Business Desk :
Bangladesh has overtaken its much-larger neighbour India in terms of per capita GDP in 2020, owing to a respectable performance on the economic front despite slowing growth coupled with a steep contraction in the India economy as a result of their coronavirus lockdown.
Per capita gross domestic product (GDP) is a global measure for gauging the prosperity of nations and is used by economists, along with GDP, to analyse the prosperity of a country, to go with its economic heft. It is calculated by dividing the GDP of a country by its population.
According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF)-World Economic Outlook (WEO) database, Bangladesh is going to pip India as its per capita GDP, in dollar terms, is likely to expand 4.00 per cent in 2020 to $1,888. Its per capita GDP is growing at a rate faster than its GDP, reports UNB.
Meanwhile, India’s per capita GDP is expected to slump 10.5 per cent to $1,877, which is the lowest in the last four years. Its per capita GDP fell at a faster rate than its GDP. The GDP number for both countries is at current prices.
The IMF’s ‘World Economic Outlook: A Long and Difficult Ascent’ released on Tuesday said like many other emerging economies, Bangladesh’s gross domestic product growth decelerated to 3.8 per cent in 2020, by which it meant the 2019-20 fiscal. Growth is projected to rise to 4.4 per cent in the fiscal year 2020-21.
Among other South Asian countries, IMF estimated a 10.3 per cent contraction for India’s GDP in 2020, while Bhutan’s growth is estimated at 0.6 per cent, Sri-Lanka at -4.6 per cent, Pakistan -0.4 per cent and Nepal’s to remain flat.
The WEO database suggests that the Indian economy will be the worst hit from the pandemic in South Asia alongside Sri Lanka, whose per capita GDP is expected to shrink 4 per cent in the current calendar year.
In South Asia, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and the Maldives still lead Bangladesh on GDP per capita, although they are much smaller economies.
India’s per capita GDP, up until five years ago, was around 40 per cent 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 per cent, compared to 3.2 per cent growth recorded by India during the said period, according to BusinessToday.in, which first reported the switchover.