The telecom regulator has decided to allocate additional lower-band spectrum to mobile operators through an auction process, aiming to improve network coverage, indoor connectivity and rural service quality.
The Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) made the decision at a recent meeting following recommendations from a technical committee tasked with comparing spectrum bands, setting prices and identifying cross-border interference issues, regulatory officials said.
“The additional lower-band spectrum could help operators strengthen network coverage in both urban and rural areas,” said Major General (retd) Md Emdad-Ul-Bari, chairman of the BTRC.
Spectrum refers to the radio frequencies used to transmit mobile signals. Lower-band spectrum with frequencies below around 1,000 MHz is particularly valuable because signals travel farther and penetrate walls more effectively than higher-frequency bands. This allows operators to cover wider areas using fewer towers, cutting infrastructure costs while improving service quality.
“The additional lower-band spectrum could help operators strengthen network coverage in both urban and rural areas,” said Major General (retd) Md Emdad-Ul-Bari, chairman of BTRC
Since multiple operators have applied for the same spectrum blocks, the commission decided to allocate them through a competitive auction rather than direct assignment, officials familiar with the matter said.
According to a committee report presented at the meeting, the Extended GSM (EGSM) band is more practical for Bangladesh in the short term because almost all mobile handsets in the country already support it for 2G services -- voice calls, SMS and low-speed data.
The committee was formed to compare the 850 MHz and EGSM bands, determine spectrum pricing and identify technical barriers, particularly cross-border interference issues affecting parts of the EGSM spectrum.
In its report, the committee noted that lower-band spectrum could significantly improve indoor connectivity in densely populated cities while helping operators reach remote areas.
However, it also identified major interference challenges in parts of the EGSM spectrum, particularly in border areas near India.
To assess the scale of the problem, mobile operators monitored interference levels across Rajshahi, Rangpur, Mymensingh, Sylhet, Cumilla, Chattogram, Khulna, Barishal and Cox’s Bazar, as well as several parts of Dhaka.
Apart from Dhaka, testing was largely carried out at sites between roughly 5 and 50 kilometres from international borders. For technical analysis, the committee split the 8.4 MHz block of EGSM spectrum under consideration into two portions.
The first, Block A, consists of 5 MHz of spectrum in the 880-885 MHz and 925-930 MHz frequency ranges. Frequencies in this band can travel long distances and penetrate buildings effectively, making them particularly valuable for coverage in dense cities and remote areas.
According to the report, interference levels in this block were extremely low in Rajshahi and Khulna. However, significant interference was detected in Rangpur, Mymensingh, Sylhet, Cumilla and Chattogram, especially in border-adjacent areas.
The committee estimated that interference in Block A could affect approximately 40 to 50 percent of Bangladesh’s total geographic area.
The second portion, known as Block B, includes 3.4 MHz spectrum in the 885-888.4/930-933.4 MHz range.
The committee found that interference in this block was comparatively lower. Significant interference was observed only in Rangpur, while most other regions remained practically interference-free.
The report stated that the interference impact in Block B would likely remain limited to around 5 to 10 percent of the country’s area, making it more commercially attractive for operators.
Despite these challenges, the committee concluded that the EGSM band should still be considered more suitable than the 850 MHz band for short-term allocation because of handset compatibility and immediate deployment feasibility.
The 850 MHz band offers stronger signal reach and better building penetration, but relatively few handsets in Bangladesh currently support it, limiting how quickly operators could put it to use.
There is one limitation worth noting for the EGSM band as well. Since Bangladesh still has relatively low smartphone penetration, only around 60 percent of users may be able to use the band effectively for data services.
For commercial allocation, the committee proposed dividing the same 8.4 MHz into three blocks -- one of 1.6 MHz and two of 3.4 MHz each -- based on operator demand. Robi Axiata currently holds the 1.6 MHz portion, while both Robi and Banglalink have applied for the two 3.4 MHz blocks.
Apart from deciding to auction the spectrum, the commission also endorsed the committee’s pricing recommendations and agreed to forward them to the Posts and Telecommunications Division for policy approval.
