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Monday, December 22, 2008

[ALOCHONA] change


We've been talking about the same problems for years. Nothing has ever been done to solve these problems.

For the past few years, we've been facing economic difficulties, price hikes, corruptions, poverty, unemployment and load shedding. It's hard now to pay for our food and medical, which are our basic needs. Education is a business now. Unemployment, poverty and load shedding are part of our everyday life.

We need a change from this never-ending situation. A Real Change! That is why everybody is looking closely at the upcoming parliamentary election. For this is not an ordinary time, neither it is an ordinary election.

We have heard a great deal about change. Change to what? To me, change is fixing economic difficulties, price hikes, corruptions, unemployment, load-shedding and poverty reduction. Change is to fix our medical facilities and educational system, instead of just talking about it. Change is to bring everybody together: Awami League (AL), BNP and Jatiyo Party. This time 'change' has to be more than just a slogan.

Let me introduce Barrister Sheikh Fazle Noor Taposh. He is educated in Law and is a practicing Barrister at the Supreme CourtB SINCE 1999. He is fighting for a change and working to rebuild Dhanmondi-Hajaribugh-New Market area which is torn apart by conventional politics.

For a long time Barrister Sheikh Taposh has walked all over these areas. He has met all walks of people; ordinary people like you and I, who are looking for a real and lasting 'change' which will make a difference in our lives.

Barrister Sheikh Taposh recognizes the importance of moving forward to a politics of change. It is absolutely inspiring to see some one like Barrister Sheikh Taposh to come to politics, to take responsibility, to make people's life better.

In our constituency, Barrister Sheikh Taposh will work with us together to solve the problems that affect the lives of everyday people.

Let me now introduce myself. I am Samina Sharmin, a 26yrs old residence of Dhanmondi. My family has an all-BNP background. I am also a big time BNP supporter. But not this time, this time I am voting for Barrister Sheikh Taposh for a "change" and a meaning to my vote.

 

The Voters of Dhaka-12 constituency: The Time for Change Has Come.

Barrister Sheikh Taposh understands people through his family affiliation with politics for three generation. Nobody is perfect. But I can tell you, Barrister Sheikh Taposh will listen to you. He will always be honest with you about the challenges we face. And most importantly, he will open the door of his office and ask you to join with him to work together for the betterment of this constituency.

 

We have few weeks left for the election. If you knock on some doors for Barrister Sheikh Taposh, if you talk with people in the streets, and buses for Barrister Sheikh Taposh, if you make some phone calls and sms for him, if you stand with him and cast your ballot for him, then I can assure you we will win more than just Dhaka-12.

 

A philosopher once remarked, "one voice can change a home." I would say, if one voice can change a home, then it can change a constituency. If it can change a constitutuency, then it can change an entire nation, our Bangladesh. Your vote can change Bangladesh.

 

Thanking You.

Samina Sharmin

 

 

 


From: mahathir of bd <wouldbemahathirofbd@yahoo.com>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com; chottala@yahoogroups.com; dahuk@yahoogroups.com; khabor@yahoogroups.com; notun_bangladesh@yahoogroups.com; sonarbangladesh@yahoogroups.com; vinnomot@yahoogroups.com; tritiomatra@yahoogroups.com; Amra Bangladesi <amra-bangladesi@yahoogroups.com>; reform-bd@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, December 20, 2008 9:46:17 AM
Subject: [ALOCHONA] www.votebnp.net



BNP has launched an web site for election campaign.Have a look of it if you want 
www.votebnp. net
 


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[ALOCHONA] Bangladesh makes remarkable achievement in girls education

