The objective of the study is to explore environmental sustainability activities, review past policies, strategies & plans, asses Bangladesh’s stance with regard to MEAs, review the priorities outlined in the 6FYP, analyze progress towards the targeted benchmarks, review achievement/ failures of national sustainable development strategies, governance issues etc with a view to ensure inclusive and equitable economic growth and environment, forestry and biodiversity conservation.
Found 144 Results From
Seventh Year Plan – Climate Change and Disaster Management
The Government of Bangladesh has initiated the process of formulating its Seventh Five Year Plan for the period 2016-2020. A total of 28 background papers, mostly sector-specific, have been identified – each of which will be completed as inputs towards formulating the Plan. The GOB recognizes that the country is highly prone to a variety of hazards and her disaster risk reduction needs are amongst the highest in the world. Moreover, the country and its poor people are most likely to be severely affected by global climate change, which in turn will exacerbate hazard related adverse impacts. As per GOB decision, a paper on climate change and disaster risk reduction is perceived to provide insight into the GOB’s current state of preparation, delivery of services, gaps between needs and services being provided, and future directions to avoid major adverse implications of both climate change and disaster risk reduction.
Background paper for Seventh Year Plan – Strategy for Infrastructure Sector
The World Economic Forum regularly updates countries position on competitiveness based on 12 pillars. Infrastructure (transport and energy infrastructure) is a key pillar for economies like Bangladesh. Comparison of infrastructure among developing Asian countries shows that despite progress Bangladesh is still substantially deficient in terms of the quality of infrastructure in regards to all the countries shown in Table 1 except Myanmar. The gap in infrastructure quality is especially large when compared with Thailand, China, India and Sri Lanka. So Bangladesh needs to bring more focus to the efficient implementation of infrastructure investments along with necessary institutional changes relating to implementation, regulation, and policy formulation.
Seventh Year Plan – Financial Market Developments & Challenges-in-Bangladesh
The financial sector is a vital part of an economy because of the role it plays in intermediating savings of the private and public sector to productive activities including investment. Bangladesh financial system is dominated by the banking sector, which fundamentally depends on short- and medium-term deposits for financing their lending portfolios. This limits availability of funds that would be required for long-term investments like infrastructure and housing. Bangladesh has a capital market, with its known difficulties, and there is no vibrant secondary market for bonds, which limits the availability of resources for infrastructure financing. This paper starts with a general overview of the current structure of the financial system in Bangladesh in terms of the 4 key markets—money market comprising banks, microfinance institutions and nonbank financial institutions, stock market, bond market and insurance market--and their sizes, relationships between the various markets and the associated regulatory bodies assigned to govern the different market segments.
Seventh Year Plan – Fiscal Management and Revenue Mobilization
Bangladesh despite being a least developed economy has had a relatively strong track record of prudent fiscal management and has made some progress in revenue mobilization efforts in the last decade. Good fiscal management in terms of keeping the fiscal deficit and public debt at sustainable levels, despite limited public sector resource mobilization, has served as the anchor to Bangladesh’s continued macroeconomic stability. The good fiscal management notwithstanding, public sector service delivery in terms of coverage and quality were seriously constrained by the limited success in resource mobilization.
Seventh Year Plan – Strategy for Export Diversification
Leveraging the global demand for commodities as well as services through export-oriented development should then be a strategic goal for the Bangladesh economy in its quest to achieve middle income status by 2021. Bangladesh’s export performance so far presents signs of strength as well as weakness in its export basket. Export concentration has emerged as a formidable challenge to address and overcome.
Seventh Plan Strategy for Mobilizing Foreign Resources
Since independence Bangladesh has been experiencing a steady increase in the growth rate of real GDP, accelerating from an average of less than 4% per year during 1974-1990 to 6.4% in 2010-13 . This is a remarkable performance, even after allowing for the low initial base. Importantly, this performance is still below true potential, which gives hope that with a stronger performance Bangladesh can expect to attain middle income status by the year 2021 as envisioned in the Government’s Vision 2021 and the 20 year Perspective Plan (Government of Bangladesh, 2011a).
Seventh Year Plan – Background Paper On Tourism Sector
The tourism industry has emerged as a major income-driving industry in many developing/middle-income countries in the world. There is a plethora of literature and studies that show the positive a thriving tourism sector can have positive impact on economic growth and development of countries. Bangladesh is blessed with natural beauty, ranging from mountains to rivers to beaches to bio-diversity. It boasts the longest natural beach in the world in Cox’s Bazaar as well as the largest mangrove forest in the world at the Sundarbans.