For the lower-interference 3.4 MHz block, the committee recommended setting the base price at Tk 237 crore per MHz for a 15-year period, matching the government-approved benchmark price for the 700 MHz band.
However, considering that the spectrum would only remain available until 2030 and that some limited interference still exists in certain areas, the commission said the government may consider reducing the base price by up to 10 percent.
For the more interference-prone 5 MHz block, the committee proposed a larger discount. Operators argued for a steeper reduction -- between 30 and 40 percent below the Tk 237 crore benchmark -- on the grounds that cross-border interference would prevent them from using the spectrum nationwide. However, the commission settled on a maximum discount of 25 percent.
The committee further recommended that operators use technical filters and mitigation tools to minimise interference and improve coexistence within the band.
The UN CDP’s recommendation to consider an extension of Bangladesh’s preparatory period for LDC graduation is a highly significant development. It is also consistent with the findings of the Graduation Readiness Assessment, earlier commissioned by UNOHRLLS at the request of the interim government. Overall, these assessments strengthen the case that Bangladesh’s LDC timeline extension request is a justified appeal to manage a complex transition under exceptional circumstances.
The CDP’s assessment confirms two things at once. First, Bangladesh continues to meet the graduation criteria by a wide margin, and its graduation eligibility is not in question. Second, Bangladesh has faced a combination of shocks, including the lingering effects of the pandemic, global economic instability, geopolitical tensions, supply-chain disruptions, and a major domestic political transition, all of which have constrained the implementation of critical preparatory measures. The recommendation therefore gives Bangladesh’s request stronger legitimacy within the UN process.
The next step will be to secure support in the UN General Assembly. Bangladesh should not assume that the CDP recommendation alone will automatically translate into approval. A focused diplomatic drive is now essential. The government will need to engage with UN member states, explain the evidence behind the request, demonstrate that the extension will be used for concrete reform actions, and reassure partners that Bangladesh remains fully committed to graduation.At the same time, Bangladesh must navigate the process with care. In the current global environment, geopolitical issues have become a serious development risk. While support should be sought from all relevant partners, the LDC graduation extension should not become a bargaining chip in ways that compel Bangladesh to make costly concessions to major powers. Diplomatic engagement should therefore be broad-based, principled, and carefully coordinated, with the extension framed as a development-transition issue rather than a matter of geopolitical alignment.
The CDP recommendation makes the case for an extension considerably stronger. It gives Bangladesh a credible basis for arguing that additional time is warranted on developmental, institutional, and transition-management grounds. However, we must treat this extension as a time-bound window for accelerating long-overdue reforms and strengthening graduation preparedness, not as a pause or a justification for delaying difficult policy decisions. Three years will pass very quickly.
Immediate priorities must include urgently securing post-graduation trading arrangements with the European Union, which absorbs nearly half of Bangladesh’s exports and where the country’s garment sector will face intensifying competitive pressure in the aftermath of the EU’s free trade agreements with Viet Nam and India. Failure to secure favourable market access could significantly erode Bangladesh’s export competitiveness. At the same time, Bangladesh must strengthen export resilience by accelerating diversification beyond traditional products and markets, reducing the longstanding anti-export bias embedded in domestic policies, enhancing productivity and compliance standards, and fast-tracking the implementation of the key measures identified in the Smooth Transition Strategy for LDC graduation.
This is where foreign direct investment becomes central. Bangladesh’s limited progress in non-RMG exports shows that export diversification cannot be achieved through domestic production capacity alone. The missing link has been FDI. While Bangladesh has developed a large and competitive garment sector, its non-RMG sectors have remained weakly connected to global value chains, international buyers, quality-control systems, design networks, and distribution channels. FDI can help close this gap by bringing technology, managerial capability, compliance systems, global sourcing relationships, and access to established markets.