Bangladesh makes remarkable achievement in girls education
 
    by Wang Xuemei
    DHAKA, Dec. 22 (Xinhua) --
 
Bangladesh has made remarkable achievement in increasing girls enrollment in primary level since early 1990s with the ratio of girls and boys at schools standing at 1:1 currently, a senior official said.
    Secretary of Ministry of Primary and Mass Education M Musharraf Hossain Bhuiyan told Xinhua recently in an exclusive interview that "The Bangladesh government has made tremendous efforts in getting more girls to schools and successfully achieved gender parity."
    Now the net enrollment rate at the primary level in the country is 91.1 percent, of which male is 87.8 percent and female is 94.7 percent, while percentage of girls at schools is 50.7 among total 16.3 million students, he said.
    Musharraf said, various measures have been taken to increase girls enrollment since the Compulsory Primary Education Program, covering grade 1-5, was implemented all over the country in 1993 after the Compulsory Primary Education Act was passed in 1990.
    Under the program, tuition and textbooks are free of cost for all the students. The government also gives stipend to poor schoolchildren including both girls and boys. However, for grade 6-10 only girls are given stipend as the dropout rate of girls is much higher after grade 5.
    There are also provisions for certain schools to attain gender parity.
    According to the Primary and Mass Education Ministry, the total number of the primary-level educational institutions in the country is about 81,000, among which 46.2 percent are government schools, 24.7 percent are Registered Non-Government Primary School(RNGPS) and 19 percent are religion schools.
    For private-initiated RNGPS, the government extends 85-95 percent salary support to the teachers there. However, they must attain the gender parity with number of girl students accounting for 50 percent.
    Besides, to eliminate gender disparity and ensure wide participation of women in development activities, 60 percent of new teachers post have been reserved for female teachers. As a result, the percentage of female teachers in the government primary schools has already reached 50.2 percent.
    Massive social mobilization programs, including some initiated by teachers' associations, have been undertaken to encourage guardians to send the girl child to schools.
    Meanwhile, when enrolling the student, the names of both the mother and the father are registered. For payment of stipend money to the students, the bank account has to be opened in the mother's name.
    "These steps have contributed to the increase of the girl enrollment and the attainment of gender parity," Musharraf said.
    "Girls' education has very positive impacts. For example, an increase in the education of girls decreases the rate of early marriage," he said.
 

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[mukto-mona] Re: (SPN) Toronto Star recommends me for a seat in the Senate!

Dear All,
 
I am genuinely happy to read this news. Tarek is doing great in Canada. I hope it materialises. But, as I relocate in my memory Tarek Fateh of the 1960s -70s and the vibrant NSF of those years, I start wondering how different our own Senate of Pakistan would have looked, had men with strong commitments such as Tarek been among us and in our own Senate, instead of the bunch of political castaways from direct elections to the National Assembly finding alternate accommodation in our Senate! 
 
B.M.Kutty  

--- On Mon, 12/22/08, Tarek Fatah <tarekfatah@rogers.com> wrote:
From: Tarek Fatah <tarekfatah@rogers.com>
Subject: (SPN) Toronto Star recommends me for a seat in the Senate!
To: "Socialist Pakistan" <socialist_pakistan_news@yahoogroups.com>, "CMKP" <cmkp_pk@yahoogroups.com>, mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com
Date: Monday, December 22, 2008, 6:00 PM

Good people,

When I saw my scowling face on the front page of the Toronto Star this morning, I crossed my fingers, thinking, what have I done now.

To my astonishment, I read that the Toronto Star has recommended that Prime Minister Harper appoint me to one of the vacant seats in the Canadian Senate.

Here is the Toronto Star's reason why I qualify to be a Senator:

Tarek Fatah: A prominent spokesperson for secular and progressive Muslim issues who would bring a much-needed unique perspective to the Senate. A Toronto resident, he is the host of a weekly cable TV show, The Muslim Chronicle, and has written extensively for Canadian newspapers and magazines. He founded the Muslim Canadian Congress in 2001, a moderate group that has advocated for separation of religion and state.
More at: http://www.thestar. com/article/ 557229


BTW, I am in good company. Others nominated by the Toronto Star include, Celine Dion, General Rick Hillier, Maude Barlow, David Suzuki and Bruce Cockburn.

Tarek

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[mukto-mona] Whither China?

China's Year of Living Precariously by Mark O'Neill   22 Dec 08 (http://asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1622&Itemid=171)

 

An extraordinary domestic study lists concerns about rents in the social fabric

See also:
The Ghost of Christmas Future

In Dongguan, an export center close to Hong Kong, the police last week reported a record rise in the crime rate – 5,300 cases in the first 15 days of December – and issued a handbook for residents to protect themselves from violence, street robberies and break-ins.

The warning came during the same week that President Hu Jintao gathered China's elite into the Great Hall of the People to celebrate three decades of economic change that gave China the world's fastest growth rate and saw it turn from a starving country on the edge of bankruptcy into the world's fourth largest economy.