Seventh Year Plan – Improving Land Administration and Management in Bangladesh
For efficient and appropriate land management system, maintenance of updated land ROR is very important. To address the inefficiencies involved, it is important to integrate all ownership information and allow all related agencies to share the same up-to-date information. To improve the land administration and management system, there are various solutions as suggested by stakeholders. While some of the solutions appear to be long-term by nature, some are short term. It is not possible to change the current administrative structure overnight to solve all the problems considering various difficulties involved with it. Rather, an IT solution can be sought to integrate the system and allow easy and quick fix of problems.
Seventh Year Plan Strategy for-Education and Training
Education has multiple effects—both economic and non-economic. The well-known noneconomic effects relate to health, nutrition, and social cohesion. Better educated population has lower child poverty, lower child and maternal under-nutrition, higher female agency and empowerment. The present paper is about economic effects of education. Encouraging upward economic mobility through deliberate accumulation of educational human capital often spanned over inter-generational frame of reference--while ensuring quality education for all--is one sure time-tested way of fighting the “injustice of poverty” (Galor and Zeira 1993; Sobhan 2011).
Seventh Year Plan – Strategy for Development of SME Sector in Bangladesh
The paper is structured in the following manner. After the introductory remarks in Section I, Section II reviews the status of the overall non-farm sector in Bangladesh based on the Economic Census 2013. Section III discusses current situation of manufacturing SME in Bangladesh based on the Survey of Manufacturing Industry (SMI) 2012.
Seventh Year Plan – Improving Access of the Poor to Financial Services
In Bangladesh, financial services are provided by a variety of financial intermediaries that are part of the country’s financial system. There are three broad types of providers of financial services—formal, quasi-formal and informal, the distinction is based primarily on whether there is a legal infrastructure that provides recourse to lenders and protection to depositors. Although the formal financial services are provided by financial institutions licensed by the government and subject to banking regulations and supervision, quasi-formal financial services are not regulated by the banking authorities. These institutions are usually licensed and supervised by other government agencies. On the other hand, informal financial services are provided by individuals and institutions outside the structure of government regulation and supervision.
SEVENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN FY2016 – FY2020
The 7th FYP has been formulated with full recognition that the 'outlier' phenomenon is not merely a blip on the development path but rather a sustainable occurrence chartering a new development trajectory. Lauded as a 'Development Surprise' by prominent international media, Bangladesh has emerged as a shining example for countries throughout the world as it continues to defy traditional, linear development models and innovate a novel, alternative pathway for socioeconomic progress.
Mid-Term Implementation Review of the Sixth Five Year Plan (2011-15) of Bangladesh
For the first time in the history of economic planning in Bangladesh, the Sixth Five Year Plan introduced the concept of results-based monitoring and evaluation (RBME). This was done to be consistent with the spirit of indicative planning whereby the Sixth Plan was conceived as a living document that would be monitored for results, and changed and adapted in light of these outcomes and changing global and domestic economic environment.
First Implementation Review of the Sixth Five Year Plan
The Sixth Five Year Plan (2011-2015) seeks to accelerate growth and reduce poverty. With the completion of the second year of the Plan, the Government believes it is important to evaluate the implementation progress with a view to understanding how well the Plan is being implemented, what policies are working, what are the emerging constraints, and what needs to be done to make mid-course corrections.
SIXTH FIVE YEAR PLAN – FY2011-FY2015
Over the past 40 y¬ears since independence, Bangladesh has increased its real per capita income by more than 130 percent, cut poverty by more than half, and is well set to achieve most of the Millennium Development Goals. Bangladesh’s development experience is particularly remarkable in that it stands out as a positive example of a resilient young nation that has fought many natural and global disasters as well as internal political debacles and yet stayed firm on the development path. Notwithstanding many external and internal shocks, per capita income has risen continuously and steady progress has been made in lowering poverty. This positive development experience provides the basis for optimism, notwithstanding the many remaining policy and institutional constraints and the global uncertainties, that Bangladesh will continue to make inroads in improving the living standards of its citizens.
Fifth Five Year Plan
The Fifth Five Year Plan (1997-2002) has been formulated with a vision as a guide. The dream of the Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman of Sonar Bangla from where poverty and deprivation will be banished forever has served as a beacon to the plan formulators. For too long this dream has remained unrealised. Adverse international situation affected our efforts to take a place of pride in the comity of nations. The brutal assassination of the Father of the Nation in 1975 took the nation away from the charted course of attaining prosperity in freedom. Our steps faltered. We continued along the trend lines. We did not yield ratchet effects through conscious, dispassionate and determined endeavour.