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     Plea to set up apparel, textile body  | 
  
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       April 2, 2000 Bangladesh
      Garments Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) on Saturday put
      forward a set of proposals including formation of a high powered Apparel
      and Textile Development Authority to look after the export oriented
      readymade garments sector (RMG).    The
      proposed authority would act as a strategic policy-planner and
      coordinating body to solve the critical problems of the industrial sector
      related to port, shipping, customs, civil aviation, labor, backward
      linkage industry and infrastructure. Possibly led by a Secretary, the
      authority would be turn under the Prime Minister's Secretariat.   The
      idea of such an authority, alongside taking of innovative steps, was
      mooted to face the challenges of the country's RMG sector which might be
      confronted with in the work of 2004, when Bangladesh would have to compete
      in a quota-free international market as per the rules of the World Trade
      Organization (WTO).   BGMEA
      President Anisur Rahman Sinha became explicit with his worries about the
      future of the sector and afterward some of the timely suggestions at a
      lunch offered in honor of Finance Minister Shah AMS Kibria at the Pan
      Pacific Sonargaon Hotel, Dhaka. Governor of the Bangladesh Bank Dr.
      Mohammad Farash Uddin, Chairman of National Board of Revenue Abdul Muyeed
      Chowdhury and high officials of the banking sector were among the guests.   "If
      the export market for the readymade garments is shifted somewhere else,
      hundreds of garment industries will face closure, leaving 1.5 million
      workers completely unemployed," Sinha said adding that the supportive
      industries would also be stagnant and closed in some cases. 
   Emphasizing
      on long-term policies to make RMG sector viable, the BGMEA leader pointed
      out that the country's foreign exchange earnings would come from three
      major sources - remittance, foreign aid and RMG which alone would
      contribute 75 per cent of the total. "Any damage to this sector will
      have a disastrous impact on the government's expenditure as well," he
      cautioned.  
   He
      called upon the garment owners to come forward with investment, including
      joint venture if needed, in setting up of backward linkage industries, and
      assured of necessary cooperation from the nationalized commercial banks (NCBs).
      He urged the authorities of the NCBs to devise syndication to finance the
      large projects.    The
      minister warned that private banks especially foreign ones would not
      expand unless they financed long-term local industrial projects side by
      side trade financing.   In
      his speech, Bangladesh Bank Governor Dr. Farash Uddin stressed the need
      for policy support and establishment of backward linkage industries for
      survival of the RMG sector. He also suggested that the garment owners
      should properly assess and increase value addition in RMG.   He
      strongly felt that the BGMEA should take long-term plans to ensure
      fundamental rights of the working people - food, good living conditions,
      healthcare and education - to increase their level of productivity.    The
      BGMEA chief proposed for accumulation of a fund amounting to 500 million
      US dollars for opening letter of credit (LC) on sight basis to save at
      least 200 million dollars that are now being paid for foreign exchange as
      interest of two billion dollars of the back-to-back LCs against export
      volume.   In
      response, Kibria expressed his readiness to consider accretion of the
      fund, saying if contribution was available from the BGMEA or other
      sources, the government could also provide with something in so doing.   About
      the functioning of the proposed Apparel and Textile Development Authority,
      the minister thought that initiatives like that required political
      leadership rather than bureaucratic one which he said would have
      traditional mindset. Besides, he said, the Prime Minister, who has had
      already a political support for the RMG sector, might not have scope to
      get involved in the process. "Yet this could be discussed."  
   The
      BGMEA leader further sought permission of the government through the
      Finance Minister to form an apex body of the exporters styled as
      Federation of Exporters Association of Bangladesh to promote the country's
      export.   Source
      : The Bangladesh Observer 
 
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