It is thus more than true that there are in reality two Chinas and a government in a race to see which one will prevail. The global economic crisis has cast a heavy shadow over China's success story, with Dongguan and the rest of Guangdong Province, China's richest, providing dramatic counterpoint to the feverish efforts by China's leaders to contain the damage.

In November, the government announced a huge Rmb4 trillion stimulus plan to attempt to ameliorate the slowdown, and that has been followed up by plans by provincial governments to add as much as another Rmb10 trillion in spending. Hardly a day goes by without another announcement of a major stimulus. Last week was typical.

On Monday, for instance, the stock market reacted to news that the agriculture sector would be the recipient of major investments, making rural areas and residents a top priority in 2009. On Tuesday, the government announced a substantial boost in spending for the power grid and construction of nuclear plants. On Wednesday, it announced import and export tariffs would be adjusted for machinery and electronics.

On Thursday, it announced the launch of yet another stimulus plan to boost real estate starting Jan. 1. On Friday, the State Council announced it would cut the fuel consumption tax.

There are questions if it will work. In a remarkably frank study published last week called "Analysis and Predictions of Chinese society in 2009." the China Academy of Social Sciences set out the three big risks for the year ahead:

Unemployment could go as high as 9.4 per cent because of the factory closures caused by the financial crisis, the Sichuan earthquake and other natural disasters and polluting firms shut by tighter environmental laws.

The lack of affordable housing has urban residents angrier than any other issue: 47 per cent of people surveyed said that they lived in bad housing and could not afford their own home. "The housing conditions of low-income people in large and medium cities is far behind those of other groups of the population," the study said. That is being exacerbated by a collapsing housing bubble that may be almost as big as America's. Property prices, down from their peaks, still have as much as 20-30 percent to fall before 70 percent of the population can afford to buy Both the central and provincial governments have announced measures, including cuts to transaction costs easier mortgage terms, especially for first-time buyers, and extended payment schedules for developers' land premium installments, all to no avail.

The increasing gap between rich and poor, officials and common people is cause for increasing outrage. "These two conflicts are the most likely fuses for social conflict," the survey. 68.8 per cent of those surveyed said that, during the last 10 years, officials had gained too many benefits, while workers, farmers and migrant workers had gained too little: 36.3 per cent said these conflicts would intensify in future.

Corruption remains a major source of discontent, with 39 per cent telling the researchers they were unsatisfied with the government's attempts to deal with it. The study said it was no longer enough to rely on campaigns and individual leaders to fight corruption and that a new system was needed in 2009.

Many people in senior positions are corrupt," said Lin Qi, a Beijing consultant. "The wife of Wen Jiabao, a geologist, is the chief valuer of jewellery in China."

Formerly the vice-president of the Chinese Jewellery Association, Wen's wife, Zhang Peili is president and chief executive of Beijing Diamond Jewellery Co, which has operations in the mainland and Hong Kong.

"In China, corruption is part of political struggle," said Lin. "If you have strong patrons, you are safe. But, if you lose in the struggle, then you may be arrested."

The public is also angry that children of leaders occupy senior posts in large state firms, especially in finance and military-related industries. They see the Communist Party as a giant conglomerate, with dense personal networks that divide the spoils of economic success. Without entree into these networks, there is no chance of wealth or promotion.

On the streets, the government is now facing the consequences of all these contradictions.
It has been reported widely that in the first nine months of this year, more than 7,000
Guangdong companies closed or moved elsewhere, leaving behind unpaid bills and wages. Workers have taken to the streets to demand what is owed to them.

Last Friday police locked 300 workers inside the Jianrong Suitcase factory in Dongguan, to prevent them holding a public demonstration about unpaid wages. In Dongguan, as in other cities, tens of thousands of migrant workers have lost their jobs but do not wish to return to a life of poverty in their home villages. Many have taken to crime.

The city's police said that a popular tactic is to rob people as they leave banks or withdrew money from ATMs and escape on a motorcycle ridden by an accomplice. Pickpockets are active on the city's buses, especially when a traveler is dozing or uses his mobile telephone. Visitors from Hong Kong, with wallets containing cash, credit cards and passports, are a major target.

In the handbook, the police advise people to lock the windows of their cars, carry their valuables inside their clothes, to not use mobile phones on buses and not ride in unlicensed taxis.

