Clicky
National, Back Page

$300m loan to Bangladesh to boost rural economy


Bangladeshpost
Published : 29 Jun 2021 09:37 PM | Updated : 30 Jun 2021 01:29 AM

The World Bank has provided $300 million loan to Bangladesh  to help about 750,000 poor and extreme poor rural people of 20 districts come out of poverty and build resilience to the COVID-19 pandemic and any future shocks.

The government of Bangladesh and the World Bank on Sunday signed a $300 million financing agreement in this regard.

The agreement was signed by Fatima Yasmin and Mercy Tembon on behalf of the government and World Bank, respectively.

The credit from the World Bank’s International Development Association, has a 30-year term, including a five-year grace period.

Through income-generating activities, livelihood and entrepreneurial support, as well as skills development for the poor and extreme poor people, the Resilience, Entrepreneurship and Livelihood Improvement (RELI) Project will help boost the rural economy in about 3,200 villages.

Built on the success of the first and second Social Investment Program Projects and on the Nuton Jibon Livelihood Improvement Project, the RELI project will mobilise, develop, and strengthen community organisations, and finance their community plans provide cash transfers and loans for income-generating activities.

Mercy Tembon, World Bank Country Director for Bangladesh and Bhutan, said, “The COVID-19 pandemic has negatively impacted the poor in rural areas particularly women, by limiting their income and economic opportunities.”

She said, “This project will help boost the rural economy. 90 percent of the beneficiaries will be women. The project will also help raise health and nutritional awareness. When a woman earns more, her family and the community are better off.”

Further, the project will support rural entrepreneurs and producer groups with market linkages  including e-commerce platforms, partnerships with local governments, and promotional activities.

It will also provide skills development training to the unemployed or under-employed youth and returnee migrants to increase their employability.

Fatima Yasmin, Secretary, Economic Relations Division, Government of Bangladesh, said, “The project is aligned with the 8th Five-Year Plan and the Bangladesh Delta Plan 2100.”

She said, “Through community mobilisation and climate-smart agriculture practices, the project will help rural women withstand any future shocks like the pandemic without falling back to poverty.”

The project will provide training to almost 490,000 people on climate risk, adaptation, and resilience building. It will also build 5,120 climate-resilient small-scale infrastructures.