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Bridging the Skills Gap: Unlocking Bangladesh’s $500 Billion Opportunity

2025-01-30

This idea was sparked during a late-night adda, where discussions on Bangladesh’s future often turn passionate. The world is shifting—manufacturing is moving out of China, creating a $500 billion opportunity. Countries like Vietnam and India are already capitalizing on it. But where does Bangladesh stand?

The Problem: A Silent Roadblock

Imagine this: A state-of-the-art factory opens in Bangladesh, backed by billions in foreign investment. The machines are cutting-edge, the demand is global—but there’s a problem. The workers lack the necessary skills to operate advanced machinery, troubleshoot technical systems, or assemble electronics with precision.

Investors hesitate. The opportunity slips away. It moves to Vietnam, where workers are already trained for the job.

This isn’t a hypothetical scenario. It’s happening now. Bangladesh’s greatest challenge isn’t capital—it’s capability.

Learning from Vietnam’s Playbook

Two decades ago, Vietnam faced a similar challenge. Manufacturing made up just 25% of its foreign direct investment (FDI). Instead of waiting for change, they took action:

  • Vocational Training: The Vietnamese government heavily invested in vocational and technical training programs, ensuring that the workforce was equipped with the skills needed for industrial growth.

  • Global Partnerships: Vietnam attracted major corporations like Samsung, LG, and Intel, partnering with them to create industry-relevant curricula and on-site training programs.

  • Policy Reforms: Vietnam streamlined investment regulations, offered tax incentives, and developed infrastructure to support the transition to high-value manufacturing.

The results? Today, Vietnam’s manufacturing FDI stands at 64%, while Bangladesh lags at 30%. As of 2023, Vietnam’s total exports reached $371 billion, with electronics and machinery leading the way. Meanwhile, Bangladesh’s exports remain heavily dependent on textiles, which accounted for over 80% of the country’s $55 billion export earnings in 2023.

Actions taken by Chief Adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus to streamline investment agencies and resolve bottlenecks at the Korean EPZ are promising, but reforms alone won’t suffice. Without a skilled workforce, these opportunities will continue to pass us by.

The Solution: Training Hubs Across 64 Districts

Bangladesh needs a bold strategy to prepare its workforce for the industries of the future. A national skills training program could transform our youth into a workforce ready for global competition.

Key Strategic Initiatives:

  • Industry Partnerships: Collaborate with global giants like Siemens, Samsung, and Bosch to design training programs that align with real-world needs. Companies investing in Bangladesh should be incentivized to develop training centers as part of their market entry agreements.

  • Training Centers in All 64 Districts: Establish dedicated skill development hubs that provide hands-on learning in fields such as electronics assembly, AI-driven automation, pharmaceutical manufacturing, and advanced engineering.

  • Government-Backed Incentives: Provide tax breaks and subsidies to companies that invest in training and upskilling workers, similar to Vietnam’s approach.

The Economic Impact: Numbers Speak Louder Than Words

A strategic investment in workforce training can unlock massive economic gains. Let’s examine the potential:

  • Training 500 youth per district:
    • 64 districts x 500 workers = 32,000 skilled professionals per year
    • Each worker earns an average of $2,500 per year, adding $80 million in annual income
    • If each worker contributes $10,000 in exports, that’s $320 million in additional annual exports

  • Scaling this to 5,000 workers per district annually:
    • 320,000 skilled workers trained each year
    • An additional $800 million in direct income
    • An estimated $3.2 billion in export earnings

In comparison, Vietnam’s labor force in high-tech industries has contributed to a 10-fold increase in electronics exports in just 15 years. If Bangladesh follows a similar trajectory, the potential is immense.

The Role of UBUI: Making It Happen

At the US-Bangladesh Unity Initiative (UBUI), we see this as a defining challenge—and an opportunity. We’re actively working on:

Bridging Global Partnerships – Engaging with US-based corporations and policymakers to bring manufacturing training programs to Bangladesh.

Driving Policy Advocacy – Collaborating with BIDA and government agencies to create incentives for industry-driven skill development.

Mobilizing the Diaspora – Encouraging Bangladeshi professionals abroad to invest in skill-building initiatives and knowledge-sharing programs.

Final Thoughts

If Bangladesh wants to claim its share of the $500 billion global manufacturing shift, the time to act is now. We have the talent, the drive, and the potential—but we must be prepared.

Investing in skills today means securing a future where Bangladesh is a leading destination for high-value industries. Without action, we risk being left behind in the global economic race.

Let’s build the foundation now, ensuring that Bangladesh is always the first choice for global investors.

The opportunity is here. The question is—are we ready to seize it?

Contributor: Shah Choudhury
Shah, a founding board director of UBUI, helps tech companies unlock top-line growth by shaping SaaS+AI monetization and growth strategies. With experience as a strategist, project manager, and engineer, he has worked across geographies in four Fortune 500 companies and at the renowned growth consultancy Simon Kucher. Currently, he serves as Director of Corporate Strategy at Salesforce. Shah is also a recognized thought leader in monetization and growth strategy, with 17,000+ followers on LinkedIn.