Table of Contents
What happened?
- According to the IMF’s World Economic Outlook (WEO) report, India’s per capita GDP is likely to slump 10.3% to $1,877 — the lowest in four years.
- Bangladesh, on the other hand, is expected to see its per capita GDP in dollar terms to grow by 4% to $1,888.
- It may be noted that the GDP figure for both countries is at current prices.
- Not just Bangladesh but Bhutan, Maldives and Sri Lanka are also set to outpace India’s per capita GDP in 2020-21.
- The per capita GDP projection makes India the third-poorest in South Asia, just above Pakistan and Nepal who are set to report a lower per capita GDP.
- The Indian economy will be the hardest-hit from the coronavirus pandemic in South Asia,
- Sri Lanka’s per capita GDP is likely to contract 4% in 2020, as per the WEO database.
- Nepal and Bhutan comparatively are pegged to grow their economies this year, though IMF has not disclosed Pakistan’s data for 2020 and beyond.
Why this is a concern?
- What makes the projection worse is the fact that India was one of the top performers in terms of per capita GDP growth a few years ago.
- India’s per capita GDP, up until five years ago, was around 40% higher than Bangladesh’s.
- However, over the last five years, Bangladesh’s per capita GDP has increased at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.1%, compared to 3.2% growth recorded by India.
Bangladesh economic rise
- With the ongoing US-China trade war, apart from other global tensions,
- Bangladesh has over the years adapted to the changing landscape and has managed to grow its exports, leading to a rise in its per capita GDP growth.
Growing export
- Bangladesh shipped an estimated $45.7 billion worth of goods around the globe in 2019 – a 44% increase since 2015.
- With a population of 166.6 million people, its total $45.7 billion in 2019 exports translated to roughly $275 for every resident in the South Asian country.
- China is Bangladesh’s largest trading partner, with annual bilateral trade valued at approximately $15 billion.
- Trade with India is only slightly more than a third of that amount.
- In contrast, India’s exports have stagnated in recent years.
- India’s merchandise trade has been weakening even before the pandemic hit the economy and external demand.
- The country’s exports have been in negative territory Bangladesh is also witnessing rise in rate of savings and investment in the country.
- Bangladesh’s gross savings rate was recorded at 30.1% in June 2020, and 29.5% in June 2019, against a record low of 27.4% in June 2018. since June 2019.
- Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, both exports and imports started declining since March, leading to a trade surplus in June for the first time in 18 years.
Rise in savings & Investment
- Bangladesh is also witnessing rise in rate of savings and investment in the country.
- Bangladesh’s gross savings rate was recorded at 30.1% in June 2020, and 29.5% in June 2019, against a record low of 27.4% in June 2018.
- The sales of savings certificates in Bangladesh have risen by leaps and bounds.
- The flow of credit to the private sector is growing as well.
- Apart from imports, the pandemic does not seem to have had too much of a detrimental effect on Bangladesh’s economy.
- In India, savings rate touched a 15-year low as the slowing economy took a toll on that segment, weakening the country’s macro economic position.
- India’s gross savings fell to 30.1% of the GDP in fiscal 2019 from 34.6% in fiscal 2012, and 36% in 2007-08
India will again overtake next year
- IMF projected that India will again surpass Bangladesh in 2021 as its economy bounces back from the pandemic.
- For 2021, IMF’s projections for India and Bangladesh are $2030 and $1990, respectively.
- However, the good news is unlikely to last long for India, with Bangladesh projected to match India’s nominal per capita GDP in 2024 at $2540.
- In 2025, Bangladesh is forecast to surpass India again with nominal per capita GDP at $2760 against $2730 for India.
GDP PPP comparison
- In terms of purchasing power parity,
- India’s per capita GDP in 2020 is estimated by IMF at $6,284 compared with $5,139 for Bangladesh.
It’s not just about economy
- In the last decade, on a range of social development indicators, from infant mortality to immunisation, Bangladesh has fared better.
- India trails across several (not all) composite indices from the latest Global Hunger Index to the
- Gender Development Index.
- Even on the 2019 World Happiness Index,
- Bangladesh score better.
- While, technically, on the Human Development Index, Bangladesh scores marginally less,
- This is largely because the index merges income and non-income parameters.
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