Successful diversifiers have used foreign investors and joint ventures to anchor domestic firms within global production networks. Bangladesh must now treat FDI not as a general investment objective, but as a core instrument of export transformation. This requires a more focused investment strategy. Rather than spreading policy attention thinly across too many economic zones and sectors, a few selected special economic zones should be prioritised and made fully functional for export-oriented investors. These zones should offer reliable power and gas, customs facilitation, serviced land, duty-free input access, compliance infrastructure, labour-skills support, and fast-track regulatory services.
If needed, generous but disciplined incentives should be offered to attract a small number of large foreign multinational export manufacturers. Securing a few credible anchor investors can have a demonstration effect: once global firms begin producing successfully in Bangladesh, suppliers, logistics providers, buyers, and other investors are more likely to follow. As multinational firms seek to reduce excessive dependence on major geopolitical power manufacturing locations, Bangladesh can position itself as a competitive, non-power-aligned production base for global exports. Bangladesh has already demonstrated its ability to produce at scale, supported by abundant labour, an established export culture, and proximity to Asian supply chains. These advantages will count only if Bangladesh presents itself as a reliable, reform-oriented, and export-ready location.
Several long overdue actions require urgent attention. Foremost among them is fixing the Central Effluent Treatment Plant in Savar and ensuring environmental compliance in the leather sector. This would restore credibility and signal seriousness to investors. Other priorities include creating affordable export-support financing for man-made fibre-based apparel, improving product quality and compliance standards in agro-processing and other promising export sectors, reducing logistics and trade-related costs, and preparing for emerging regulatory requirements such as the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive and the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism.
The issue of export incentives also deserves special consideration. While many broader policy reforms have stalled, the reduction of export incentives appears to have been placed on a much faster track. This sequencing is questionable. The resurgence of industrial policy globally, and recent experience from export success by various economies, suggest that carefully designed support for exports remains important for building supply-side capacity and strengthening competitiveness. With the possibility of an extension of Bangladesh’s graduation timeline, the country must use any available policy space strategically. Export support should not be indiscriminate, but it should be targeted and linked to export expansion, diversification, technology upgrading, compliance, and new market entry. Removing support before alternative competitiveness-enhancing reforms are in place could weaken the very sectors Bangladesh needs to build for the post-LDC period.
More fundamentally, the success of any extended preparatory period will depend on domestic economic management. Tackling inflation, restoring macroeconomic stability, addressing banking-sector weaknesses, and strengthening implementation capacity remain critical. Without progress in these areas, an extension may provide temporary relief but not a stronger transition. The real test, therefore, will be whether Bangladesh can use the additional time to accelerate reforms, deepen productive capacity, attract export-oriented investment, and enter the post-LDC phase with greater confidence and resilience.
The government’s ongoing effort to formulate a new five-year strategic framework presents a timely opportunity to embed LDC graduation preparedness within a broader national development action plan. Rather than treating graduation-related measures as a parallel exercise, the plan should explicitly align its priorities, targets, and implementation mechanisms with the requirements of a successful post-LDC transition.
In this regard, Bangladesh already possesses a valuable foundation in the STS, which contains a comprehensive set of actions covering macroeconomy, export competitiveness and diversification, productive capacity, institutional strengthening, and international partnerships. Many of these measures can be incorporated directly into the forthcoming development framework. The new strategic plan should therefore establish clear priorities, assign institutional responsibilities, define implementation timelines, and allocate the necessary resources to ensure that the most critical graduation-related reforms are carried out within the available window of opportunity.
Bangladesh Bank (BB) has instructed all scheduled banks to give priority to farmers affected by recent heavy rainfall in receiving agricultural credit under its refinancing scheme, aiming to support recovery efforts and protect farm production in vulnerable regions.
The directive was issued today (Tuesday) through a Financial Inclusion Department (FID) circular, BSS reports. Bangladesh Economic Report
According to the circular, banks have been asked to ensure quick and priority-based loan disbursement to farmers in flood-affected haor and other areas where intense rainfall has damaged crops and disrupted agricultural activities.
The central bank said farmers in districts such as Sylhet, Sunamganj, Habiganj, Kishoreganj, Netrokona and Moulvibazar have suffered significant losses due to recent adverse weather conditions, making timely access to credit crucial for restoring agricultural production and livelihoods.
