have to understand how far the country has come and the very low starting point the country started from. This will help appreciate the efforts the country's leader have made to elevate the peoples living standards. Of course it hasn't been and it is not an easy journey, and there has obviously been some mistakes made and questionable policies taken by the leaders, political uncertainty at one point, social issues and instability faced with trying to keep the country away from Islamic extremists and their backward policies etc
However the Country has managed to forge along and handled all this in a relatively good way. So I will say Bangladesh has done quite well given its limited resources and geographical location. If you guys keep on this route/at this rate then in a decade or two from now Pakistanis and maybe even Indians will be asking what went wrong with them. Moreover Bangladesh is not a small country with small population like Sri Lanka/Bhutan/Maldives which makes it easier to manage and achieve high income/GDP pee capital for them. Bangladesh is one of the most populous countries on earth. 8th most populous country on earth if I'm not wrong. So this makes their achievements even more impressive . I admire this, and hope you guys continue on the same path, don't mind your detractors and others making fun of you guys(mostly out of jealousy as its often the case ). 😊😁
 
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And by this definition (of GDP per capita) Sri Lanka and Bhutan are the richest countries in south asia. :rofl:

Selected Countries and Economies
Country
Most Recent Year
Most Recent Value

South Asia
2019
1,956.6

South Asia
Country
Most Recent Year
Most Recent Value

Afghanistan
2019
507.1

Bangladesh
2019
1,855.7

Bhutan
2019
3,316.2


India
2019
2,099.6

Maldives
2019
10,626.5

Nepal
2019
1,071.1

Pakistan
2019
1,284.7

Sri Lanka
2019
3,853.1


https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.PCAP.CD?locations=8S
You forget that the countries you mentioned are small countries with the most populous of them being Sri Lanka with just about 22 million people. The others have an even smaller population of less than 3million. Lol So it makes things more convenient and easier for them in general to achieve such GDP per capital. Compared to a country with a huge population like Bangladesh with little to no natural resources sandwiched between India and who gained independence from you Pakistan just 50 years ago. In fact you guys often saw them (and still do from. what I heard) as a basket case even today. Its easy to have an early impression about someone when you first know them and their situation, but its not easy to erase that perception even after that person changes it takes a considerable amount of time and drastic overwhelming changes (usually the gap has to be so wide between you and that person so much so that you can't afford to overlook them anymore, but unfortunately it's usually to late) for one to start changing their perception of that person's earlier image. Case in point, some Indians still make fun of China even though both countries are not even in the same league anymore. Such is human psychology.
 
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Yes but that doesn't change the access of Bangladesh. It seems you guys are underestimating your own success(which isn't a bad thing actually since humility is good). Bangladesh gained independence after a brutal war of independence from Pakistan, back then Bengladesh was regarded as the POOREST COUNTRY IN SOUTH ASIA AND PROBABLY ONE OF THE POOREST/MKST BACKWARD COUNTRIES IN THE WHOLE OF ASIA IN GENERAL . it was so bad that even Henry Kissinger once joked that Bengladesh was a bottomless basket case. Lol I red that even many Pakistanis and Indians used to make fun of you Bengalis and looked down on you guys as a poor destitute pit. When even poor countries like India and Pakistan look down on a country you can only imagine how poor/bad it was for Bangladesh. Lol

So you have to understand how far the country has come and the very low starting point the country started from. This will help appreciate the efforts the country's leader have made to elevate the peoples living standards. Of course it hasn't been and it is not an easy journey, and there has obviously been some mistakes made and questionable policies taken by the leaders, political uncertainty at one point, social issues and instability faced with trying to keep the country away from islamic extremists and their backward policies etc
However the Countyry has managed to forge along and handled all this in a relatively good way. So I will say Bengladesh has done quite well given its limited resources and geographical location. If you guys keep on this route/at this rate then in a decade or two from now Pakistanis and maybe even Indians will be asking what went wrong with them. Moreover bengladesh is not a small country with small population like Sri Lanka/Bhutan/maldives which makes it easier to manage and achieve high income/GDP pee capital for them. Bangladesh is one of the most populous countries on earth. 8th most populous country on earth if I'm not wrong. So this makes their achievements even more impressive . I admire this, and hope you guys continue on the same path, don't mind your detractors and others making fun of you guys(mostly out of jealousy as its often the case ). 😊😁





Yes BD is doing better than India and Pakistan but no offence to either country that is nothing to brag about.