In his speech last Thursday, Hu stressed social stability: "without stability, nothing could be done. Even achievements already made could be lost."

One threat to the government is social disorder in the form of strikes, demonstrations and attacks on police and government buildings. But so far there is no sign of a Polish-style Solidarity that would co-ordinate the protests and give them a political focus.

A second threat to Hu and his government is from those within the party who accuse him of betraying Socialism and promoting social inequality, corruption and privileges to foreigners. Where are the ideals of the revolution for which millions died?

A third threat is from 300 intellectuals who issued Charter 08 on December 10 to coincide with the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, calling for political reform, the separation of parliamentary, executive and legal powers, and freedom of expression and association.

It is a particularly scathing document. In part it reads: "By departing from these values, the Chinese government's approach to 'modernization' has proven disastrous. It has stripped people of their rights, destroyed their dignity, and corrupted normal human intercourse. So we ask: Where is China headed in the twenty-first century? Will it continue with 'modernization' under authoritarian rule, or will it embrace universal human values, join the mainstream of civilized nations, and build a democratic system? There can be no avoiding these questions.

The government promptly responded by arresting the two main organizers of the charter. Its nightmare is the Polish and Czechoslovak scenarios, where workers and intellectuals united, with the support of the US and Western Europe, to overthrow the party, exploiting popular discontent over many of the same issues that fester today in China. It nearly happened in the spring of 1989. The party is busy preparing to prevent a repetition 20 years later, and thus the feverish economic changes now being pushed forward. The US$2 trillion in reserves that China has in its vaults give Beijing an advantage that neither Poland nor Czechoslovakia had available to them.

>>

The Ghost of Christmas Future By Our Correspondent 17 Dec 08 (http://asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1616&Itemid=590)

The first quarter of 2009 is going to look frightening to Asia's exporters

In the
United States they used to say that no retailer ever goes bankrupt before Christmas.  The consumers flooding into the stores during the holiday season provided even sagging shopkeepers with a last dose of income and hope. The closing days of 2008 appear to be putting an end to such dreams, and not just for Detroit's distressed automakers.

The retail blight in the US is likely to spell big trouble across the Pacific for the thousands of factories that supply consumer goods to the west.  The upshot could be a hard landing for China, despite official projections of 8-9 percent gross domestic product growth.

As many as 6,500 retail shops are estimated to be closed for good in the US by the end of the year. US consumers habitually slow their spending to a minimum for the entire first quarter of the year. Many retailers who claw their way through a slow Christmas season will now be closing in greater numbers, synapsing their way up and down the food chain — to advertising agencies, newspapers and magazines, shopping mall owners and factories in Asia that supply them with gadgets, gizmos and finery. 

The United States, Europe and Japan – all three of which are descending into recession – account for at least 56 percent of China's exports, which went negative month-on-month in November for the first time in seven years. Although exports to emerging markets grew by 20 percent in the first 10 months of 2008, these economies are also slipping. China's imports from other Asian countries are intermediate goods used as imports for export processing, meaning they will have little impact on the regional economies. China can be expected to face an export collapse in the first quarter of 2009, perhaps by as much as 19 percent to 20 percent from the cyclical high and a fall of perhaps 3 percent year on year for 2009, according to an estimate by Qu Hongbin, China chief economist for global banking for HSBC.

China's exporters are already in trouble, particularly in the export-driven Pearl River Delta. For more than a year, squeezed by rising labor costs and falling margins, manufacturers have been facing a mounting crisis. Now, as bankruptcies and store closures rise in the west, fears are rising that the credit facilities on which the Asian supply chain is built will be severely strained.

"All the decoupling theory is total bunk," says a top figure in Hong Kong's outsourcing industry. "People are holding out China as the locomotive that is going to pull the rest of the world through.  But China is just one big factory export processing zone for low-cost goods, based on western demand and cheap credit. It isn't going to work."

The pace of western retailing bankruptcies is rising. The most recent collapse was KB Toys, a toy chain in the eastern United States that filed for protection on Dec. 11, saying it planned to hold going out-of-business sales at hundreds of stores.  It has 4,400 full-time employees and 6,515 seasonal employees. In the same week, Woolworths, the venerable British chain, greeted its 100th anniversary year by announcing that it would appoint administrators in an attempt to sell its stores for cash. 

