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India to surpass China as most-populous nation in 2023
India is expected to surpass China to become the world’s most-populous nation in 2023, four years ahead of an earlier estimate by the United Nations. The UN expects global population to hit 8 billion on Nov. 15 and grow to 8.5 billion by 2030. More than half the projected rise between now and 2050 is expected to be in just eight countries: Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines and Tanzania, according to a report titled World Population Prospects 2022. China is expected to experience an absolute decline in its population as early as next year, the report said. A Chinese official had earlier this year estimated that the country’s population may peak as early as 2022 as its population of 1.41 billion grew at the slowest pace since the 1950s, according to government data. An earlier report projected India surpassing China by 2027. Lower mortality rates and demographic changes may ensure that central and southern Asia become the world’s most-populous region by 2037. Numbers in sub-Saharan Africa may almost double by late 2040s to cross 2 billion. Population growth rates in Europe and Northern America were almost zero in 2020 and 2021, data show.   The global population is expected to grow to 9.7 billion in 2050 and 10.4 billion in 2100, lower than the UN’s 2019 estimate of 11 billion. In India, the total fertility rate may decline to 1.29 births per woman by 2100 instead of the UN’s earlier estimate of 1.69 births, according the report, which cites data from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. Women and men are expected to be equal in numbers by 2050 as the current global count of 49.7% women compared to 50.3% men is expected to be inverted, the report said. Sustained high fertility and rapid population growth present challenges to achieving sustainable development, it said. Source: The Economic Times
12 Jul 2022,21:40

Indian economy is set to surpass Japan as Asia’s second largest by 2030
India is set to regain its position as the world’s fastest growing major economy in the current fiscal ending March 31, 2022, and is likely to overtake Japan as Asia’s second-largest economy by 2030 when the country’s GDP is projected to surpass that of Germany and the UK to rank as the world’s No.3.   The size of the Indian economy, based on current prices in dollar terms, is estimated to be $3.1 trillion. It is currently the sixth-largest in the world, behind the US, China, Japan, Germany and the UK.   According to the first official estimate released by the Statistics Ministry, India’s gross domestic product will grow 9.2 per cent in the current fiscal year, the fastest since 1988-89, helped by a robust farm sector and strengthening recovery in manufacturing, construction and services sector. The third Covid wave may hurt expansion in the months ahead.   The latest growth projection is slightly slower than a 9.5 per cent expansion forecast by the Reserve Bank of India and leading economists.   “Overall, India is expected to continue to be one of the world’s fastest-growing economies over the next decade,” it said.   According to the World Bank, India’s GDP in current dollar terms had risen to $2.9 trillion in 2019 before falling to $2.7 trillion in 2020 due to Covid impact.   The long-term outlook for the Indian economy is supported by a number of key growth drivers.   “An important positive factor for India is its large and fast-growing middle class, which is helping to drive consumer spending,” IHS Markit said, forecasting that the country’s consumption expenditure will double from $1.5 trillion in 2020 to $3 trillion by 2030.   “India’s nominal GDP... is forecast to rise from $2.7 trillion in 2021 to $8.4 trillion by 2030,” IHS Markit said. “This rapid pace of economic expansion would result in the size of Indian GDP exceeding Japanese GDP by 2030, making India the second-largest economy in the Asia-Pacific region.”   For the full fiscal year 2021-22, India’s real GDP growth rate is projected to be 8.2 per cent, rebounding from the severe contraction of 7.3 per cent year-on-year in 2020-21, IHS Markit said. In the 2022-23 fiscal year, the Indian economy is forecast to continue growing strongly at a pace of 6.7 per cent. Analysts at HSBC Holdings said new restrictions in India due to rising Covid-19 cases could lower the nation’s economic growth by about a quarter of a percentage point in the current fiscal year.   “Economic cost will be there, but hopefully it will just be about a third or lower than the economic cost of previous waves,” HSBC economist Pranjul Bhandari said.   Meanwhile, foreign investors have turned net buyers in the first week of January by infusing Rs32.02 billion in Indian equities after three months of selling spree as corrections in markets provided them a good buying opportunity. Going forward, FPIs flows will remain volatile on the expectation of the US Fed rate hike, rising concerns over the Omicron variant and elevated inflation levels, experts said.   The latest inflow came after witnessing a net outflow of Rs385.21 billion during October-December 2021. Before that, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) had made a net investment of Rs 131.54 billion in September last year.   According to data available with the depositories, FPIs have infused a net sum of Rs32.02 billion in the Indian equities during January 3-7. Source: KHALEEJ TIMES
12 Jan 2022,18:29

