DHAKA: The government of Bangladesh Monday signed two financing agreements totaling $535 million with the International Development Association (IDA), the World Bank’s concessional arm.
According to a press release, $410 million will be spending for the Municipal Governance and $125 million for the ongoing Services Project and Higher Education Quality Enhancement Project.
The Municipal Governance and Services Project aims to improve the municipal governance and basic urban services in the urban local bodies located along growth corridors from Dhaka towards Chittagong, Rangpur, Sylhet, and Mymensingh.
The project aims to benefit some 3.4 million people in municipalities across the country, of whom 45 percent will be women.
The project will build roads, water and sanitation systems, markets, bus terminals, and municipal services centers in these communities. Further, the project will strengthen the urban local bodies to able to undertake immediate response operations in times of major emergencies.
World Bank Country Director for Bangladesh Johanness Zutt said, “Bangladesh’s vision for becoming a middle income country is ambitious, but not impossible. To achieve this goal, it will need to boost its competitiveness and grow at an even faster pace than the last decade.”
He also said: “With nearly one-third of the population living in urban centers, they can become the engine of growth if local urban bodies are able to deliver essential services and make cities livable and if they have access to quality education that empowers them to lead productive lives.”
The additional financing to the ongoing Higher Education Quality Enhancement Project that started in 2009 will continue to support enhancement of quality and relevance of higher education. The project aims to introduce innovation, accountability and better research facilities in public and private universities.
The additional financing will continue to promote academic innovation through a competitive funding mechanism, known as the Academic Innovation Fund. The project has already awarded 194 academic innovation funds to 27 public and two private universities.
“The Sixth Five Year Plan (2011-15) has emphasized addressing service delivery deficiency in local urban bodies as well as creating a knowledge society by producing skilled tertiary education graduates,” said Mr. Mohammad Mejbahuddin, Secretary, Economic Relations Division, Government of Bangladesh.
“Both the projects will ultimately boost economic growth of the country,” he added.
Mohammad Mejbahuddin, Secretary, Economic Relations Division and Johannes Zutt, World Bank Country Director for Bangladesh and Nepal, signed on behalf of the Government of Bangladesh and the World Bank respectively at the External Relations Division.
The credit from the International Development Association (IDA), the World Bank’s concessional lending arm, has 40 years to maturity, including a 10-year grace period; and carries a service charge of 0.75 percent.
BDST: 1935 HRS, FEB 10, 2014