In November the US electronics retailer Circuit City announced it would file for Chapter 11 protection and close 155 of its locations, leaving some 8,000 employees jobless. Spectrum Brands, which sells batteries, lawn care equipment, pet supplies, grooming products and many other items, was said by Morningstar, Inc. to be in serious distress.  Although it was not filing for protection, Office Depot, which sources most of its supplies in Asia, announced on December 10 that it would close 126 stores and 33 distribution facilities in 2009. 

Joseph Skrupa, editor in chief for RIS News, which follows the retail industry, told the Washington Post in December that an estimated 6,500 retail stores will close. 

Consumer spending accounted for 72 percent of the US economy in 2007, built personal debt that ran to 133 percent of disposable income by the end of 2007. With the US economy headed down, average per capita bank credit card debt was US$5,710 as of November, the equivalent of two months average salary.  As an example of how consumers stopped spending, toy traffic through the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, which handle about half of US consumer imports, has declined by 10.3 percent as measured by tonnage according to IHS Global Insight.

China makes nine of every 10 toys sold in American stores. In 2007 it exported US$14.2 billion worth of leather products, more than half the world's shoes, according to the US Department of Agriculture.

China and India between them produce well over half the world's textiles, according to the USDA. Consequently the shoe manufacturers, textile producers and toy makers of the Pearl River Delta, on whom a large extent of China's torrid prosperity has rested, face even more frightening times going forward than they have faced over the last two years. 

Exacerbating the fact that there are fewer orders – and substantial questions whether the strapped or bankrupt retailers at the other end of the supply chain are going to be able to pay off what already has been shipped – is the credit crisis.  Certainly, Hong Kong's banks are continuing to ration credit despite the fact that the Hong Kong Monetary Authority has pourd almost HK$130 billion into the system since September  Hong Kong dollar lending has virtually stopped, with loans going negative in October. Credit facilities are being withdrawn in China and Hong Kong as well, a growing problem for export-oriented companies.

This can be expected to play itself out with the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs in export-oriented industries in China and other Asian countries, and growing concern over social unrest.
There is plenty of room for the leaders to get worried. According to a study of migrant workers reported by the highly respected Caijing Magazine, only a fraction of the unemployed have returned to their villages. Some 10 million peasant workers have lost their jobs, according to the report, but the more severe impact is expected after the spring festival, when the thousads of closed factories don't open up again. Riot police have already had to make their appearance in southern cities to contain laid-off — and unpaid — workers. The scenario is a vast army of angry jobless workers wandering the streets of once-prosperous southern
China
with little to eat and no prospects.
That could be the ghost of revolution past.

 



 

 

 



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[mukto-mona] COMBATING GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS - NCEUS for Rs 58,000 cr bailout for the poor

COMBATING GLOBAL FINANCIAL MELTDOWN
 
NCEUS for Rs 58,000 cr bailout for the poor
 
http://www.financialexpress. com/news/nceus-for-rs-58-000- cr-bailout-for-the-poor/ 400134/0
 
ASHOK B SHARMA
Posted: 2008-12-18 21:31:43+05:30 IST
Updated: Dec 18, 2008 at 2131 hrs IST
 
New Delhi, Dec 18 : The National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector (NCEUS), with a view to insulate the country's poor from the adverse impact of the global financial crisis, has suggested a Rs 58,000 crore (Rs 580,000 million) stimulus package for the informal economy.
 
The package is only for short and medium-term measures designed to create over 57 million additional jobs in five years, it said.
 
The panel headed by Arjun Sengupta also suggested 10 specific areas for implementation of the package.
 
"The NCEUS members, alongwith its chairman met the Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh and urged him to immediately implement the proposals in the remaining three month's of the current fiscal and in the 12 months of the coming fiscal year," said the panel's member-secretary, VK Malhotra.
 
He said that Rs 58,000 crore (Rs 580,000 million) would not be burden on the exchequer as it was less than 2% of the country's GDP.
 
"The impact of the global financial crisis is already being felt in the country and the poor are worst affected. In the first half of the year the unorganised workers were pressed hard due to high commodity prices and after the global financial crisis they are hit by loss of job," he said
 
According to NCEUS about 77% of the workers in the unorganized sector live on less than Rs 20 a day.
 
