Bangladesh : Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Bangladesh, How Likely and What Will it Take to Reduce Poverty, Child Mortality and Malnutrition, Gender Disparities, and to Increase School Enrollment and Completion?
This report focuses on the attainment of five major human development-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in Bangladesh - consumption poverty, infant and under-five mortality, child malnutrition, schooling enrollment and completion, gender disparities in schooling. The report stipulates that...
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2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/06/6045400/bangladesh-attaining-millennium-development-goals-bangladesh-likely-take-reduce-poverty-child-mortality-malnutrition-gender-disparities-increase-school-enrollment-completion http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8627 |
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oai_dc |
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Digital Repository |
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Foreign Institution |
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Digital Repositories |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
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English en_US |
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AGED ANNUAL RATE ANTENATAL CARE CAPITA GROWTH CHILD IMMUNIZATION CHILD IMMUNIZATION RATES CHILD MALNUTRITION CHILD MORTALITY CHILD MORTALITY RATES CHILD NUTRITION CONSUMPTION INEQUALITY CONSUMPTION POVERTY DATA QUALITY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY ECONOMIC GROWTH EDUCATION EDUCATION SERVICES ENROLLMENT ENROLMENT RATE ENROLMENT RATES ESSENTIAL DRUGS EXPENDITURE SURVEY EXPENDITURES FAMILY PLANNING GENDER DISPARITIES GENDER DISPARITY GENDER PARITY GEOGRAPHICAL AREA GIRLS GROWTH INCIDENCE GROWTH RATE HEADCOUNT RATIO HEALTH HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SURVEY HOUSEHOLD DATA HOUSEHOLD HEAD HOUSEHOLD INCOME HOUSEHOLD LIVING STANDARDS HOUSEHOLD SIZE HOUSEHOLD SURVEY HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IMMUNIZATION INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATES INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INTERVENTION LITERACY LIVE BIRTHS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MALNUTRITION MALNUTRITION RATES MANAGEMENT CAPACITY MATERNAL MORTALITY MCH MEAN CONSUMPTION MEASLES METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES MORTALITY MORTALITY RATES MOTIVATION MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS NATIONAL INCOME NATIONAL POVERTY NATIONAL POVERTY LINES NATURAL RESOURCES NET ENROLLMENT OLD CHILDREN OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN PARENTS POPULATION GROWTH POVERTY ALLEVIATION POVERTY HEADCOUNT POVERTY REDUCTION PRIMARY EDUCATION PRIMARY ENROLLMENT RATE PRIMARY SCHOOL PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENT PRIMARY SCHOOLING PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC INTERVENTIONS PUBLIC POLICY PUBLIC SERVICES QUALITATIVE VARIABLES REDUCING POVERTY REGIONAL DISPARITIES RURAL AREAS RURAL WOMEN SAFETY SANITATION SECONDARY SCHOOLS SERVICE DELIVERY SEVERE CHILD MALNUTRITION SOCIAL INDICATORS SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL SECTORS SOCIAL SERVICES SPATIAL VARIATIONS STATISTICAL ANALYSIS STUNTING TEACHER RECRUITMENT TEACHERS TETANUS TEXTBOOKS UNDERWEIGHT CHILDREN UNDERWEIGHT RATES UNIVERSAL PRIMARY EDUCATION URBAN AREAS VACCINATION VOLUNTARY SECTOR WORKERS |
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AGED ANNUAL RATE ANTENATAL CARE CAPITA GROWTH CHILD IMMUNIZATION CHILD IMMUNIZATION RATES CHILD MALNUTRITION CHILD MORTALITY CHILD MORTALITY RATES CHILD NUTRITION CONSUMPTION INEQUALITY CONSUMPTION POVERTY DATA QUALITY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY ECONOMIC GROWTH EDUCATION EDUCATION SERVICES ENROLLMENT ENROLMENT RATE ENROLMENT RATES ESSENTIAL DRUGS EXPENDITURE SURVEY EXPENDITURES FAMILY PLANNING GENDER DISPARITIES GENDER DISPARITY GENDER PARITY GEOGRAPHICAL AREA GIRLS GROWTH INCIDENCE GROWTH RATE HEADCOUNT RATIO HEALTH HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SURVEY HOUSEHOLD DATA HOUSEHOLD HEAD HOUSEHOLD INCOME HOUSEHOLD LIVING STANDARDS HOUSEHOLD SIZE HOUSEHOLD SURVEY HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IMMUNIZATION INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATES INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INTERVENTION LITERACY LIVE BIRTHS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MALNUTRITION MALNUTRITION RATES MANAGEMENT CAPACITY MATERNAL MORTALITY MCH MEAN CONSUMPTION MEASLES METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES MORTALITY MORTALITY RATES MOTIVATION MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS NATIONAL INCOME NATIONAL POVERTY NATIONAL POVERTY LINES NATURAL RESOURCES NET ENROLLMENT OLD CHILDREN OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN PARENTS POPULATION GROWTH POVERTY ALLEVIATION POVERTY HEADCOUNT POVERTY REDUCTION PRIMARY EDUCATION PRIMARY ENROLLMENT RATE PRIMARY SCHOOL PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENT PRIMARY SCHOOLING PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC INTERVENTIONS PUBLIC POLICY PUBLIC SERVICES QUALITATIVE VARIABLES REDUCING POVERTY REGIONAL DISPARITIES RURAL AREAS RURAL WOMEN SAFETY SANITATION SECONDARY SCHOOLS SERVICE DELIVERY SEVERE CHILD MALNUTRITION SOCIAL INDICATORS SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL SECTORS SOCIAL SERVICES SPATIAL VARIATIONS STATISTICAL ANALYSIS STUNTING TEACHER RECRUITMENT TEACHERS TETANUS TEXTBOOKS UNDERWEIGHT CHILDREN UNDERWEIGHT RATES UNIVERSAL PRIMARY EDUCATION URBAN AREAS VACCINATION VOLUNTARY SECTOR WORKERS World Bank Bangladesh : Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Bangladesh, How Likely and What Will it Take to Reduce Poverty, Child Mortality and Malnutrition, Gender Disparities, and to Increase School Enrollment and Completion? |
