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Growth and Poverty : The Development Experience of Bangladesh

AuthorEdited by Sadiq Ahmed and Wahiduddin Mahmud
PublisherThe University Press Limited
Publisher2006
Publisherxxii
Publisher316 p,
Publishertables, figs
ISBN9840517554

Contents: List of abbreviations. Contributors. Preface. I. Employment, inequality and pro-poor growth: 1. Rising inequality in Bangladesh: an analysis of sources and policies for containment/Azizur Rahman Khan. 2. Employment, incomes and poverty: prospects of pro-poor growth in Bangladesh/Wahiduddin Mahmud. 3. Employment/poverty linkages: A cross-country analysis/Rizwanul Islam. II. Political economy and policy environment: 4. Growth and poverty reduction: does political regime matter?/M.G. Quibria. 5. The political economy of development experience in Bangladesh/Sadiq Ahmed. 6. Entrepreneurship, productivity and investment climate: issues for Bangladesh/Syed Akhtar Mahmood. 7. Public enterprise performance and strategy/Syed Nizamuddin. III. Service delivery and social development: 8. Delivering basic health services in Bangladesh: a view from the human rights perspective/S.R. Osmani. 9. Fertility decline under poverty/Simeen Mahmud. 10. Reaching the poor: micro-finance experience in Bangladesh/Shahid Khandker. 11. Delivery of basic services: citizens\' feedback/Kapil Kapoor and Zahid Hussain. 12. Participation of non-government organisations in the delivery of social services/Sajjad Zohir. Index.

"The book is the outcome of a seminar that looked at the nature of challenges and the policy options facing Bangladesh in achieving accelerated, sustained and equitable economic growth. Since the early 1990s, Bangladesh has notably improved its economic growth performance following the introduction of market-oriented liberalising economic reforms. The positive impact of economic growth on poverty was, however, compromised to some extent by a worsening of income distribution. This calls for a deeper understanding of the growth-inequality nexus, both analytically and in terms of the policy implications for supporting more inclusive and pro-poor economic growth. There is also a growing concern regarding how far the economic growth momentum can withstand a \'weakening\' of the institutions of economic and political governance. Institutional reforms, which have lagged behind economic reforms, are needed to address a whole range of factors affecting investment incentives and production efficiency.

Compared to the modest progress in poverty reduction, there has been truly remarkable improvement in social and human development indicators such as in respect of infant and child mortality, female school enrollment and the adoption of birth control. It remains a puzzle how Bangladesh could make such progress in social development despite widespread poverty and poor governance in public service delivery. The early gains from the adoption of easy low-cost solutions, the contribution of NGOs towards raising public awareness, favourable budgetary allocations and government policy support have all helped. However, sustaining the positive trends may become increasingly difficult without larger public social spending and an improvement in service delivery along with a more rapid reduction in poverty." (jacket)

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