Geographical Location
Bangladesh lies across the Tropic of Cancer, in the northeastern part of South Asia between 20o.34' and 26.38' north latitude and longitudes 88.01' and 92.41' east. The country is bordered by India on the west, north and the northeast, Myanmar is on the southeast and the Bay of Bengal is on the south. Strategically located, Bangladesh is virtually a bridge between South and Southeast Asia.
Population
The population of the country currently stands at around 133 Million. Around 75 percent of the people live in rural areas while 60 percent of the population depend on agriculture for their livelihood.
History in Brief
Recorded history is traceable to 4th century B.C. and shows clear evidence of a flourishing civilization with cities, palaces, temples, forts, seats of learning and monasteries;
Official Language
Bengali
Capital City
Dhaka
Standard Time
GMT plus 6 hours
Currency
Taka/TK(US$1=Tk.60) approximately
Mineral Resources
Natural gas, limestone, hard rock, coal, lignite, silica sand, white clay, etc.
Politics
The People's Republic of Bangladesh is an independent and sovereign republic comprising three basic organs: The Executive, The Legislature, and The Judiciary. The President is the head of state and is elected by members of parliament for a term of five years.
On 4th Oct 1975, Bangladesh and China established formal diplomatic relations. Since then, a bilateral friendly cooperative relation has developed smoothly. The two countries share common views in a series of important international and regional issues. High-level exchanges have been frequent, with ever-increasing contacts and expanding cooperation areas.
In Jan 2002, the former Chinese Prime Minister Zhu Rongji visited Bangladesh. It was the first visit at this level after a long gap of 13 years and its high point was the reassurance given by the former Chinese Premier that China shall forever remain a trusted, reliable friend and a development partner. The number of important bilateral accords signed during the visit underlined the depth of the bilateral cooperation. The fact that China has emerged as an ally of Bangladesh was evident from the timing of this visit and its content.
Former Prime Minister Begum Khaleda Zia also paid an official visit to China in Nov, 2002.The two countries have reiterated their common objectives of consolidating friendship and deepening cooperation. Bilateral visits from both Prime Ministers are historical events in Bangladesh-China relations, which have built a sound base for further development of bilateral relations in the new century.
Bangladesh has an agrarian economy with 25% of GDP coming from the agriculture, forestry and fisheries sector. Major agricultural products are rice, jute, wheat, potato, pulse, tobacco, tea, sugarcane, and etc. The country is the largest exporter of jute and jute goods in the world. Readymade Garments occupy the topmost position among the exportable items. Tea, frozen shrimps, leather goods, fish and vegetables ceramic-ware flowers and handicrafts are also major exportable commodities.
GDP at Current Price |
Tk. 3,004.85 billion US$ 51.897 billion |
GDP Growth (at FY '96 Constant Price) |
5.33% |
Industrial Growth (at FY '96 Constant Price) |
7.3% |
Inflation Rate |
5.1% |
Investment Rate |
23.2% of GDP |
National Savings Rate |
23.7% of GDP |
Exports (US $) |
US $ 6,548 million |
Imports (US $) |
US $ 8,699 million |
Major Industries |
Jute, tea, textiles, garments, paper, newsprint, fertilizer, leather and leather goods, sugar, cement, fish processing, pharmaceuticals, chemical industries, etc. |
Major Exports |
Garments, raw jute, jute manufactures, jute products, tea, leather, leather products, frozen shrimps, other fish products, newsprint, paper, naphtha, furnace oil, urea, ceramic products etc. |
Major Imports |
Wheat, oil, seeds, crude petroleum, raw cotton, edible oil, petroleum products, fertilizer, staple fibers, yarn, iron & steel, capital goods, etc. |
Major Trading Partners |
USA, EU Countries, India, China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Indonesia, Thailand, Saudi Arabia, UAE. |
Economic Relations with China
In recent years, the commercial relations between China and Bangladesh have grown significantly, with cooperative-areas expanding. In 2003, bilateral trade volume was 1.098 billion US$, up 13.1%. China's export volume was 1.068 billion US$, up 11.6%, and import volume was 32million, up 93.8%.
The Joint Commission of Economic and Trade Cooperation between Bangladesh and China was established in Nov, 1983.In principal, the annual session is to be held in the two capitals by turn. Up to now, 10 sessions have been held. The main items China imports from Bangladesh are leather, textiles and fishery products, and the main export items being textiles, mechanical-electrical products, cement, fertilizers, tires, corn, etc.