Out of the Rs 58,000 crore (Rs 580,000 million) package the panel suggested Rs 5,000 crore (Rs 50,000 million) special programme for small and marginal farmers, setting up of a Rs 500 crore (Rs 5,000 million) National Fund for Unorganised Sector, Rs 2,000 crore (Rs 20,000 million) programme for employment assurance through skilled development, Rs 14,500 crore (Rs 145,000 million) for a new scheme for generating employment for the urban poor, Rs 30,000 crore (Rs 300,000 million) for a comprehensive scheme for national social security and additional Rs 5,000 crore (Rs 50,000 million) for the government's ongoing self-employment schemes.
 
The panel called for creating new jobs through government-funded low-cost housing for urban slum dwellers, expansion of minimum social security programme for informal workers, increase in investment in rural infrastructure and basic urban facilities, stepping up of land and water management programmes, lifting the ceiling on mandated 100-day employment per household under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, enhanced investment in human resources development.
 
According to NCEUS, informal sector consists of all unincorporated private enterprises owned by individuals or households engaged in the sale and production of goods and services operated on a proprietary or partnership basis and with less than 10 workers in total.
 
There are an estimated 58 million enterprises in the non-agriculture unorganized sector employing less than 10 workers. Of these 94% have an investment in plant and machinery up to Rs 5 lakh (Rs 500,000) and another 4% have investment ranging between Rs 5 lakh to Rs 25 lakh (Rs 2,500,000). These enterprises contribute 31% to the GDP.
 
The panel called for increasing credit flow to small enterprises having investment below Rs 5 lakh from 2% to 5% and that to those having investment below Rs 25 lakh from 5% to 8%.
 
Informal workers consists of those working in the informal sector or households, excluding regular workers with social security benefits provided by the employers and the workers in the formal sector without any employment and social security benefits provided by the employers.
 
According to 2005 data 47% of the workforce in the formal sector were having informal jobs without any social security. Out of the total workforce of 475 million in 2004-05, 420 million worked in the informal economy – 6% in the formal sector and 86% in the informal sector and thus informal workforce total to 92%.
 
About 34% of the informal sector workers in 2005 were females and about 48% of the self-employed women were unpaid family workers as against 17% male.
 
A marginal farmer is defined as one having land holding below 2.5 acre land and a small farmer is defined as one having land holding up to 5 acre. Scheduled castes and tribes constitute a large section of the workforce in the informal sector. About 64% of the workforce is in agriculture. Among agriculture workers, 74.6 million (29.5%) are marginal farmers and 39.9 million (15.8%) are small farmers. Small and marginal farmers contribute 60% of the output.
 
The NCEUS has said that the growth in the GDP need not necessarily lead to employment generation. Specific employment generation strategies need to be incorporated in the development planning process. The conventional approach followed by the Planning Commission generally does not make any distinction between informal and formal sectors. It also does not consciously factor in the planning process the educational and social profiles of the persons seeking employment, their specific work capabilities and state wise variations in the size and composition of labour force and existing employment opportunities.
 
The NCEUS had earlier submitted seven reports since 2006. Its proposals for social security made in 2006 has recently been passed by both the houses of the Parliament. Its proposal for setting up of a national fund for the unorganized sector is also recommended by the inter-ministerial group.
---------------------------------



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[ALOCHONA] Bangladesh Political Parties need a real life Menifesto

Dear All,
 
I am surprised to see few of our so called economists in Bangladesh about their prediction on Bangladesh GDP for 2009. Most of them emphasized that Bangladesh will not be affected as International slowdown wide spreads the world.  I have been telling as before that Bangladesh will be affected more since Bangladesh depends on exports mostly of its survival.
 
These so called economists live in a cave or not, I am not sure but I will urge political parties to provide clear strategies how to face this worldwide slowdown storm in Bangladesh with real expectation and plan for worst situation.
 
Regards,
M. M. Chowdhury (Mithu), Virginia, USA
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Mahmuda Shaolin

The country' overall exports declined by over 41 per cent in October over that of September of the current fiscal with earnings tumbling from US$1.48 billion in September to US$867.69 million in October.

Sector insiders termed the drastic fall as the beginning of the adverse impact of global financial meltdown on the country's economy.