To facilitate the process, BB also instructed banks to prioritize Krishak Smart Card holders while extending loans from the refinancing fund for marginal and landless farmers, sharecroppers, small account holders and micro-enterprises.
The move is aimed at ensuring that affected farmers can obtain working capital quickly for crop rehabilitation, purchasing agricultural inputs and continuing farming operations despite weather-related setbacks.
The central bank, however, clarified that eligible farmers should not be denied access to loans solely because they have not yet received a Krishak Smart Card.Finance Daily Reports
Bangladesh Bank said the special emphasis on flood-affected farmers reflects its commitment to supporting rural communities facing climate-induced challenges and maintaining food production across the country.
All other provisions of the existing refinancing scheme will remain unchanged, the circular added.
US President Donald Trump signed an order Monday to cut tariffs on agricultural equipment, the White House said, as farmers and manufacturers face pressure from surging costs over the Middle East war.
Trump's proclamation reduces the duty rate on machinery like harvesters, alongside certain other equipment, from 25% to 15%.
Foreign companies can also qualify for a 10% duty rate if their manufacturing equipment contains at least 85% US steel or aluminum, the White House added in a fact sheet.
The changes take effect on June 8 and last until December 31, 2027.
Farmers have raised concern over rising costs ahead of key midterm elections, and face a further squeeze from the Middle East war as diesel and fertilizer prices have surged.
US-Israeli strikes targeting Iran since the end of February sparked Tehran's retaliation that virtually blocked off the Strait of Hormuz.
The critical waterway normally sees about a fifth of the world's oil and gas supplies pass through it, and is also essential for the global fertilizer trade.
The blockage has also driven aluminum prices higher as it is a key passageway for deliveries from the Middle East.
"Recent circumstances have affected and are affecting domestic industries that use agricultural equipment, industrial equipment and machinery, and other related products," Trump's order on Monday noted.
It is the latest adjustment to Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs, after firms pushed back on onerous rules.
US tariffs on steel, aluminum and copper generally stand at 50%.
In April, Trump moved to lower tariffs on products deemed to contain substantial amounts of these metals to 25% -- targeting their full value rather than the amount of the metals they contain -- in a bid to simplify the system.
Besides agricultural equipment, Trump's latest order said the lower 15% rate would also apply to certain heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems that are mainly for residential use.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said on Tuesday the company has enough supply to accommodate robust growth in central processing units (CPUs) and graphics processing units (GPUs) as it rides an AI boom.
The company, considered a barometer for the AI market's health as its semiconductors are used in virtually every major data centre in the world, acknowledged, however, that supply constraints remain a concern.
"We've secured supply for very robust growth of all of those systems," Huang said at an Nvidia press conference during the Computex week in Taipei.
"We have supply for very, very robust growth, but we're still supply constrained."
Huang was speaking a day after the $5 trillion chip company unveiled a new chip that brings AI capabilities directly to personal computers.
Nvidia's new chip, which will be launched in the autumn, would pit it against the likes of Advanced Micro Devices, Intel and Apple.
Huang said the RTX Spark PC chip is part of Nvidia's efforts with Microsoft to "reinvent the PC" for the AI era.
Born in Taiwan's southern city of Tainan, the Nvidia chief announced plans last week to invest around $150 billion a year in Taiwan, describing it as the epicentre of the AI revolution.
At the press conference on Tuesday, Huang said Taiwan is a strategic partner for the US because the island is investing in US manufacturing. The company plans to continue to invest in Taiwan and make the supply chain as resilient as possible.
"We are the largest purchaser of any company now for the ecosystem of Taiwan," he said.
Demand for Nvidia AI chips, or GPUs, has generated tens of billions of dollars of revenue and helped make the company the most valuable in the world.
Huang said the company's Vera data centre CPUs would be even more popular than its GPUs because of the CPUs' crucial role in crunching information.
Vera competes with data centre chips made by AMD and Intel.
