Bangladesh is a notable out-performer. It ranks lower than India, as it has always done, but it has been moving up the scale faster and has left Pakistan well behind. Indeed, Pakistan is the problem country in South Asia. It barely makes it to the “medium” category, and is ranked a step below Nepal though that country has only half its per capita income. Pakistan is also stuck with a high population growth rate, which is about three times India’s, while its fertility rate is about 50 per cent higher. Unlike Bangladesh, which has overtaken India on the rate of capital formation (as a share of gross domestic product), Pakistan’s is half India’s level. With lower capital formation will come slower growth. And with population continuing to grow rapidly, per capita income in Pakistan is likely to become lower than that of Bangladesh for the first time. That would have been unthinkable in 1971, and for some decades after.
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