With a population growth of nearly 1.38%, Bangladesh will have 200 million inhabitants by 2050, which will lead to national challenges
It is not often that I have the opportunity to write about some specific short term relief program for Dhaka's transport problems that is
Dhaka—like other rapidly urbanising megacities in the tropics, is facing overwhelming demand for buildable land, which continues to
Electronic-governance (e-governance in short) involves the use of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) and its numerous
ICTs have dramatically changed service models in the last two decades. Many jobs have been made more efficient and less
Biotechnology is the application of any technology to biological systems and living organisms or derivatives to develop or make useful
Almost a year ago, Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) Chairman Sunil Kanti Bose made the comment that
Bangladesh has been experiencing a huge gap between supply and demand of electricity; 40% of the population still do not have access to electricity.
Economics is not a science. As much as those of us studying and practicing the discipline would like to place it in the same category as the hard, positivist sciences, the fact of the matter is that it simply isn't. Unlike the hard sciences, we cannot embark upon environmentally controlled experiments using humans as lab rats to find out the truth of a particular economic theory.
As 2016 begins, an historic contest is underway over competing development models – that is, strategies to promote economic growth – between China, on the one hand, and the US and other Western countries on the other. Although this contest has been largely hidden from public view, the outcome will determine the fate of much of Eurasia for decades to come.
Bangladesh is a country uniquely located in the world. Like a hem it geographically stiches three mega civilisations and three mega growth centres