"This (Vera CPU) is going to be our new major growth driver," Huang said during a presentation on Monday outlining Nvidia's latest AI products.
In a striking development for Bangladesh's banking sector, non-performing loans (NPLs) increased by Tk31,000 crore within a three-month period. Compared directly with the December quarter, defaulted loans increased by Tk31,488 crore in the March quarter.
By the end of March this year, total defaulted loans had surged to Tk5,88,704 crore, representing a staggering 32.26% of the total loans disbursed. Currently, the total volume of loans disbursed across the banking sector stands at Tk1,824,668 crore.
Sluggish private credit growth and economic stagnation
The first major factor driving the high ratio of non-performing loans is that private credit growth has slowed down significantly, preventing a meaningful increase in total credit. Private sector credit growth has fallen to 4.72%, indicating that the country's overall macroeconomic situation is not very good.
Businessmen are taking fewer loans from banks to conduct business. Instead of expanding new businesses, they are struggling to repay their previous loans. Furthermore, the fuel crisis caused by the war in the Middle East in March has made it more difficult to do business.
Because of these challenges, the country's large business groups have accepted policy support from the Bangladesh Bank. Therefore, if credit growth in the private sector can be successfully increased, the total amount of defaulted loans will naturally decrease.
Low collection, compounding interest, and auditing shift
Secondly, the volume of defaulted loans has mounted due to a combination of low collection rates and interest added directly to the outstanding debt.
In this regard, Bangladesh Bank spokesperson and Executive Director Arief Hossain Khan told The Business Standard, "Loan collection has decreased. Moreover, interest is levied on loans every quarter, which is why the amount of defaulted loans has increased compared to before."
Third, Bangladesh Bank has utilised qualitative assessment while finalising the financial statements of banks. As part of this approach, certain loans identified during the central bank's inspection and assessment have been formally shown as defaulted, directly contributing to the increase in the overall amount of defaulted loans.
Banking practices: Rescheduling vs write-offs
In light of these numbers, some private management directors told TBS that write-offs are usually reduced in the first quarter of the year. In contrast, during the last quarter of the year, write-offs are aggressively increased to make the balance sheet look stronger.
A senior official in a private bank benchmarked this behaviour, pointing out that defaulted loans had previously been reduced from 35% in September to 30% in December.
However, many banks have not been writing off debts following the International Financial Reporting Standards model. Most banks have rescheduled instead of writing off.
"If you just reschedule, there is no benefit in dragging out the loan for 10 years; the defaulted loans will increase. Therefore, these bad loans should be written off instead of rescheduling," a senior official in a private bank said.
Another senior official of a private bank noted that the overdue loan period has been increased to 90 days, and the amount of defaulted loans in the banking sector has been increasing ever since. "On the other hand, during the March quarter, the number of defaulted loans in banks was heavily impacted by broader stagnation."
Macroeconomic stagnation and corporate distress
Syed Mahbubur Rahman, managing director and CEO of Mutual Trust Bank (MTB), believes that in the current economic situation, many companies are failing to do business properly and repay their debts to banks on time.
He observed that large companies are receiving various policy support from the central bank because of these persistent strains.
"Currently, there is a kind of stagnation in the economy. Due to this, many companies are not able to expand their businesses, and many are defaulting due to not being able to do business properly. Again, many institutions are not able to pay down payments on time," Mahbubur told TBS.
Critical factors behind the surge
Md Touhidul Alam Khan, MD and CEO of National Bank, outlined several critical factors explaining the mechanics behind the current NPL surge.
Regarding historical issues surfacing, he noted that previously hidden bad loans from major corporate groups are now being exposed under stricter oversight, revealing years of concealed financial irregularities that artificially suppressed NPL figures.
According to him, the expiration of moratorium periods and loan deferrals has forced banks to reclassify distressed accounts, leading to a sharp increase in reported NPLs as temporary relief measures ended.
Severe economic pressures, such as persistent inflation, rising borrowing costs, and global trade disruptions, have severely impacted business cash flows, making debt servicing difficult even for legitimate enterprises amid political and economic instability.