Coronavirus: Bangladesh reports 54 deaths as cases surpass 3 lakh
Bangladesh on Wednesday reported 54 deaths, the highest number of fatalities this month, as the country’s confirmed cases shot past 300,000 mark. The country currently has 3,02,147 confirmed cases after the health authorities announced detection of 2,519 new patients in the last 24 hours. Bangladesh’s death tally stands at 4,082 with a mortality rate of 1.35 percent, the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) said in a press release. The country reported its first cases on March 8 and the first death on March 18. DGHS said 14,85,261 tests have so far been carried out – 15,070 of them in the last 24 hours. The overall infection rate is 20.34 percent. People above 60 at high risk The recovery rate is 62.94 percent in Bangladesh. DGHS said 3,427 patients have recovered, taking the total number of recoveries to 1,90,183 on Wednesday.  Currently, there are 1,07,882 active cases of Covid-19 in Bangladesh — the 15th worst-hit country ahead of Pakistan.  According to DGHS, 2,003 of the deceased aged above 60 years, 1,129 aged between 51 and 60, and 547 aged between 41 and 50 years. The death rate is comparatively low in other age brackets.  Of the victims, 1,968 have died in Dhaka division, 898 in Chattogram, 276 in Rajshahi, 335 in Khulna, 159 in Barishal, 186 in Sylhet, 171 in Rangpur and 89 Mymensingh. Currently, 20,287 people are in isolation across the country and 52,705 are quarantined.  ‘Reinfection chances slim’ The number of globally confirmed coronavirus cases neared 24 million on Wednesday, according to the latest tally from Johns Hopkins University (JHU). Besides, over 819,554 fatalities have been recorded. United States has recorded 5,779,028 infections and 178,518 deaths so far – the highest for any country. Meanwhile, after reports in Hong Kong that a man had contracted new coronavirus for a second time after an interval of more than four months, the UN health agency said the possibility of reinfection is slim. Covid-19 reinfection seems not to be a ‘regular event’, says UN health agency on Tuesday. Speaking to journalists in Geneva, World Health Organization (WHO) spokesperson Dr Margaret Harris addressed concerns that the development could herald a new alert. “The important thing to note is the numbers are very, very small,” she said. Source: UNB Read In Bangla Version AH
26 Aug 2020,21:35

Bangladesh’s confirmed coronavirus cases surpass 2.6 lakh
Bangladesh’s officially confirmed coronavirus cases went up to 260,507 with the detection of 2,907 new patients in 24 hours until Monday. The death tally rose to 3,438 with 39 new deaths, announced Dr Nasima Sultana, Additional Director General of the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS), at a regular online briefing. Of the victims, 79.14 percent are men and 20.86 percent are women.  Bangladesh’s fatality rate stands at 1.3 percent while the recovery rate is 57.7 percent. The country reported its first cases on March 8 and the first death on March 18. Labs around the country have conducted 12,73,168 tests so far – including 12,849 new tests – and found 20.46 percent of the samples to be positive. Nasima said 2,067 more patients have recovered, bringing the total recoveries to 150,437. The latest fatalities include a child below the age of 10. Twenty-three of the victims are aged between 51 and 70 years. Twelve of the victims died in Dhaka, six in Khulna, seven in Chattogram, eight in Rajshahi three in Mymensingh, one in Rangpur and two in Barishal division. ‘Precautions only way to tackle coronavirus’ Coronavirus cases were first reported in China in December last year. In March, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared it a pandemic. There are now over 19.7 million confirmed COVID-19 cases globally, with more than 729,000 fatalities and 12 million recoveries, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The United States currently has the highest number of confirmed cases (5,044,864) and deaths (162,938). Brazil is the second worst-hit country with 3,035,422 cases and 101,049 deaths. Neighbouring India has the third-highest number of coronavirus cases (2,215,074) and fifth-highest death toll (44,386), according to JHU. Bangladesh has been recording a high number of cases in recent weeks and many fear that the number will increase if more tests are conducted. The government has requested the people to properly follow the health guidelines but the people are hardly paying any heed. Masks, which helps reduce the transmission of the virus, are not worn by everyone and people hardly maintain rules of physical distancing. DGHS official Nasima reiterated that taking precautions is the only way to tackle Covid-19 for now and urged everyone to follow the hygiene rules. Source: UNB AH
10 Aug 2020,17:28

