Title: Bangladesh:
1Bangladesh
- Development and
- political economy
- Link to map
2RecapTurning points in History
- 1952 Language revolution
- 1971 march Beginning of the Liberation War
- 1971 - Sheikh Mujib arrested and taken to West
Pakistan. In exile, Awami League leaders proclaim
the independence of the province of East Pakistan
on 26th March. The new country is called
Bangladesh. Just under 10 million Bangladeshis
flee to India as troops from West Pakistan are
defeated with Indian assistance - Dec 16 1971 Surrender of the Pakistan Army
(termed Victory Day)
3Birth of Bangladesh
- Internal colonialism
- Challenge of facing both a state apparatus and a
political community - Disarray of civil bureaucracy and the military
- Schism between collaborators and patriots
4Bangladesh
- Continuing militancy
- Debates over the constitution extent of
political power of the Prime Minister - Mujibbad Mujibism nationalism, socialism,
democracy and secularism - Supposed to correct the deficiencies of communism
and capitalism (the third way)
5Indicators SL I P B
Children underweight for age ( under age 5) 29 46 38 48
Population living below 1.25 a day () 14.0 41.6 d 22.6 49.6
Population living below 2 a day () 39.7 75.6 d 60.3 81.3
Total GDP (PPP US billions) 84.9 3,097 405.6 196.7
Annual growth rate of GDP per capita () 3.9 4.5 1.6 3.1
Income/expenditure share of the richest 10 of the population () 2.9 3.6 f 3.9 f 4.3
Income/expenditure share of the richest 10 of the population () 33.3 31.1 26.5 f 26.6
Ratio of the richest 10 to the poorest 10 11.7 8.6 6.7 6.2
6Bangladesh timeline
- 1971-5 The Mujib era. This is the formative
period, associated with a strong nationalist and
statist fervour, with Mujibur Rahman and his
party Awami League in power - 1977-81 The Zia regime. This is the beginning
of military rule in Bangladesh, marked by the
adoption of Islam in the constitution - 1982-91The Ershad regime. Military rule, and
declaration of Islam as state religion - 1991-6 the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP)
regime, with Khaleda Zia as Prime Minister - 1996-2000 The second Awami League regime, with
Sheik Hasina as leader - 2001-6 Coalition government headed by the BNP
- 2006-9 Caretaker government, postponement of
elections, declaration of a state of Emergency
and political violence - 2009 The third Awami League regime, with Sheik
Hasina as leader
7The story of Bangladesh stunning ironies
- On the one hand, it affirms the power of popular
discontent and the eventual vulnerability of a
minority elite, however powerful, to such
discontent. - On the other hand, it suggests the irony that
states may well reproduce processes of exclusion
which they themselves are born out of.
8Origins
- In 1971 Bangladesh inherited an economy with a
high external dependence on food, inequity, and
landlessness. The Liberation War caused
large-scale death and displacement, along with
the withdrawal of the Pakistani industrial
classes from the productive economy. The
immediate problem was to rehabilitate ten million
refugees a task for which foreign aid became
the only feasible option.
9Dependent development
- The very premises of autonomy and
self-sufficiency on which the liberation struggle
was based became marginalized, as state power
became directed towards a strategy of dependent
development - It offered certain classes legitimate instruments
to institutionalize their monopoly over domestic
and external resources, in particular the state.
10Dependent developmenttwo elements
- the strategy of promoting a local capitalist
class through state patronage - and a systematic dependence on foreign aid. As
elsewhere in the Third World, the process
engendered a rather unhealthy symbiosis between
the bureaucracy and the emergent indigenous
capitalist class. What evolved was therefore a
predatory state par excellence, couple with a
distorted and primitive form of capitalism.
11Proto capitalism
- The political-economy that evolved in Bangladesh
has been labeled in various ways. Broadly
speaking, it has had the character of petty
mercantilism and has often been referred to as
proto capitalism or shopkeeper capitalism.
Various kinds of rents emanating from state
patronage, price manipulation and overt
exploitation of workers became the hallmark of
this structure of predation
12Recent insertion into the global economy
- myriad forms of oppressive social relations
drawn from different types of social formations
ranging from feudalism to flexible accumulation
exist quite comfortably in synergy with one
another. - The extraordinary development of the textile
sector in Bangladesh. This new growth sector is
the lifeline of todays Bangladesh. It has drawn
millions of Bangladeshi women into the orbit of
factory production, generating profound and often
irreconcilable contradictions in social
relationships at the level of the family, the
community, the workplace, and the nation-state
13From Womanmachine
- Both economically, and in literal terms, workers
feel trapped by their machines the operators of
machines experience the machine operating them at
multiple levels. In the eyes of many workers,
they are part of a machine that men are in
control of. It is men who throw on the switches
to turn the giant on, men who guard its products,
and of course, men who own it. Moreover, the
promise of empowerment through paid labor is
belied by the knowledge of workers entrapment in
the labor market. It is not only that women are
perceived as inhabiting the space of men
certainly the factory is an archetypically
masculine site. Of critical import here, however,
is the specific conditions under which women come
to displace male labor. Since womens access to
the factory occurs in the context of inequality
and severe male unemployment, female garment
workers have come to represent a socially
disruptive labor force.
14Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHTs)
- Inhabited by indigenous communities who inhabit
the south-eastern region of the country and
comprise less than 1 per cent of the population.
The conflict between the Bangladeshi state and
the indigenous communities continues to result in
much violence and destruction.
15The people of CHT
- The people of CHT belong to thirteen different
indigenous tribes primarily of Sino-Tibetan
descent. A majority of them are Buddhists or
Hindus. Bengali, which is the language spoken by
the majority of Bangladeshis, is not their
language. They speak a variety of languages and
are governed by different legal, social and
cultural customs What explains the intensely
conflictual relationship - It appears to be a conflict between two
fundamentally opposite understandings of justice
and development and of the relationship between
the state and its people. The state took recourse
to violence to resolve these oppositions,
unleashing an armed conflict in response.
16History
- During British colonialism, the CHT region
enjoyed a special status and limited
self-government. Migration into the region was
strictly prohibited during colonial rule, and the
local populace was allowed to live by its
distinctive cultural and economic practices with
relatively limited interference from the state.
The special status was lost in 1963 as a result
of an amendment to the constitution of Pakistan.
With this amendment began two processes of
enduring impact on the region the in-migration
of Bengalis from other parts of Bangladesh, and
the initiation of large-scale development
projects. Approximately 54,000 acres of settled
cultivable land, mostly farmed by the Chakma
tribe, were lost as a result of these processes.
Some 100,000 people lost their homes and
livelihoods, leading to a fairly large
out-migration of Chakma tribals into India. The
Government of Pakistan also embarked on a policy
to encourage poor Bengali families to settle in
the region, a policy that the government of
independent Bangladesh decided to continue and
expand.
17Structural inequality
- Structural inequality does not affect people as
individuals but as collective entities who share
similar structural locations that similarly
condition their opportunities and life-chances
and their ability to act as agents. It is in this
sense we argue that collectivities such as
gender, race, ethnicity or class are best
understood as structural. The structural
locations shared by these collectivities are
engendered through historical processes and
reflect the intersection of the realms of
economics, politics, culture and knowledge.
18Origins of structural inequality
- intermingling of several distinct historical
forms - different varieties of proto capitalism
- predatory and rentier states and associated
patterns of governance - the dominance of religion in the cultural and
political realms - the pervasive patterns of subordination of women,
etc.
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