Bangladesh’s economic progress may have been hyped
A new report highlights the challenges facing Muhammad Yunus’s interim government

For years Bangladesh was hailed as an economic miracle. Sheikh Hasina, who ruled it autocratically from 2009 until August this year, insisted she was the brains behind the growth. Official statistics gave these claims legitimacy: in the decade before the pandemic the economy grew by 7% annually, a rate comparable with China’s. Yet this narrative has now been upended. A student-led uprising has toppled Sheikh Hasina. And a new white paper, published earlier this month, has shredded her economic legacy.
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This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Miracle or mirage?”

From the December 14th 2024 edition
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