geographic_facet |
South Asia Asia South Asia Bangladesh |
description |
This report focuses on the attainment of five major human development-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in Bangladesh - consumption poverty, infant and under-five mortality, child malnutrition, schooling enrollment and completion, gender disparities in schooling. The report stipulates that of these MDGs, Bangladesh has already attained (or nearly attained) the goal relating to elimination of gender disparity in schooling opportunities. Bangladesh is the only country in South Asia (other than Sri Lanka) to have achieved parity in male and female enrollments, not just at the primary level, but also at the secondary level. The analysis in this report suggests that attainment of two other MDGs - in particular, the reduction of consumption-poverty and under-five mortality - is also feasible with a combination of interventions, including sector-specific interventions (such as expanding immunization coverage and reducing pupil-teacher ratios), economic growth, improved coverage of infrastructure, and social safety-net programs (such as the District Education Stipends Program, and the Vulnerable Group Development programs). However, it will be challenging for Bangladesh to attain the child malnutrition-related MDG, as well as the education MDGs relating to universal net primary enrollment, and primary completion. A factor that is likely to be important in explaining Bangladesh's relative success in attaining positive social outcomes is the work of its nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Bangladesh may well be the world's leader in using NGOs as vehicles of development. Yet another factor in explaining the country's success, especially its ability to eliminate gender disparity in enrollment, even at the secondary level, is the use of targeted public interventions, such as the Female Secondary School Stipend Program (FSSS). However, there are problems in attaining the MDGs, i.e., very large regional disparities, and, the problem of governance - in particular, poor service delivery. The report notes there is evidence of significant synergies among the different MDGs, i.e., a reduction in the proportion of underweight children is strongly associated with a reduction of child mortality. At the same, it needs to be realized that the different MDGs are not necessarily internally consistent. For instance, simultaneous attainment of the poverty and child malnutrition MDGs by Bangladesh would result in 30 percent of the population being poor, but 34 percent of the children being underweight. This inconsistency indicates a problem in the manner in which poverty and/or underweight thresholds are established. But the importance of systematically monitoring MDGs outcomes at disaggregated levels, and evaluating the impact of public programs cannot be overemphasized. |
format |
Economic & Sector Work :: Social Analysis |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Bangladesh : Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Bangladesh, How Likely and What Will it Take to Reduce Poverty, Child Mortality and Malnutrition, Gender Disparities, and to Increase School Enrollment and Completion? |
title_short |
Bangladesh : Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Bangladesh, How Likely and What Will it Take to Reduce Poverty, Child Mortality and Malnutrition, Gender Disparities, and to Increase School Enrollment and Completion? |
title_full |
Bangladesh : Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Bangladesh, How Likely and What Will it Take to Reduce Poverty, Child Mortality and Malnutrition, Gender Disparities, and to Increase School Enrollment and Completion? |
title_fullStr |
Bangladesh : Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Bangladesh, How Likely and What Will it Take to Reduce Poverty, Child Mortality and Malnutrition, Gender Disparities, and to Increase School Enrollment and Completion? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Bangladesh : Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Bangladesh, How Likely and What Will it Take to Reduce Poverty, Child Mortality and Malnutrition, Gender Disparities, and to Increase School Enrollment and Completion? |
title_sort |
bangladesh : attaining the millennium development goals in bangladesh, how likely and what will it take to reduce poverty, child mortality and malnutrition, gender disparities, and to increase school enrollment and completion? |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/06/6045400/bangladesh-attaining-millennium-development-goals-bangladesh-likely-take-reduce-poverty-child-mortality-malnutrition-gender-disparities-increase-school-enrollment-completion http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8627 |
_version_ |
1764405117041246208 |
spelling |