Investment from China is flowing into Bangladesh. The Government of China has completed a large number of infra-structure projects, which include important 'friendship bridges', highways, roads and an international conference centre. China is now building fertilizer factories, developing coal mines and improving telecommunications through governmental and private sector agreements.
(a) Import of books, journals, magazines and periodicals on sight draft or stance bill basis;
(b) Import of any permissible item for an amount not exceeding US Dollar Five thousand only during each financial year against remittance made from Bangladesh. However, permissible item valued up to US Dollar five thousand in a single consignment from Myanmar shall be importable without opening L/C and in that case above mentioned annual ceiling of US Dollar five thousand shall not be applicable.
(c) Import under commodity aid, grant or such other loan for which there are specific procurement procedures for import of goods without opening any L/C;
(d) Import of "International Chemical References" through Bank drafts by recognized pharmaceutical (allopathic) industry on the approval of Director, Drugs Administrators for the purpose of quality control of their products.
(a) Import of books, magazines, journals, periodicals and scientific and laboratory equipment against surrender of UNESCO Coupons;
(b) Import under Pay-As-You-Learn-Scheme in the following cases only on the basis of clearance of the Bangladesh Bank:
(i) New or not exceeding twelve years old plant and machinery of permissible specification;
(ii) New or not exceeding five years old motor cars;
(iii) Cargo or passenger vessel of steel or wooden bodies, including refrigerated vessel of any capacity either new or not exceeding fifteen years old; but in case of ocean going ships, old ship, not exceeding twenty years old shall be importable;
(iv) Import of plant and machinery for export-oriented industrial units with the clearance of the competent sanctioning authority, wherever necessary; and
(v) Trawlers and other fishing vessels, either new or not exceeding twenty years old:
For import under this scheme the sanctioning authority of such import shall forward a copy of sanction letter to the Chief Controller and the importers shall apply to the CCI & E along with necessary paper for prior permission.
(a) Unless, otherwise specified, shipment of goods shall be made within seventeen months in the case of machinery and spare parts and nine months in the case of all other items from the date of issuance of LCA From by bank or registration of L/C Authorization Form with Bangladesh Band Registration unit, as the case may be, Shipment of goods under commodity aid/grant, and barter/STA shall be effected within the time limits as may be notified by the Chief Controller;
(b) In case where shipment could not made within the validity of the LCA Form due to circumstances beyond the control of the importer, the Chief Controller may extend the time limit for shipment of goods on the merit of each case;
(a) L/C application form duly signed by the importer;
(b) Indents for goods issued by indenter or a Performa invoice obtained from the foreign supplier, as the case may be; and
(c) Insurance cover note.
(a) valid membership certificate from the registered local Chamber of Commerce and Industry or any Trade Association, established on all Bangladesh basis, representing any special trade/business;
(b) proof of payment of renewal fees for the Import Registration Certificate for the concerned financial year;
(c) a declaration, in triplicate, that the importer has paid income-tax or submitted income-tax return for the preceding year;
(d) proof of having Tax Identification Number (TIN) in all cases of import excepting personal use;
(e) insurance cover note either from Shadaran Bima Corporation or from Bangladeshi Insurance Company and stamped insurance policy against this cover-note;
(f) any such documents as may be required as per this Order or Public Notice, or instruction issued by Chief Controller, from time to time under this Order;
Violation of the requirement of LCA/LC: Shipment effected before authentication of the L/C Authorization Form by the nominated bank and registration with the Bangladesh Bank, wherever necessary, and before opening of L/C or after expiry of the validity of the L/C Authorization Form or L/C shall be treated as import in contravention of this Order. L/C Authorization Form obtained on the basis of false or incorrect particulars or by adopting any fraudulent means shall be treated as invalid and void abinitio.
Import against indent and Performa invoice: L/C may be opened against an indent issued by a local registered indenter or against a Performa invoice issued by a foreign manufacturer/seller/supplier.
Scope of Foreign Investment
All industries except six sectors covered in the reserved list, viz, arms and ammunitions, atomic energy, air transport, telecommunication, generation and distribution of electricity and forest extraction are open for investment and placed in the Industrial Investment Schedule under 13 broad groups. The private sector, barring the above six sectors, can invest in all sectors without any ceiling.
The government has taken further steps to ease the flow of local and foreign investments into the economy. The private sector is given great priority in all economic endeavors. As a consequence economic policies focus on creating a more conducive atmosphere for foreign and local investment.
Priority Sectors
Comparative Advantages for Foreign Investment