The
New Nation
Tribune's
tribute for Bangladesh
By BDNEWS, Dhaka
May 7, 2005
Bangladesh
has made much more progress than its neighbours over the past 10 years becoming
self-sufficient in food and overtaken India on several social indicators.
"...effective
use of the billions earned overseas - now requires more effective governance and
a freer rein for the private sector. The economy has become much more integrated
with the world over the past decade but needs to move further to attract investment
and exploit its only abundant resource - labor," according to a report by
International Herald Tribune.
The report by Philip Bowring titled "The
puzzle of Bangladesh" published May 7 raised the issue whether Bangladesh
can combine social progress with a higher level of economic growth while combating
the problems of rapid urbanization and pollution in an already overcrowded land.
"India
and Sri Lanka both suggest that in South Asia, social and economic progress do
not always go hand in hand. Will Bangladesh continue as a paradox, or can it combine
enterprise and a homogenous population to overcome natural adversity and set its
sights on a standard of life akin to its neighbors in Southeast Asia?" questioned
IHT.
The
report said despite Bangladesh lacks natural resources and good governance and
is beset by natural calamities, corruption and self-destructive political infighting,
its gross national product persistently maintains a growth rate of 5 percent,
well above average for developing countries, it has overtaken India on several
social indicators. Its aid dependence has fallen from 6 percent to 1.8 percent
of gross domestic product.
"The
answer to the puzzle seems to lie in the triumph of individual and local group
initiative over both the elements and institutional failings. The frustration
for many Bangladeshis is that their nation could be doing so much better,"
it said.
Bangladesh's
attractions for foreign investors - low labour costs and stable fiscal and macro-economic
policies - are countered by politically motivated strikes that paralyze the urban
economy, vested trade union interests that choke its main port, inefficient textile
business interests that impede its dynamic garment industry, and corrupt politicians
and officials who hold up infrastructure development, the report said.
Last
summer, the worst floods in decades put more than half the country under water.
But no one died, relief was effective, farmers adjusted and the economy still
grew at nearly 5 percent, Philip Bowring said in his report.
"And
this year, according to many a foreign forecast, Bangladesh's garment industry,
which employs hundreds of thousands, was supposed to have been devastated by the
end of textile quotas and China's export juggernaut," it said adding, "It
is too early to make a final judgment, but so far at least the local industry
appears to have maintained its share of the global market, albeit with lower profits."
Though
Bangladesh is still a desperately poor, overpopulated country, where 50 percent
of children are underweight, it said India is no better on that score. "There
are doubts about how much longer the farmers can continue to get additional output
from their tiny plots of land of 3 percent a year. But do not be surprised if
they do."
Social
progress has been even more marked. Though educational standards may be poor,
but primary school enrollment is on a par with India, and completions even higher.
"Gender
equality in education is even more striking: There are now more girls than boys
at secondary level. Gender equality also seems reflected in the fall in the fertility
rate, which has halved from 6.0 to 3.0 in two decades - the steepest fall almost
anywhere other than China. It is now below India's and far below Pakistan's,"
it said.
IHT
report commented that the lower birth rate is linked to a steep fall in child
mortality, and to the enhanced economic role of women as small-scale village entrepreneurs
and as garment workers. "The conservative religious reaction to the advance
of women seems unlikely to succeed in the face of educational and employment progress."
Economic
advance has been underpinned by the individual initiative of hundreds of thousands
of Bangladeshis working overseas. Their remittances exceed the net earnings of
the garment industry, amounting to more than $3.5 billion a year, mostly from
Britain, the United States and the Middle East.
The
military earns another $2 billion from UN peacekeeping missions. Bangladesh is
likely to remain an exporter of people for years to come.