okr-10986-86272021-04-23T14:02:39Z Bangladesh : Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Bangladesh, How Likely and What Will it Take to Reduce Poverty, Child Mortality and Malnutrition, Gender Disparities, and to Increase School Enrollment and Completion? World Bank AGED ANNUAL RATE ANTENATAL CARE CAPITA GROWTH CHILD IMMUNIZATION CHILD IMMUNIZATION RATES CHILD MALNUTRITION CHILD MORTALITY CHILD MORTALITY RATES CHILD NUTRITION CONSUMPTION INEQUALITY CONSUMPTION POVERTY DATA QUALITY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY ECONOMIC GROWTH EDUCATION EDUCATION SERVICES ENROLLMENT ENROLMENT RATE ENROLMENT RATES ESSENTIAL DRUGS EXPENDITURE SURVEY EXPENDITURES FAMILY PLANNING GENDER DISPARITIES GENDER DISPARITY GENDER PARITY GEOGRAPHICAL AREA GIRLS GROWTH INCIDENCE GROWTH RATE HEADCOUNT RATIO HEALTH HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SURVEY HOUSEHOLD DATA HOUSEHOLD HEAD HOUSEHOLD INCOME HOUSEHOLD LIVING STANDARDS HOUSEHOLD SIZE HOUSEHOLD SURVEY HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IMMUNIZATION INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATES INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INTERVENTION LITERACY LIVE BIRTHS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MALNUTRITION MALNUTRITION RATES MANAGEMENT CAPACITY MATERNAL MORTALITY MCH MEAN CONSUMPTION MEASLES METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES MORTALITY MORTALITY RATES MOTIVATION MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS NATIONAL INCOME NATIONAL POVERTY NATIONAL POVERTY LINES NATURAL RESOURCES NET ENROLLMENT OLD CHILDREN OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN PARENTS POPULATION GROWTH POVERTY ALLEVIATION POVERTY HEADCOUNT POVERTY REDUCTION PRIMARY EDUCATION PRIMARY ENROLLMENT RATE PRIMARY SCHOOL PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENT PRIMARY SCHOOLING PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC INTERVENTIONS PUBLIC POLICY PUBLIC SERVICES QUALITATIVE VARIABLES REDUCING POVERTY REGIONAL DISPARITIES RURAL AREAS RURAL WOMEN SAFETY SANITATION SECONDARY SCHOOLS SERVICE DELIVERY SEVERE CHILD MALNUTRITION SOCIAL INDICATORS SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL SECTORS SOCIAL SERVICES SPATIAL VARIATIONS STATISTICAL ANALYSIS STUNTING TEACHER RECRUITMENT TEACHERS TETANUS TEXTBOOKS UNDERWEIGHT CHILDREN UNDERWEIGHT RATES UNIVERSAL PRIMARY EDUCATION URBAN AREAS VACCINATION VOLUNTARY SECTOR WORKERS This report focuses on the attainment of five major human development-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in Bangladesh - consumption poverty, infant and under-five mortality, child malnutrition, schooling enrollment and completion, gender disparities in schooling. The report stipulates that of these MDGs, Bangladesh has already attained (or nearly attained) the goal relating to elimination of gender disparity in schooling opportunities. Bangladesh is the only country in South Asia (other than Sri Lanka) to have achieved parity in male and female enrollments, not just at the primary level, but also at the secondary level. The analysis in this report suggests that attainment of two other MDGs - in particular, the reduction of consumption-poverty and under-five mortality - is also feasible with a combination of interventions, including sector-specific interventions (such as expanding immunization coverage and reducing pupil-teacher ratios), economic growth, improved coverage of infrastructure, and social safety-net programs (such as the District Education Stipends Program, and the Vulnerable Group Development programs). However, it will be challenging for Bangladesh to attain the child malnutrition-related MDG, as well as the education MDGs relating to universal net primary enrollment, and primary completion. A factor that is likely to be important in explaining Bangladesh's relative success in attaining positive social outcomes is the work of its nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Bangladesh may well be the world's leader in using NGOs as vehicles of development. Yet another factor in explaining the country's success, especially its ability to eliminate gender disparity in enrollment, even at the secondary level, is the use of targeted public interventions, such as the Female Secondary School Stipend Program (FSSS). However, there are problems in attaining the MDGs, i.e., very large regional disparities, and, the problem of governance - in particular, poor service delivery. The report notes there is evidence of significant synergies among the different MDGs, i.e., a reduction in the proportion of underweight children is strongly associated with a reduction of child mortality. At the same, it needs to be realized that the different MDGs are not necessarily internally consistent. For instance, simultaneous attainment of the poverty and child malnutrition MDGs by Bangladesh would result in 30 percent of the population being poor, but 34 percent of the children being underweight. This inconsistency indicates a problem in the manner in which poverty and/or underweight thresholds are established. But the importance of systematically monitoring MDGs outcomes at disaggregated levels, and evaluating the impact of public programs cannot be overemphasized. 2012-06-21T14:36:57Z 2012-06-21T14:36:57Z 2005-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/06/6045400/bangladesh-attaining-millennium-development-goals-bangladesh-likely-take-reduce-poverty-child-mortality-malnutrition-gender-disparities-increase-school-enrollment-completion http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8627 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Social Analysis Economic & Sector Work South Asia Asia South Asia Bangladesh |