Nilgiri
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if productivity increases spending is in itself an indication of growth.
(So, need to know BD's position regarding this)
Given BD does not sit on vast stockpiles of (persistent value) liquidity, almost all its (real) growth right now would/should be coming from productivity increase (at very little inflation). The fact that there is this much inflation this early on is very concerning....it means BD govt/elite have created supply side interventions/bottlenecks too early (in some very bad spots, for political dependency reasons probably)....instead of letting market forces operate freely (which is the most efficient way in the earliest stage of economic growth by far and in my opinion always the most efficient at any stage to differing degree)
or worry about whether they’ll still have work next month.
(So, need to know BD's position regarding this)
Honestly its too early to tell for the region at large. Unemployment is those willing/wanting to work that don't have any. It will technically be quite low in the region (given vast size of informal sector, although the productivity isnt that much and/or is largely unrecorded). The more critical issue is underemployment (i.e low productive work, even though its work)....which is not easy to make a number for (rather you just see it by per capita output, labour ratios and worker productivity etc provided you have good way of adequately measuring/estimating those)
From what I have seen in the world, you need to get to around 10,000+ USD per capita PPP for the statistical trends to clarify so that unemployment number starts to have more relevance compared to underemployment (which largely recedes after that given the base capacities, supply side inertia and liquidity pools generated). Further you away from that, the less relevant unemployment figure really is.
All the rest of the "need to know this" needs BD to improve its standards a lot to say SDDS or near level...i.e much more high frequency credible data released monthly etc. This is why India for example has many global banks/agencies like Fitch, S&P, DBS, Chase, Nomura etc release their predictions regarding GDP, inflation, jobs etc (and even then there is a long way to go to get reliable derived data like income and gini etc)....but Bangladesh only has its own internal govt agency and maybe IMF/WB doing so a cpl times a year. Bangladesh has to focus on reforming and improving its bureaucracy a huge amount first before we can answer many of these.
- Measures of well-being – surveys which measure overall living standards. e.g. ONS well-being index. (need to know BD's position regarding this)
- Human development index (HDI) – It is a composite index which includes real GDP per capita and also factors such as education, healthcare and environmental factors.
If you assume BD to be as true/credible as its peers in developing world, HDI is a good one (and if you don't, you just have to take that into account). MPI (multi poverty index) is another decent one. Food security index is pretty good too. The more composite they are, the better generally (as they don't rely on just 1 or 2 input streams...i.e the bias is hedged/reduced overall).
Bangladesh is doing ok overall, but can do much better on those and definitely needs to improve a lot on its internal survey credibility first and foremost (otherwise there will be lingering strong question on level of truth/fiction on various numbers).