South Asia Should Pay Attention to Its Standout Star

Isa Khan

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

By Mihir Sharma

June 1, 2021, 5:30 AM GMT+6 Corrected June 1, 2021, 9:29 AM GMT+6

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’t even 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.”)

 

Raptor

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BD would surpass India permanently by 2025 man!
 

KKF 2.0

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Like the article mentioned before, it's interesting to see that Indians can't swallow the fact that BD has surpassed them and this is not going to change anytime soon. In fact, most of the Western scientists believe that BD will slowly overtake India in almost all of the indices available. This is not surprising at all given India's and Pakistan's social and demographic heterogeneity.
 

Nilgiri

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Typical media rent-a-con-omists like Mihir Sharma are attuned to wokism and the polarised-gotcha cherrypicking associated with that....knowing large audiences/mobs snap that all up with no actual understanding. It is nothing new from their end.

In the end, the real question should be why does Bangladesh Taka's exchange rate not track its inflation, something I've mentioned before:


i.e why does Bangladesh drop from 1855 to less than 1300 when constant dollars used....whereas India's constant dollar is about the same (2100 in both cases)........ i.e why does INR track with its inflation a lot better, and what does this mean w.r.t the utility of "current dollar" among developing countries with varying standards and integrations with world economy.

One must look at the structure+reliance of the respective foreign exchange earnings (that dictate exchange rate) for some initial answers.

This all ends up showing in both constant dollar discrepancy and measures like PPP (which is non surprisingly the one used by the UN for development indices like HDI).

It is all evidenced in the end when you actually look at any physical consumption parameter of relevance (Energy, electricity, transport, base inputs, standard consumer goods etc etc)

Moreover, Bangladesh Taka not tracking (w.r.t USD) its internal inflation is actually systematically hurting its foreign investment (past the existing issues present).

When it comes to FDI, India receives in ball park of 60+ billion in recent years. Whereas BD struggles to get past 2 billion a year (it would get more if BDT tracked its inflation).

It's market cap is around 3 trillion USD dollars (BD around 50 billion). It gets about 7000 international patent grants per year recently (BD less than 10).

The model in foreign sector has simply evolved differently from one reliant on RMG quota and remittance dependency.

It is the underlying reason why current and (more important) constant dollar per capita are roughly the same for India.

Would India hypothetically throw that away to have a better current dollar conversion by the same artificial "bump" in BDT:USD (i.e to get from 2000 to say 3000 dollar per capita number). I don't think so.
 
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