India Covid-19 cases surpass one million
India has registered one million coronavirus cases, the third highest after the US and Brazil, according to report of the Health Ministry on Friday.   In the last 24 hours, the country has reported 34,956 new cases, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 1,003,832.   The surge in Covid-19 cases is also prompting concerns about the country's readiness to confront an inevitable surge that could overwhelm hospitals and test India’s feeble health care system.   The Health Ministry also reported a record number of 687 deaths for a total of 25,602 and noted that the recovery rate was continuing to improve at 63 percent.   The grim milestone comes at a time when several Indian states are imposing focused lockdowns to stem the outbreak amid frantic efforts by local governments to protect the economy.   So far, three states — Maharashtra, Delhi and Tamil Nadu — have accounted for more than half of total cases. But in India’s vast countryside, which is much less prepared and with weaker health care facilities, the pandemic is clearly growing.   “The acceleration in cases remains the main challenge for India in the coming days,” said Dr Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, adding that a vast majority of cases were still being missed.   The continuing surge has forced authorities to reinstate lockdowns in some cities and states.   In Bangalore, a city that prides itself as the centre of Indian technology innovation, the government ordered a weeklong lockdown that began Tuesday evening after the cases surged exponentially.   In Bihar, an eastern state with a population of 128 million and a fragile health system, a two-week lockdown was announced Thursday.   In Uttar Pradesh, the most populous state with more than 200 million people, authorities have started placing residents under strict weekend curfews, which will remain in place until the end of July.   Other local governments are increasingly focusing on smaller lockdowns that shield the economy. Nearly a dozen states have imposed restrictions on “containment zones” — areas that can be as small as a few houses or a street.   Dr Anant Bhan, a global health researcher, said that India was likely to see “a series of peaks,” as the infection spread in rural areas. He pointed out that New Delhi and the financial capital, Mumbai had already seen surges, while infections have now shifted to smaller cities.   India’s response to the virus was initially sluggish and then it bought time by locking down its entire population of 1.4 billion people when Prime Minister Narendra Modi imposed a nationwide lockdown for three weeks on March 24.   “If (the) situation is not handled in these 21 days, the country and your family could go back 21 years,” Modi said then in a televised address to Indians, many of whom were still unaware of the scale of the crisis in the country.   The nationwide lockdown, then extended for five more weeks, came at an enormous economic cost amid an unprecedented humanitarian crisis when millions of impoverished migrant workers were forced to return to the countryside due to job losses and hunger.   Aimed at increasing the capacity of the health care system, the lockdown slowed down the virus, but it wasn't enough. Cases kept increasing while testing still remained abysmally low and the virus rocketed through India’s vast landscape.   “Slowdown isn’t eradication,” said Jayaprakash Muliyil, an epidemiologist at the Christian Medical College in Vellore.   Muliyil said that India had to try and slow down the virus because it didn’t have enough beds but was only partly successful since the “requirement was quite large.” 'Doing things that'll work'   India’s public health care system is one of the most chronically underfunded in the world and access to hospitals in rural areas is very low. Experts say the challenge for India will be to tightrope the opening up of the economy while trying to restrict the increase in cases to manageable levels that don’t overwhelm hospitals.   “India’s strategy going forward will revolve around containment zones,” said Rajesh Bhushan of India’s federal Health Ministry. Once more zones are mapped out, health care workers will go from house to house and test those with symptoms, he said.   Experts say low testing remains a concern. Dr Ujjwal Parakh, a senior consultant at the department of respiratory medicine at Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi, said authorities could have been more transparent about testing guidelines.   Initially, India had some of the world’s most stringent testing criteria and used only about a third of its testing capacity. After months of sluggishness, it has now ramped up testing, from a single lab in January to over 1,200. Over 300,000 samples are being tested every day. In some cities, it has also allowed tests without a doctor’s prescription. “The battle plan is to do all the things we know work. Open the economy, as much as it is safe. Track things very closely,” said Jha. "But don’t let the virus get a foothold.” Source: UNB AH
17 Jul 2020,14:43

Covid-19 pandemic: Global cases surpass 9.7 million
The confirmed COVID-19 cases have reached 9,776,963 globally with 493,609 deaths as of Saturday morning. Besides, more than 4.8 million recoveries have been confirmed, according to the latest tally of Johns Hopkins University. The worst-hit U.S. has recorded over 2.46 million confirmed cases and over 125,046 deaths  while South American country Brazil has come up to the second position with 1,274,974 confirmed cases and 55,961 deaths so far. Meanwhile, Russia, the third most infected country, has confirmed 619, 936 coronavirus cases and  8,770 deaths, followed by South Asian country India (490,401 cases), United Kingdom (310,836) and Peru (272,364) Besides, The UK has the third-highest death toll at 43,498, followed by Italy with 34,708, France 29,781 and Spain 28,338, according to Johns Hopkins University. The World Health Organization (WHO) chief warned the number of coronavirus cases around the world is set to reach 10 million "within the next week." WHO's regional director for Europe said there has been a resurgence of cases as many countries begin to ease restrictions. Coronavirus cases were first reported in China in December last year.   The World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the coronavirus crisis a pandemic on March 11. Coronavirus situation in Bangladesh A total of 1,30,474  in  6,96,941coronavirus tests carried out in Bangladesh have turned out to be positive.   The health authorities have confirmed 3,868 cases after testing  18,498 samples  in the span of 24 hours until Friday.   Since March 18, the government said 1,661 people have died of COVID-19.    In the last 24 hours, 40 more people died from the highly contagious disease.    Additional Director General of the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) Prof Dr Nasima Sultana came up with the disclosure at its daily health bulletin.   Bangladesh reported its first cases on March 8. The number of cases has spiked in recent weeks. Source: UNB AH
27 Jun 2020,13:20
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