A Brief Overview
This study examines how economic growth and living standards evolved over the past 50 years across Nepal’s monarchy, constitutional monarchy, and republican periods. It explores how investment, education, health, infrastructure, and trade shaped these outcomes, and how fiscal policy, monetary policy, and remittances contributed to or constrained growth. It also asks how institutions influenced incentives, efficiency, and long-term development across regimes. The central question is whether Nepal’s march toward prosperity has truly advanced, drifted, or declined, and what bold reforms could still change its course.
Keynote Speaker
Ram Acharya, PhD
Former Research Coordinator, ISED Canada
Program Host
Bhanu Bhakta Acharya, PhD
Department of Communication
University of Ottawa, Canada
Key Takeaways
- Regime change did not bring structural transformation.
- Nepal fell behind as peer countries moved ahead faster.
- Productivity never took firm root; industry weakened and good jobs stagnated.
- Outmigration and remittances softened the pain but masked deeper decay.
- Government revenues rose, but public services did not improve enough.
- Institutions too often became barriers rather than engines of progress.
- Bottom line: Nepal has drifted more than it has advanced, and risks decline without
reform. - Hope: Nepal can still become a country of builders if it chooses serious reform.
Platform
Zoom Webinar
Meeting ID: 950 5014 7662