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Bangladesh Insulator and Sanitaryware Factory Limited; Bangladesh Jute Mills Corporation; Bangladesh Machine Tools Factory; Bangladesh Municipal Development Fund [1] Bangladesh Ordnance Factories; Bangladesh Overseas Employment and Services Limited; Bangladesh Parjatan Corporation; Bangladesh Petroleum Exploration and Production Company Limited
Bangladesh Blade Factory Limited; Bangladesh Chemical Industries Corporation; Bangladesh Diesel Plant; Bangladesh Film Development Corporation; Bangladesh Fisheries Development Corporation; Bangladesh Forest Industries Development Corporation; Bangladesh Gas Fields Company Limited; Bangladesh Government Press; Bangladesh House Building Finance ...
In India, state-owned enterprise is termed a Public Sector Undertaking (PSU) or a Central Public Sector Enterprise (CPSE). These companies are owned by the Union Government, or one of the many state or territorial governments, or both.
Government jobs provide better pay and benefits than private sector jobs in Bangladesh, which creates demand for government jobs. [2] Students in Bangladesh protested in 2013, 2018, and 2024 against the quota system and have argued that talented candidates were not being recruited due to the quota. [3]
Stagnant job growth in Bangladesh’s private sector has made government jobs, which offer regular wage hikes and other privileges, more attractive, said Mohammad Abdur Razzaque, chairman of ...
The Government agencies in Bangladesh are state controlled organizations that act independently to carry out the policies of the Government of Bangladesh. The Government Ministries are relatively small and merely policy-making organizations, allowed to control agencies by policy decisions.
While job opportunities have expanded in Bangladesh’s private sector, many people prefer government jobs because they are seen as stable and lucrative. Each year, some 3,000 such jobs open up to ...
In the former Eastern Bloc countries, the public sector in 1989 accounted for between 70% and over 90% of total employment. [5] In China a full 78.3% of the urban labor force were employed in the public sector by 1978, the year the Chinese economic reform was launched, after which the rates dropped.