Why E-Commerce For Bangladesh
Why E-Commerce For Bangladesh
Why E-Commerce For Bangladesh
transaction records.
By 1960‟s businesses that engaged large volume of transaction had began
exchanging transaction information on punched card.
In 1968 Transportation Data Co-ordination Committee (TDCC ) was formed by
some companies.
In 1979 ANSI (American National Standards Institute) chattered a new committee
to develop uniform EDI (Electron Data Interchange).
In 1979: Online shopping was invented in the UK by Michael Aldrich.
In 1982: Minitel was introduced nationwide in France by France Telecom and
used for online ordering.
In 1984: World's first recorded B2C online home shopper. Mrs. Jane Snowball
uses the Gates head SIS/Tesco system to buy groceries.
In 1987: Swreg begins to provide software and shareware authors means to sell
their products online through an electronic Merchant account.
In 1990: Tim Berners-Lee writes the first web browser, World Wide Web, using a
NeXT computer.
In 1992: J.H. Snider and Terra Ziporyn publish Future Shop: How New
Technologies Will Change the Way We Shop and What We Buy. St. Martin's
Press. ISBN 0312063598.
In 1994: Net scape releases the Navigator browser in October under the code
name Mozilla. Pizza Hut offers pizza ordering on its Web page. The first online
bank opens. Attempts to offer flower delivery and magazine subscriptions online.
Adult materials also become commercially available, as do cars and bikes.
Netscape 1.0 is introduced in late 1994SSLencryption that made transactions
secure.
In 1995: Jeff Bezos launches Amazon.com and the first commercial-free24 hour,
internet-only radio stations, Radio HK and Net Radio start broadcasting. Dell and
Cisco begin to aggressively use Internet for commercial transactions. eBay is
founded by computer programmer Pierre Omidyar as Auction Web.
Dimensions of E-Commerce
The three dimensions of e-commerce are:
Business-to-Consumers (B2C)
Business-to-Business (B2B)
Business-to-Government (B2G)
Consumer to consumer (C2C)
B2C e-commerce is unlikely to be of much use in the near future in Bangladesh
because of low per capita income, a weak infrastructural and legal environment, lack of
trust between business and consumers. B2C for cross border trade is also limited by the
factors suggested for the domestic front. In addition, non-availability of international
credit cards, foreign currency remittance restrictions, delays and informal payments at
customs clearance even for small value and quantity items will discourage B2C.
Benefits of E-Commerce
The benefits of e-Commerce are many and many. Some of them include:
E-Commerce in Different Sector in Bangladesh
Despite being a under developed country, selected segments of the Bangladeshi
business community has embraced technology with reasonable success. The Facsimile
in the 1980‟s and mobile telephones in the 1990‟spopularized modern technology in the
mass market. Personal computers and the Internet are also emerging as day-to-day
business tools. These positive indicators are favoring the prospects of e-commerce in
Bangladesh.
RMG Sector
Banking on the Web (Online Banking)
Online Shopping
Web Hosting, Domain
Online cards, gifts
Pay Bill
Education
Etc.
Recommendations
The assessment of the e-commerce environmental forces of Bangladesh leave us
some room to recommend some steps and measures, that should be undertaken by the
policy makers and business stake holders for the full fledged implementation and
development of e-commerce in Bangladesh. The recommendations are:
There should be an EFT (Electronic Fund Transfer) Gateway, which will connect
all finance and banking institutions, ATMs, POS and related websites. Such
Gateway will speed up the transactions among banks, commercial institutions.
This sort of infrastructure needs to be implemented on priority basis.
A CCG (Credit Card Gateway) should be established. A credit card gateway is a
server that makes online credit card transactions safe(Skinner, 2005). The
software protocols in the CCG use the information provided to check for
availability of funds and to make sure the credit card is not expired, lost or stolen.
This takes only seconds. When the transaction is approved a receipt is
generated for the customer, and the funds are transferred to the vendor's bank
account through EFT.
Unlicensed radio frequencies should be made available on demand and VSAT
operating licenses should not limit the bandwidth.
To improve banking mechanism, Bangladesh government should compel the
banking sectors to automate their operation and going online by a specific period.
The control of foreign exchange should be liberalized gradually, and easier
issuance of International Credit Cards should be allowed, banks should take
effective steps here.
Business associations and organizations should be made aware of the benefits
of e-commerce. Business organizations like FBCCI, DCCI, MCCI, and BGMEA
can play a significant role in promoting e-commerce in Bangladesh.
Political commitment to improve governance and institutional strength is essential
for successful application of e-commerce.
Last but not least, National ICT policy, 2002 and enactment of the ICT Act, 2005
is required to enhance the implementation of e-commerce.
CONCLUSION
A key reason why e-commerce, especially the business-to-business segment, is
growing so quickly is its significant impact on costs associated with inventories, sales
execution, procurement, intangibles like banking, and distribution costs. If these
reductions become pervasive, e-commerce has the potential to be the application that
ushers in the large productivity gains .Achieving these gains is therefore contingent on a
number of factors, including access to e-commerce systems and the needed skills.
However, what is unique about ecommerce over the Internet and the efficiency gains is
that it promises the premium placed on openness. To reap the potential cost savings
fully, firms must be willing to open up their internal systems to suppliers and customers.
This raises policy issues concerning security and potential anti competitive effects as
firms integrate their operations more closely.
REFERENCES
http://www.manufacturingnews.com/news/editorials/cohen.html
http://www.businessweek.com/the_thread/economicsunbound/archives/2008/06/the_im
portance.html
http://www.med.govt.nz/templates/MultipageDocumentPage____16344.aspx
http://www.cid.harvard.edu/cidtrade/issues/ecommerce.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecommerce
http://www.google.com.bd/