Governance failures, including weak risk management, inadequate credit evaluation, and poor collateral assessment, have created inherently vulnerable loan portfolios, while political interference in lending decisions has fostered a "culture of default" among influential borrowers.
At the same time, political interference in lending decisions has fostered a culture of default among influential borrowers.
Ultimately, the current crisis represents both the unveiling of historical mismanagement and genuine economic stress, creating a complex, dual challenge for the banking sector's ongoing recovery efforts.
Finance and Planning Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury today (Tuesday) said the core philosophy of the upcoming national budget is the democratization of the economy and bringing poor and marginalized communities into the mainstream of economic activities.
“The low-income people have historically been the most deprived in Bangladesh’s budgetary framework. Therefore, we have given priority to the poor, low-income groups and homemakers (housewives) in the upcoming budget,” he said, BSS reports.
The minister made the remarks while addressing a seminar titled “Budget 2026–27: Expectations and Reality” as the chief guest in the capital today, organised by the Economic Reporters Forum (ERF).
ERF President Daulat Akter Mala chaired the seminar. Executive Director of Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) Dr Fahmida Khatun, Chairman of East Coast Group Azam J Chowdhury and President of the Bangladesh Textile Mills Association (BTMA) Shawkat Aziz Russell attended the programme as special guests. ERF General Secretary Abul Kasem moderated the event.
The Finance Minister also said the next national budget seeks to address rising poverty, expand economic opportunities for marginalised groups and reduce bureaucratic obstacles to business, despite being prepared under exceptionally difficult circumstances.
“Preparing a national budget within one and a half months of assuming office was almost impossible, noting that the process normally takes at least six months,” he said.
He said the government inherited a fragile economy marked by declining indicators, weak investment, growing unemployment and rising poverty, but was nonetheless required to present a budget within the constitutional timeframe.
“The economy has reached a level where significant intervention is needed to restore stability and put it back on the path to prosperity,” he said, likening the situation to priming a tube well by pouring water into it before groundwater can be drawn.
Responding to criticism over the size of the budget amid economic challenges, Khosru said the government was investing heavily to revive economic activity and rebuild confidence.
He said the budget prioritises low-income and disadvantaged groups who have traditionally been overlooked in national fiscal planning.
Among the key initiatives, he highlighted the expansion of the Family Card programme, under which financial assistance will be transferred directly to women heading households through bank accounts, minimizing opportunities for corruption and political influence.
The minister claimed that a pilot project recorded only a 1-1.5 percent deviation rate and expressed confidence that the programme could achieve near-perfect targeting in future.
He also underscored the government’s focus on farmers through the introduction of Farmer Cards, aimed at strengthening food security and improving rural livelihoods.
On healthcare, Khosru said the government is moving towards universal primary healthcare, noting that Bangladeshis spend a disproportionately high share of their own income on medical treatment.
He said the programme would be implemented through partnerships involving the private sector and non-governmental organisations rather than relying solely on government agencies.
The finance minister also announced significant support for what he termed the “creative economy”, including artisans, weavers, folk craftsmen, performers, theatre artists and other cultural workers.
Under the initiative, targeted groups will receive skills training, access to finance, design assistance, branding support and opportunities to market products online, drawing inspiration from successful international models such as Thailand’s “One Village, One Product” programme.
Khosru said economic growth should not be measured solely through industrial production, arguing that creative industries and cultural activities also contribute significantly to gross domestic product (GDP).
“Our vision is the democratisation of the economy,” he said. “Economic participation and the benefits of growth must reach every citizen and every community.”
The minister reiterated the government’s commitment to strengthening the private sector, describing it as the primary driver of economic growth while positioning the state as a facilitator rather than a regulator.
He announced plans to simplify regulatory procedures through a one-stop service system under which multiple approvals would be processed within specified timeframes.
Applications not acted upon within the prescribed period would be deemed approved, he said.
Calling for a “deregulated economy”, Khosru said excessive controls had constrained businesses, citizens and institutions for years.
