UNDER-FIVE MORTALITY REDUCTION IN BANGLADESH

Context

Key Points

  • Bangladesh has benefitted from a rise in access to family planning and declining fertility rates, along with women's empowerment initiatives such as the Female Secondary School Stipend Project and microcredit lending programs.


  • In-country research organizations have generated statistical evidence to inform decision-making, while other professional bodies have played a key role in developing interventions.

  • Improvements in the economy and in the transportation and road system have further enabled improvements in under-five health.

Geography and History

Bangladesh is a predominantly low-lying riverine country in the Ganges River delta on the Bay of Bengal. Bordered by India to the north, west, and east, it also shares a border with Myanmar to the southeast.

Within these borders is one of the most densely populated countries on Earth, with 1,070 people per square kilometer. Somewhat counter intuitively, Bangladesh is also categorized as a highly rural country, in the sense that a large proportion of its people (77 percent) live outside its cities.,,  

The population has grown rapidly over time, more than doubling from 70 million in 1975 to 156 million in 2015 – more people than live in Russia or Japan, which is astonishing when one realizes that Bangladesh occupies a physical area slightly smaller than its regional neighbor Nepal, which has only about one-fifth of Bangladesh’s population.

Bengalis are overwhelmingly the main ethnic group in Bangladesh, accounting for more than 98 percent of the national population. About nine in ten Bangladeshis are Muslim, with Hindus constituting almost all of the remainder. The country has two official languages – Bangla/Bengali and English – though nearly 40 others are spoken in various parts of the country, including Sylheti, Rangpuri, Chittagonian, and Chakma.

In 1947, British rule in the subcontinent came to an end, and India was partitioned to create a new independent country, Pakistan. At the time, the country consisted of two Muslim-majority areas. One bordered India to the northwest (West Pakistan), the other to the northeast (East Pakistan).

The geographical and cultural distances between Pakistan’s two halves made their union untenable. In the spring of 1971, East Pakistan and West Pakistan went to war. By the end of that year, a victorious East Pakistan declared its independence and its new name – Bangladesh.

Within a mere three years, the fledgling country suffered one of the most devastating famines in modern history. The 1974 crisis, variously attributed to flooding, grain mismanagement, and the aftereffects of war, killed an estimated 1.5 million people.

Bangladesh also had to contend with regional strife. In the southeastern Chittagong Hill Tracts, the Chakma and Jumma ethnic groups had suffered displacement as a result of ongoing government projects within their area.

Between 1977 and 1997, the United People’s Party of the Chittagong Hill Tracts and its armed wing Shanti Bahini waged war on the government of Bangladesh. During the case study period, ongoing political unrest occasionally affected efforts to reduce mortality among children under age five (under-five mortality or U5M).

Economy

Beginning soon after independence, Bangladesh introduced socialist economic policies that involved the nationalization of much of its manufacturing and agricultural sector. These policies resulted in economic hardships within the country and by the mid-1970s, a new regime began moving away from socialist policies. These reform measures resulted in economic growth throughout the 1990s and were enacted with support from the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.,

Bangladesh’s gross domestic product (GDP) per capita maintained an upward trend from $1,642 in 2000 to $3,524 in 2017 (PPP, 2011 Constant International $). Despite these increases, Bangladesh’s GDP per capita remained below the South Asian average, as well as below those of its regional neighbors India and Myanmar.

Bangladesh's GDP per capita, compared to its neighbors