Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Bangladesh moves up economic liberty index

Bangladesh has made significant strides in the Index of Economic Freedom world rankings, making its economy the 137th freest in the world.
In the ranking, the country’s overall score was 51.1, which is 3.6 points higher than that of the last year, according to the report jointly prepared by USA-based think tank Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal.
In the Asia-Pacific region Bangladesh has been ranked 29th out of 41 countries.
“The gains reflect Bangladesh’s improvements in trade freedom and investment freedom,” according to the report.
In the index, the country for the first time graduated itself from the ‘Repressed’ category to the category of ‘Mostly Unfree’ countries.
Praising the country’s performance in last five years, the report said, “Bangladesh has enjoyed impressive economic growth of around 6 percent per year over the past five years driven mainly by its limited but growing services and industrial sectors.”
It, however, said, “Structural and institutional weaknesses remain serious impediments to sustaining such high economic growth rates.”
It said Bangladesh’s economy remains overly dependent on agriculture, which accounts for almost 20 percent of GDP and employs more than half of the labour force.
It also said the heavily politicised weak regulatory regime of the country often tends to crowd out private investment while corruption, coupled with onerous bureaucracy, is still perceived as pervasive.
This year the ranking covered 183 countries measuring 10 components of economic freedom. Score in each category ranged from 0 to 100.
The components were business freedom, trade freedom, fiscal freedom, government spending, monetary freedom, investment freedom, financial freedom, property rights, freedom from corruption and labour freedom.
In the component business freedom Bangladesh scored 59.4 out of 100. The report said in Bangladesh it requires 44 days on average to start a business while the world average is 35 days. However, obtaining a business license requires less than the world average of 18 procedures.
Bangladesh’s score was 58 in trade freedom component. Import and export restrictions, numerous border taxes and fees, burdensome import licencing rules, export subsidies, government monopolies, inefficient and corrupt customs administration, among others, add to the cost of trade in the country, said the report.
Twenty points were deducted from Bangladesh’s trade freedom score to account for non-tariff barriers.
In the monetary freedom component where the country scored 66.6, a total of 15 points were deducted from this component to adjust for price-control measures that distort domestic prices for petroleum products, some pharmaceuticals, and goods produced in state-owned enterprises.
About the financial freedom the report said Bangladesh has made modest progress in recent years in its banking sector adding that the sector is underdeveloped and provides a limited range of banking services.
Bangladesh’s state-owned commercial banks, which account for more than 30 percent of total banking system assets, undermine the sector’s efficiency, it said. Bangladesh scored 20 in the financial freedom component.
In the global context Hong Kong, Singapore, and Australia are the top three scorers in the index while North Korea, Zimbabwe and Cuba were top from the bottom.
In South Asian context Bangladesh’s position was only above Maldives whose rank is 148th. Bhutan’s position was the 103rd, Pakistan’s 117th, Sri Lanka’s 120th, India’s 124th, and Nepal’s 130th.

Friday, July 15, 2011

BNP on mission caretaker govt

BNP is working to form a platform for political parties to resist the next parliamentary elections under the Awami League-led coalition government.
The main opposition has already contacted the parties that want a continuation of the caretaker government system.
BNP is also seeking to have in the opposition camp the ruling alliance leaders who feel either deprived or cornered in their parties.
Its Chairperson Khaleda Zia has approached some of these leaders and also a few pro-AL intellectuals.
A number of BNP leaders hinted that after the Eid the high command will communicate with the AL-led grand alliance components, which are in favour of the caretaker system.
AL sources said Khaleda has lately sent her aides to some ruling party leaders, urging them to either join her party or support the opposition's anti-government agitation. Her representatives have also communicated with some leaders of Jatiya Party, a component of the ruling alliance.
Some of the leaders have even been offered important positions in BNP, added the sources.
“I was approached, on her [Khaleda's] behalf, to join her party, but I outright rejected the offer,” an AL leader said, seeking anonymity.
“As far as I know, similar proposals have been made to some other leaders who belong to Awami League or are involved in secular politics,” the leader said without specifying when they had been approached.
Some senior leaders including acting secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir are in touch with those outside BNP-led four-party alliance.
The four-party components--Jamaat-e-Islami, Bangladesh Jatiya Party (BJP) and Islami Oikya Jote--are already rallying round BNP.
Fakhrul have also talked to a number of intellectuals including some economists over the last couple of months to win their favour.
“You first talk to the leaders of all other parties,” a BNP standing committee member quoted Khaleda as saying at a recent meeting at her Gulshan office. “Then, if necessary, I myself will have discussion with them.”
On the chairperson's instructions, Fakhrul on Tuesday night met Bikalpa Dhara Bangladesh President Prof AQM Badruddoza Chowdhury and also contacted Liberal Democratic Party President Oli Ahmad, who is now in Thailand.
Badruddoza expressed solidarity with BNP's hunger strike on Wednesday, while Oli has sent a delegation to the programme.
LDP presidium member Redwan Ahmed said they will be with BNP to force the government to reinstate the caretaker government system.
Both Badruddoza and Oli were founding members of BNP.
Also, 12 like-minded parties, mostly Islamist, have pledged support to the main opposition.
BNP insiders said its high-ups have also talked to Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal's ASM Abdur Rob and Krishak Sramik Janata League's Abdul Kader Siddiqui about a possible coalition.
Asked if BNP has contacted him, Siddiqui said there is no last word in politics. “We believe that a credible election is not possible without the caretaker government. So, discussions can be held on the issue.”
Talking to The Daily Star, Rob said, “We also want non-party caretaker system [to oversee the national polls]. Let's see where the situation leads us to.”
The Jatiya Sangsad on June 30 scrapped the caretaker government system, allowing general elections under elected government.
Meanwhile, a senior BNP leader said they are looking to organise an uprising similar to the Arab Spring to topple the government.
To intensify the anti-government movement, they will hold a mass rally in the capital towards the year-end.

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