On budget implementation, he acknowledged concerns over low execution rates and said the government would introduce digital monitoring systems across the ministries.
According to the minister, all development projects will be tracked through dashboards at the ministry, finance ministry and Prime Minister’s Office levels, allowing delays and bottlenecks to be identified in real time.
He said future project selection would be guided by four criteria: value for money, return on investment, job creation and environmental sustainability.
The government has already reviewed around 1,300 ongoing projects inherited from previous administrations and plans to cancel those that fail to meet the new standards while repurposing others to improve economic returns, he added.
Turning to the capital market, Khosru said the government is restructuring the securities regulator and expects to appoint a new professional leadership team within weeks.
He said reforms would help attract quality listed companies, reduce pressure on the banking sector and enable businesses to raise long-term financing through the capital market.
The minister also said international financial institutions and major investment firms, including global fund managers, had expressed interest in Bangladesh as economic reforms gather pace.
Khosru expressed confidence that the budget’s inclusive approach, coupled with stronger governance and implementation mechanisms, would help restore stability and lay the foundation for sustainable and equitable economic growth.
He said money under the Family Card programme would be transferred directly to beneficiaries’ accounts, ensuring no political influence or intermediary involvement in the process.
Referring to the agriculture sector, the minister said a “Farmers Card” initiative has been introduced to strengthen food security and improve farmers’ living standards.
On the health sector, Amir Khasru said people in Bangladesh continue to incur high out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. In response, the government is prioritising the expansion of universal and primary healthcare services with the participation of government institutions, the private sector and NGOs.
A surge of US crude oil is arriving in Asia, but the record volumes are nowhere near enough to offset the loss of cargoes from the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
Asia’s imports of US crude were 63.56 million barrels in May, the most for a single month although at 2.05 million barrels per day (bpd) they were slightly behind the 2.07 million bpd from June 2023, according to data compiled by commodity analysts Kpler.
However, more US oil is on the way, with Kpler tracking arrivals of 2.32 million bpd in June and 3.07 million bpd in July.
This is more than double the average of 1.37 million bpd of US crude that Asia imported in the three months to the end of February.
The United States and Israel attacked Iran on February 28 and Tehran retaliated by effectively closing the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20 percent of global crude oil and refined products moved prior to the start of the conflict.
While some Middle Eastern exporters such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have managed to re-route some oil exports to ports outside the strait, at least 10 million bpd of supply remains unavailable as the Iran conflict drags on.
About 1.2 million bpd of crude reached Asia in May through the Strait of Hormuz as some vessels secured Iranian approval to transit, but this is down from the average of 13.54 million bpd in the three months ended February.
The scale of the loss of cargoes through the strait overwhelms the additional volumes Asia has secured from the United States, as well as from other exporters in the Americas and Africa.
Asia’s seaborne crude arrivals in May were 19.47 million bpd, up from 18.7 million bpd in April, which was the lowest in more than 10 years, according to Kpler data.
However, even May’s higher arrivals were still 22 percent down from the average of 24.82 million bpd for the three months to the end of February.
It’s this loss of more than 5 million bpd in supplies that will ultimately lead to tough choices for Asia’s refiners.
So far they have managed to keep plants operating by a combination of using up commercial and in some cases strategic stockpiles, while also reducing processing rates.
But there are now questions being asked as to how much longer the world can continue to deplete inventories before refiners are forced to significantly cut back throughput amid crude shortages.
There is an emerging consensus among most analysts and oil executives that the clock is ticking louder.
It’s likely that the process won’t be spread evenly across the world, with some regions likely to be able to continue producing and refining oil at usual rates, but others struggling to secure supply.
Ultimately, if the Strait of Hormuz doesn’t reopen within the coming weeks and doesn’t remain open on a sustainable basis, it’s likely that prices for refined fuels will have to increase in order to force a reduction in demand.
Asia, which took about 80 percent of the usual volumes through the Strait of Hormuz, is the most exposed and it’s likely that less well-developed, fuel-importing countries such as Bangladesh, the Philippines and Pakistan will experience the pain soonest.
