EVERY year 2 lakh foreigners, mostly Indians, employed in Bangladesh received Tk 40 billion as salary and perks as the country has lack of technical and managerial skilled personnel necessary for the manufacturing and industry sector. When the country has been blessed with demographic dividends and more than 70 lakh migrant workers remit some Tk 120 billion annually, the trade off is pathetic and speaks of our apathy.
The low skilled or unskilled working age population is a barrier in the way of attaining the potential economic growth. It has entrapped the economy in agriculture and service sectors instead of the industrial sector. To attain the potential growth, the country has to go for industrialization. It needs a skilled workforce, mostly with managerial skills. To get the benefit of demographic dividend, the government, universities, NGOs and all other stakeholders should coordinate to formulate vigorous action plans for producing a higher skilled workforce.
The graduate unemployment rate is tremendously high at 47 percent in the country meaning the higher education has failed to produce the needed skilled manpower for fulfilling market demand. The entrepreneurship skills among the employable work force is much lower than the global level. Over the years, the number of higher educational institutions mushroomed without proper strategy, diversity and without maintaining standard or quality. Thus, many studying at higher educational institutions have become worthless and just a wastage of time. New higher education and vocational education strategies aligning the national interest and market-based economy and economic potentiality must be devised.
Some of the East and South-East Asian countries have invested heavily in human resource development, in particular, education and health, to achieve a higher economic growth rate during their time of demographic dividends. China, Japan, and many other countries developed their economies using the demographic dividend but we are not on the right track. Experts said the size of the working-age population of Bangladesh would start to decline and the country may not get this dividend again in the near future. Economists said when the domestic job market is declining to cope with the larger unemployed and underemployed youths, many midrange jobs are gradually being occupied by foreigners as local university graduates fail to achieve the required level of skills under the faulty education system. Unless the country capitalizes on the opportunity, the window would not remain open forever. Developing a brand of highly proficient workforce, particularly with quality managerial ability is now a crying need for the country. Failure to do so would only open doors to the foreigners to be hired at a high costs. Failure to seize the opportunities now would only push the national economy further backward.