But the overall export earnings during July-October period of 2008-09 fiscal year (FY) registered a growth of 30.68 compared to the corresponding period of FY 2007-08, according to Export Promotion Bureau (EPB) export performance report.

During July-October of FY 2008-09, the overall export earnings stood at US$5.25 billion while it was US$ 4.019 billion during the corresponding period of FY 2007-08.

President of Bangladesh Garment Manufactures and Exporters and Association (BGMEA) Anwar Ul Alam Chowdhry Parvez and Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA) Fazlul Hoque expressed concern over the situation, saying that it is an initial impact of the global financial recession. The government should review the export performance immediately for taking necessary steps to save the export sectors, they added.

After a booming 71 per cent growth in export in the first month of current fiscal year compared to the same period of the 2007-08, Bangladesh's export earning started to dip in the latter months.
Monthly export growth came down to 30 per cent in October from 42 per cent in September and 42.35 per cent in August as earning from RMG started to plummet, the EPB data showed.

Growth in earnings from garments including knitwear and woven stood at 32 per cent in July-October of 2008 period from a year earlier to $ 3.902 billion. It was $3.36 billion with 44 per cent growth in the first quarter of the current fiscal compared to the corresponding period of the last fiscal year.

Talking to the FE, BGMEA president Anwar Ul Alam Chowdhry Parvez said export earning from garments in October declined as buyers from the European counties and the United States requested them to defer shipment of goods due to poor sales in those part of the world.

But, he expressed the hope that earning from garments export would pick up again as shipment in November-December period increased to some extent.

"It is an initial impact of the global financial meltdown. The government should identify the reasons and take immediate steps to address them," BKMEA president Md. Fazlul Hoque told the FE.

According to the EPB, Bangladesh's exports hit a record $14.11 billion in the last financial year that ended in June 2008, of which almost $10.7 billion came from garments.

Bangladesh has set a $16.298 billion export target for the year to June 2009. The projected target for knitwear is $ 6.58 billion, up 19 per cent from the last fiscal. The target for woven garments is $ 5.68 billion, up 10 per cent from the previous fiscal.


--- On Wed, 11/12/08, M. M. Chowdhury (Mithu) <cgmpservices@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: M. M. Chowdhury (Mithu) <cgmpservices@yahoo.com>
Subject: More Financial bad news on the Horizon
To: cgmpservices@yahoo.com
Date: Wednesday, November 12, 2008, 4:50 PM



Dear All,
 
Even it looks like that the financial crises started at USA but its effect will be felt every corner in the world.  Lets see if I can explain how this problem has accumulated for more than 20 years.
 
Most of the countries in the world have invested, lend money to USA to use it.  In return of this cheap money inflow, they have got great access to their products in USA.  USA customers were happy to use this cheap money and spent it like free fall.  This has created a bubble in home prices (Cost of a house price shoot up to 4 times some areas).  People in USA have become addicted to cheap money and easy credit access where they should not have in the first place where they can not afford it.
 
Second problem is that USA is no longer in leader in new technologies and in competition like before.  Their manufacturing industries have evaporated last 8 years.  Few of US policies have made worst for not letting new students to study in USA if they were not from Europe and India.  So revenue of USA has dropped in every areas you can think about it.
 
Third problem is that USA consumes more product than they manufacture, like importing more goods more than they can export.  In this case China & India have beaten them badly.
 
By looking at this financial crises,  I predict that this financial slump will stay between 6-8 years unless some miracle happen.  USA is not in good condition like 1930's or 1980's where USA has greater advantage in new technologies and were very few competitors compare to China and India.
 
Iraq war has cost USA more than $700 Billion and expected benefit of more than $2 Trillion dollar to be provided for injured soldiers form the years to come.  This will be a great burden for USA form the years to come.
 
Forth problem is that foreign countries won't lend cheap money to USA like before which can bring down the standards of living in USA.
 
Our children future in USA might be in trouble by looking at all the indication that I can see.  So the bottom line is that it does not matter which prism you use to see USA future,  it looks bleak and scary.
 
I like to urge everybody to have plan B in their financial solvency.  We may have to adopt lower standards of life in future.  This is the compromise we have to take either we like it or not.
 
God Bless America and her people.
 
Regards,
M. M. Chowdhury (Mithu), USA
 
 
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