December 23, 2024, 6:37 am

Bangladesh economy should be more open to escape middle-income trap: WB chief economist

  • Update Time : Saturday, December 7, 2024
  • 20 Time View


TDS Desk



Bangladesh should be a much more open economy to escape the middle-income trap, said Indermit S Gill, chief economist of the World Bank Group, on December 7.

He made the remarks while addressing the Annual BIDS Conference on Development (ABCD) 2024, organised by the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS), in Dhaka on Saturday morning.

Gill said that today six billion people in middle-income countries are in a race against time. “The external environment is making things harder, not easier. To escape the middle-income trap, countries need to undergo two transitions, not one.

“The transitions are between investment, infusion, and innovation. To grow quickly through middle income, they have to discipline incumbents, reward merit, and capitalise on crises.”

“You have to have an open economy when you are shifting from an investment-led phase to infusion-led phase. Here, Bangladesh should be much more open regardless of what others are doing.

“It should not be choosing between the US and China, manufacturing and services, or international and domestic policy reform for example,” he stressed.

Gill said, “There are many more middle-income economies, but they are different from their natural resources and ties with various countries. We have seen that the inequality has gone up slightly, however, it is not too bad if socio-economic mobility is going up too.”

“Again, if socio-economic mobility is going down, then it doesn’t matter if the inequality is going up or down,” he added.

The economist continued, “In the energy sector, Bangladesh is only looking into where the energy comes from, which means from the renewable sector or fossil fuel. This is a completely wrong approach.

“We have to look at how efficient Bangladesh is converting energy into output. If it is not efficient, it means the amount of carbon emission against per capita output is too high.”

The event was also attended by Planning and Education Adviser Wahiduddin Mahmud. During the opening remarks, BIDS Director General Binayak Sen introduced the theme of ABCD 2024 – “Interconnectedness: Equality, Opportunity, Freedom and Dignity”.

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