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UN projects growth for Bangladesh’s economy amid worldwide decline

Bangladesh’s economy is projected to grow by 5.8 percent in 2022 and 6.8 percent in 2023, according to a UN report released on Thursday.

The report projected 6.5 percent growth in 2022, and 5.9 percent growth in 2023 for India. For Pakistan, it was 4.2 percent for 2022, and 3.8 percent for 2023.

The UN’s World Economic Situation and Prospects 2022 report said the global economy is projected to grow by 4 percent in 2022 – down from 5.5 percent last year – and expand 3.5 percent in 2023 amid new waves of Covid-19 infections, labor market challenges, supply-chain constraints and rising inflation.

“Despite the roll-out of vaccines from early 2021, the Covid-19 pandemic is far from over. From 1 April through 1 December 2021, an average of 9,432 people died every day around the world, significantly higher than the 6,061 deaths per day recorded during the same period in 2020,” read the report.

Last year’s growth momentum in world economy – following a contraction of 3.4% in 2020 – began to slow by the end of the year, including in big economies like China, the European Union and the United States, as the effects of fiscal and monetary stimuli faded and major supply-chain disruptions surfaced, the report added.

Along with the ongoing pandemic, “rising inflationary pressures in major developed economies and a number of large developing countries present additional risks to recovery,” according to report by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs.

“Global headline inflation rose to an estimated 5.2 percent in 2021, more than 2 percentage points above its trend rate in the past 10 years,” it said.

The report also warned that an emerging longer-term consequence of the coronavirus pandemic was higher levels of inequality within and between countries.

“For the vast majority of developing countries, a full recovery of GDP per capita will remain elusive. The gap between what they will achieve and what they would have achieved without the pandemic will persist well into 2023,” the report projected.

“In contrast, GDP per capita in the developed economies is expected to almost fully recover by 2023 relative to pre-pandemic projections,” it added.

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