Information Technology in Bangladesh

Analysis: IT Strengths and Weaknesses


STRENGTHS WEAKNESSES
There is a substantial number (actuals not given) of educated unemployed youth force, with the ability to read and write.  Hartals (non unionized labor disputes) occur on a regular basis that prevent people from working, or even leaving their homes
IT professionals are going to other countries, thus promoting Bangladesh's IT capabilities Bangladesh really need IT professionals in the country, to develop the IT landscape within the country.
Universities are increasing the number of graduates in computer related fields These numbers are not at the governments required minimum
For attracting foreign IT investment there are tax and tariff holidays Bribes and other start-up costs are huge
Hardware platforms necessary for IT development are available Bangladesh lacks the money to purchase large amounts 
IT (programing) is a very labor intensive task; Bangladesh is highly populated Only 50-60% of the people are literate, and programing requires literacy 
Profits from international IT companies can be repatriated, provided the necessary paperwork and procedures were done correctly In a highly corrupt and unorganized country like Bangladesh, this task of translation can be very time, money, and patience consuming
Over 4 million telephone subscribers.  That's only 3% of the population! The most people are incredibly poor.  Costs to build probably outweigh the benefits of attacking the untapped market.
Non profit organizations (WB, ADB) are donating money to companies that pose bids for improving the infrastructure It takes a lot of work. 
New IT industries, like cellular and high speed services are unregulated because the technology is beyond government know-how to regulate Privatization of current IT industries (like telecom) is at a standstill
The demand for computers and peripherals is booming at 20% Little hardware is manufactured in bangladesh, thus there are heavy transportation costs for new equipment
ISPs are forming at a incredible rate None provide secure browsers for e-commerce, and many servers have connection or other problems 
The government is pushing software development by issuing reports, hosting trade shows and anti piracy campaigns, and posting virus warnings Piracy is a big issue and viruses run rampant. People don't protect their computers.  Not even the computer retailers!
The government is re-writing their piracy laws Paper changes do not always cause people to change



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Last updated December 18, 1999 by Anjali Phukan