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introduce

বাংলাদেশ দক্ষিণ এশিয়ার একটি জনবহুল রাষ্ট্র। বাংলাদেশের সাংবিধানিক নাম গণপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশ। ভূ-রাজনৈতিক ভাবে বাংলাদেশের পশ্চিম, উত্তর ও পূর্ব সীমান্তে ভারত, দক্ষিণ-পূর্ব সীমান্তে মায়ানমার ও দক্ষিণ উপকূলের দিকে বঙ্গোপসাগর অবস্থিত।  উইকিপিডিয়া রাজধানী :  ঢাকা ডায়ালিং কোড :  +৮৮০ প্রধানমন্ত্রী :  শেখ হাসিনা রাষ্ট্রপতি :  আব্দুল হামিদ জাতীয় সঙ্গীত :  আমার সোনার বাংলা জনসংখ্যা :  ১৬৩ মিলিয়ন (২০১৬)   World Bank we are Bangladeshe . Education Bangladesh has made remarkable gains in ensuring access to education in the past two decades. In 2015, the country’s net enrollment rate at the primary school level reached above 90 percent, and that at secondary school level, around 62 percent. With nearly 6.4 million girls in secondary school in 2015, Bangladesh is among the few countries to achieve gender parity in school enrollment, and has more girls than boys in secondary schools. However, the count...

introduce

বাংলাদেশ দক্ষিণ এশিয়ার একটি জনবহুল রাষ্ট্র। বাংলাদেশের সাংবিধানিক নাম গণপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশ। ভূ-রাজনৈতিক ভাবে বাংলাদেশের পশ্চিম, উত্তর ও পূর্ব সীমান্তে ভারত, দক্ষিণ-পূর্ব সীমান্তে মায়ানমার ও দক্ষিণ উপকূলের দিকে বঙ্গোপসাগর অবস্থিত। উইকিপিডিয়া
জনসংখ্যা১৬৩ মিলিয়ন (২০১৬) World Bank
we are Bangladeshe .Education
Bangladesh has made remarkable gains in ensuring access to education in the past two decades. In 2015, the country’s net enrollment rate at the primary school level reached above 90 percent, and that at secondary school level, around 62 percent. With nearly 6.4 million girls in secondary school in 2015, Bangladesh is among the few countries to achieve gender parity in school enrollment, and has more girls than boys in secondary schools. However, the country still faces the challenges of equitable access and quality of education. Government spending on education is only around two percent of the GDP, one of the lowest among countries at similar levels of development.
IDA is the largest external funder in the education sector covering the primary, secondary, and tertiary levels, as well as technical training and vocational training, and education for the hard to reach children. The World Bank recently completed an Education Sector Review, which recommends medium terms policy measures in the areas of equity, education quality and skills development.
Health
Bangladesh achieved a number of MDG targets for health, nutrition and population outcomes. Child and maternal mortality, as well as fertility rates, have continued to decrease over the past decade, although progress on child undernutrition has been slower. Bangladesh has embraced the SDGs, including SDG 3, encompassing universal health coverage. The country faces several challenges. First, the country needs to address important financing, governance, and system management gaps for effective use of the increased public spending on health. Second, there are significant parts of the MDG agenda that remain unfinished. While many service utilization indicators, such as immunization coverage, have reached high levels, it is necessary to maintain those gains, achieve still higher coverage, improve quality, and reduce socio-economic and geographic inequalities. Third, the country needs to address emerging health challenges arising from non-communicable diseases, urbanization and climate change [RSP1] as well as adolescent health.
The World Bank is supporting Bangladesh in aligning financing and technical support to meet these challenges. The Bank supports the government’s fourth Health Nutrition Population (HNP)[RSP2]  sector program for the period 2017-22, helping strengthen health system governance, management and service delivery capacities, implement an essential services package, and a focus on lagging regions, in particular Sylhet and Chittagong Divisions               Agriculture
Despite high population density, decreasing arable land, and frequent natural disasters, Bangladesh has made remarkable progress in achieving food security. While having one of the fastest rates of agriculture productivity growth in the world since 1995 (2.7 percent per year and second only to China), this self-sufficiency is continuously threatened by a decrease of arable land by at least one percent per year, an increasing population and stagnating yields.
The World Bank is helping over 1 million rural households modernize farm practices and use new technologies and about 500,000 households increase grain reserve to meet their post-disaster needs, and the country improve the efficiency of grain storage management.
Climate Change
Bangladesh’s geographical position renders it especially vulnerable to the adverse impacts of climate change. The 2014 Climate Change Vulnerability Index ranks Bangladesh as the number one economy at risk to climate change. The vicious circle of natural disaster and poverty, whereby each new calamity risks poor becoming poorer and slows development, is a major challenge to poverty reduction efforts in Bangladesh.
The World Bank helped Bangladesh address climate change impacts and disaster risk management.  The country has built stronger disaster-coping mechanisms, and these have significantly reduced the impact of recent storms, cyclones, and floods in terms of numbers of deaths and economic losses.
IDA has an ongoing portfolio of $1.5 billion supporting Bangladesh to build resilience against natural disasters and climate change impacts. So far, 240 new cyclone shelters have been constructed; 387 km of embankment has been repaired; 501 solar irrigation pumps have been installed; 17,500 hectares of  block plantations and 2,000 km of strip plantations have been completed in climate vulnerable areas; 40,000 people residing in saline, flood and drought prone areas have received adaptive basic needs (house, water, agriculture, health) and livelihood support; about 6,000 poor and forest dependent households in 200 communities have participated in the alternative livelihoods support programs.
Local governance
Local government institutions in Bangladesh traditionally had a limited role in delivering services to their citizens due to limited responsibilities coupled with lack of adequate resources. Most government services have often been delivered in a top-down manner, with little accountability to local communities.  Over the past decade, the World Bank has been supporting the government’s move towards a stronger and more accountable local governance system.
Since 2006, IDA has been supporting a nationwide program that augments the government’s block grants provided to all 4,504 Union Parishads (the lowest tier of elected local government).  The block grant enables Union Parishads to decide and spend on local priorities. Since 2006, the discretionary funds that a Union Parishad receives annually has grown by more than ten-fold and has benefitted 130 million people. Female members are managing 30 percent of the funds. More than 35,000 community schemes generating employment for poor people have been implemented, including construction or rehabilitation of rural roads, culverts, drainage and embankment systems; water and sanitation facilities; and schools and clinics. Under the ongoing third project, IDA is assisting to institutionalize the block grants with the government’s own resources and supporting a pilot for an urban fiscal transfer system in 16 municipalities.
Last Updated: Apr 05, 2018
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