It needs to look at Vietnam and target that and while there are some good things happening on that front( finally lots of infrastructure and slow building of home-grown industries like home electronics, pharma, IT, shipbuilding etc) it is still nowhere near as successful in FDI.

Vietnam does have some specific advantages in FDI like closeness to China/East Asian economic region but BD simply must be more successful in attracting enough overseas investors to the 100 SEZs that it plans to build by 2030, and having mainly only domestic companies building factories there will not be enough.

Thanks for your kind words but BD is far from being able to pat itself on the back on the economic front and needs to keep carrying out reforms/investments to keep the 7%+ GDP growth show on the road over the next 10-15 years.
 
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is a shame for a country that spends hundreds of billions of dollars to import weapon systems from all over the world

Ok we are spending billion of dollars on weapons but what is making you fail ? We all know picture is not that rosy on other side of the border. Where we are standing today is just because of the pandemic. Country was/is in lockdown for 5-6 month during one and a half year and this is going to break down any economy.
 
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You forget that the countries you mentioned are small countries with the most populous of them being Sri Lanka with just about 22 million people. The others have an even smaller population of less than 3million. Lol So it makes things more convenient and easier for them in general to achieve such GDP per capital. Compared to a country with a huge population like bengladesh with little to no natural resources sandwiched between India and who gained independence from you Pakistan just 50 years ago. In fact you guys often saw them (and still do from.what I heard) as a basket case even today. Its easy to have an early impression about someone when you first know them and their situation, but its not easy to erase that perception even after that person changes it takes alot of time and drastic overwhelming changes (usually the gap has to be so wide between you and that person so much so that you can't afford to overlook them anymore) for one to start changing their perception of that person's earlier image. Case in point, soe Indians still make fun of China even though both countries are not even in the same league anymore. Such is human psychology.

What you have rightly pointed out is the connection between population and GDP Per capita definition and ideally countries with similar population should be compared not someone which is 6-7 times their population and roughly 10 times their GDP.

Bangladesh has done well, but in no way can it be compared with India or any major trillion dollar+ economies.
 
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Yes BD is doing better than India and Pakistan but no offence to either country that is nothing to brag about.

It needs to look at Vietnam and target that and while there are some good things happening on that front( finally lots of infrastructure and slow building of home-grown industries like home electronics, pharma, IT, shipbuilding etc) it is still nowhere near as successful in FDI.

Vietnam does have some specific advantages in FDI like closeness to China/East Asian economic region but BD simply must be more successful in attracting enough overseas investors to the 100 SEZs that it plans to build by 2030, and having mainly only domestic companies building factories there will not be enough.

Thanks for your kind words but BD is far from being able to pat itself on the back on the economic front and needs to keep carrying out reforms/investments to keep the 7%+ GDP growth show on the road over the next 10-15 years.

This is the right attitude to have. Being better than India or Pakistan is no goal to have. Also GDP itself should not be the only measure to focus on. Whats the point of all that money if it's in the hands of a few hundred people. It's important to focus on the quality of life of the poorest people. As that goes up, everything else will go up too.
 
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Bangladesh deserved credit for what it's done. Someone mentioned Sri Lanka. I have no doubt that if not for a 25 year old Civil War, the per capital income of Lanka would have made it a middle income country.
They’re considered a middle income country since 1997
 
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What you have rightly pointed out is the connection between population and GDP Per capita definition and ideally countries with similar population should be compared not someone which is 6-7 times their population and roughly 10 times their GDP.

Bangladesh has done well, but in no way can it be compared with India or any major trillion dollar+ economies.
Trillion dollar economy means shit if people have to use the beach for nature calls
 
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