Bangladesh India Comparison

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    Reforms and Their Impact on Health and Education 73

    But how does India compare with the critics favourite countries

    Bangladesh and China? Table 5.1 provides vital statistics for thesecountries and India, as reported in the 2011 World Health

    Organization (WHO) publication.

    TABLE 5.1: SELECTED INDICATORS: BANGLADESH,

    CHINA AND INDIA, 2009

    Health Indicator India China Bangladesh

    Per capita income, 2009 (current dollars) 1192 3744 551

    Life expectancy at birth in 2009 (years) 65 74 65

    Stillbirth rate (per 1000 total births) 22 10 36

    Infant mortality, 2009 (per 1000 live births) 50 17 41

    Maternal mortality, 2008 230 38 340

    (per 100,000 live births)

    Death from malaria, 2008 1.9 0 1.8

    (per 100,000 population)

    Per cent children stunted, 2000-09 47.9 11.7 43.2

    Per cent children underweight, 2000-09 43.5 4.5 41.3

    Source: WDI of the World Bank for per capita GDP and World Health Organization(2011) for the remaining indicators.

    Take Bangladesh first. Without discounting its achievements, wemust deflate them relative to those of India, refuting the

    unwarranted encomiums for Bangladesh and the exaggerated

    criticisms directed at India.

    The performance of Bangladesh relative to that of India in terms

    of health indicators is significantly more equivocal than has been

    reported by the critics. India and Bangladesh enjoy the same life

    expectancy at birth. Bangladesh has a lower infant mortality rate

    than India (41 per 1000 live births against the latters 50) but its rate

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    74 Indias Tryst with Destiny

    of stillbirth more than offsets the difference (36 per 1000 births

    against Indias 22): an inconvenient fact that almost all observersemphasizing the lower infant mortality in Bangladesh ignore.2 The

    maternal mortality rate in Bangladesh is, in fact, much higher than

    in India. Mortality due to malaria is almost similar while Bangladesh

    edges out India only marginally on nutrition indicators.

    In comparing Bangladesh and India, we must also take into

    account history. According to the United Nations (World

    Population Prospects, the 2010 revision), life expectancy in

    Bangladesh during 1950-55 was forty-five years compared to just

    thirty-eight years in India. The 1971 war led to a major dip in most

    health indicators of Bangladesh but they recovered in the following

    decades. At least some of the accelerated progress Bangladesh has

    achieved during the 1980s and beyond is therefore to be attributed

    to its return to the initial conditions.

    This point is reinforced when we compare Bangladesh to West

    Bengal, with which it has a shared history and geography. Not onlyare the two entities located in the same region; they were once part

    of the same larger state in pre-independence India. It turns out that

    West Bengal outperforms Bangladesh in terms of health indicators.

    During 2002-06, it enjoyed a life expectancy at birth equalling

    sixty-five years. And its infant mortality rate at 33 per 1000 live

    births in 2009 and maternal mortality of 141 during 2004-06 were

    considerably lower than the corresponding rates reported for

    Bangladesh in Table 5.1.3

    2. For example, see the recent attack by Dreze and Sen (2011) on the health

    achievements of India as compared to Bangladesh and other South Asian

    countries.

    3. We may also add that in terms of the United Nations Human Development

    Index (HDI), India ranks ahead of Bangladesh by ten places. It may be

    recalled in this context that it was Amartya Sen, a leading proponent of the

    (Contd.)

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    Reforms and Their Impact on Health and Education 75

    Turn next to the India-China comparison. Some critics of Indian

    performance on health argue that despite acceleration in growthsince the 1980s, India has done poorly relative to China in improving

    its health indicators. Such assertions are misleading for at least two

    reasons. First, growth in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s has been

    much faster in China than in India.4 And second, like Bangladesh,

    China has enjoyed a historical advantage over India. For example,

    China had already gained much of its lead over India in life

    expectancy by the early 1970s (See Figure 5.2).

    Indeed, the gap in life expectancy between China and India has

    steadily declined in recent decades, falling from 13.2 years at its

    peak in 1971 to 9.3 years in 2009. It is ironic that Amartya Sen, who

    has been deploring India for its poor achievements in health vis--

    vis China, had himself made this point in 2005 stating, The gap

    between India and China has gone from fourteen years to seven

    (since 1979) because of (China) moving from a Canada-like system

    to a US- like system.

    5

    (contd.)

    view that Bangladesh has outdone India in terms of human development,

    who helped the United Nations Development Programme design the

    HDI. Oddly, as Panagariya (2011b) pointed out, Sen (2011) neglects to cite

    this statistic in his critique of India in relation to Bangladesh. Indeed, any

    references to the index remain conspicuously missing even from Dreze

    and Sen (2011), which was published well after Panagariya (2011b).4. It is odd that authors disparaging India often applaud Bangladesh for doing

    well in health outcomes despite its lower per capita income but gloss over

    the much larger per capita-income gap India suffers vis--vis China when

    they compare it to the latter.

    5. See An Annie Hall Moment: A Nobel Prize-winning economist spouts

    off, and a Chinese survivor sets him straight, originally published in The

    Wall Street Journal, 21 February 2005, and available at http://www.parrikar.org/

    misc/amartya-wsj.pdf (accessed on 3 March 2012). According to the report,

    speaking in Hong Kong, Sen had argued that while China had made great

    (Contd.)

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    76 Indias Tryst with Destiny

    FIGURE 5.2: LIFE EXPECTANCY IN INDIA AND CHINA,

    1960-2009

    Source: Based on the data from World Development Indicators of the World Bank.

    (contd.)

    strides in medicine during the Cultural Revolution, the move to a privatized

    system in recent years had made the system less fair and efficient. It sohappened, however, that the audience included a Hong Kong banker,

    Weijian Shan, who had lived through the Cultural Revolution and had

    been one of Maos barefoot doctors. The report notes that Shan was

    surprised by Sens comments and went on to state to the audience, I

    observed with my own eyes the total absence of medicine in some parts of

    China. The system was totally unsustainable. We used to admire India. He

    added that when he observed medical school graduates in Taiwan serving

    in the countryside in the 1980s during a visit there, he thought, China

    ought to copy Taiwan. Shan further stated that had Maos medicine system

    been made optional, nobody would have opted for it.

    Life expectancy at birth in years