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Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy, Trade Policy in Bangladesh, India
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IBCIM economic corridor: facilitating sub-regional development
Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2017The Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Forum for Regional Cooperation’s (BCIM) Economic Corridor (EC) initiative, a complex entanglement between security, economic and national interest, exemplifies Foreign Secretary Jaishankar's statement.DocumentIndia and its Eastern neighbours: prospects for sub-regional cooperation
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015South Asia is the fastest growing region in the world. The combined economy of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) is the third largest in the world in terms of GDP (PPP), with US and China ahead. SAARC countries make up around 21 percent of the total world population with around 1.7 billion people.DocumentBCIM economic cooperation: prospects and challenges
Centre for Policy Dialogue, Bangladesh, 2007This study is an attempt to explore the potentials for expanding trade and investment under the ambit of sub-regional cooperation comprising four contiguous countries of Eastern South Asia, which includes the two fast growing economies – India and China, and the two developing economies – Bangladesh and Myanmar (BCIM).DocumentRecent developments in Myanmar: opportunities for sub-regional energy cooperation
Centre for Policy Dialogue, Bangladesh, 2014In the context of the political and economic changes that have marked Myanmar since 2010, this paper assesses the opportunities for sub-regional energy cooperation between four countries: Bangladesh, China, India and Myanmar, with Myanmar as a node.DocumentIndia & Bangladesh: bilateral trade- potential free trade agreement
World Bank Office, Dhaka, 2006India and Bangladesh have long shared common objectives for closer economic integration within the South Asia region and trade between the two countries has grown rapidly since the early 1990s. A free trade agreement (FTA) has been under consideration for some time. This report seeks to explore the implications of a bilateral FTA.DocumentTracking gender equity under economic reforms: continuity and change in South Asia
International Development Research Centre, 2003This book develops a new framework for gender analysis by demonstrating the importance of identifying the context of such analysis, and by highlighting the necessity of differentiating ‘gender’ per se from its various ‘indicators’.DocumentThe Uruguay Round and South Asia : an overview of the impact and opportunities
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1995South Asia remains less liberal in trade policy than East Asia, including China. The Uruguay Round's most dramatic effect on South Asia will be the removal of non tariff barriers on the region's exports to the rest of the world.DocumentSources of growth in South Asian economies
Global Development Network, 2000This paper extracts insights from cross-country analysis about the performance of individual South Asian countries and the region as a whole.