There are also likely to be increasing questions asked in the United States about the rapid depletion of inventories amid record crude and product exports.
US politicians from both major parties tend to focus heavily on domestic issues and it isn’t hard to see them increasingly opposing oil and fuel exports in the mistaken belief that this will somehow lower retail prices at home.
Profits at most non-life insurance companies rose in the first quarter (January–March) of the current year compared to the same period last year mainly due to the introduction of zero commission in non-life insurance, cost cuts against the growth in marine insurance business.
Industry stakeholders attributed the increase to the introduction of zero commission in non-life insurance, companies' efforts to reduce management expenses, and growth in marine insurance business. They also believe the sector could see further improvement if geopolitical tensions in the Middle East ease.
Stakeholders noted that regulators have long received complaints about irregularities involving individual agents, including excessive commissions, mis-selling of policies, misleading customers, unnecessary policy sales, and artificially inflated premium income shown on paper.
The Insurance Development and Regulatory Authority (IDRA) also have information that some companies used multiple software systems and undisclosed bank accounts to conceal commission-related transactions.
However, the removal of commissions is expected to reduce management expenses and lift profitability. As commission-based sales decline, unnecessary policy sales may also fall. Premium pricing could become more realistic and customer-friendly, artificial inflation of premium income may ease, and healthier market competition is anticipated.
According to Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) data, 39 of 43 listed non-life insurers have published their quarterly results so far. Of these, 31 reported higher profits in the first quarter compared to a year earlier, while eight reported lower profits. The remaining four companies have yet to release their results.
Non-life insurance companies primarily cover risks such as fire, health, motor, marine, engineering, and liability.
Strong performers
Desh General Insurance led the pack with profit growth of around 120%, posting a net profit of Tk44 lakh in the quarter against Tk20 lakh a year earlier. Its share price rose 2.54% to Tk24.20 today (2 June).
Peoples Insurance reported a 105% increase in profit, reaching Tk5.96 crore from Tk2.91 crore a year ago. The company said lower agency commission expenses, reduced operating costs, and fewer claim settlements helped cut costs, lifting profit, operating cash flow, EPS, and NOCFPS.
Phoenix Insurance recorded a 67% rise in profit, earning Tk2.62 crore compared with Tk1.57 crore in the same period last year. The company cited higher premium and other income for the growth, while investment gains improved NAV per share and stronger cash collections boosted NOCFPS. Its share price rose 4.36% to Tk43.10 today.
Pragati Insurance posted a 55% increase in profit, with EPS rising to Tk1.63 from Tk1.05 a year earlier. The company attributed the growth to higher operating and other income, improved premium cash collections, and gains in investments, dividend and interest receivables, and cash equivalents, all of which strengthened NAV per share. Its share price also rose 3.07% to Tk70.40 today.
Under pressure
Agrani Insurance reported a 48% decline in profit, with EPS falling to 17 paisa from 33 paisa a year ago. The company cited lower premium and other income alongside higher claim settlements as the key drivers of the weaker performance.
United Insurance posted a 46–47% decline in profit, with net profit falling to Tk1.07 crore from Tk2 crore, and EPS dropping to Tk0.24 from Tk0.45.
Speaking to TBS, Managing Director of United Insurance Khawja Manzer Nadeem said, around 15% of total income went towards claim settlements during the quarter, largely tied to a fire incident at the airport that required payouts to clients including Unilever. He noted that the company's underlying business performance was otherwise positive, but the elevated claims overshadowed the gains.
Green Delta Insurance saw profit fall 29%, Mercantile Islami Insurance by 19%, and Rupali Insurance by 18% during the same quarter.
Overall, the majority of non-life insurers reported profit growth in the first quarter, though higher claims and softer investment income continued to weigh on a handful of companies.
The government is likely to unveil its full-term tax plan on June 11, outlining income tax-free limits and tax rates for individual taxpayers up to the fiscal year 2030-31 (FY31), the final year of its tenure.
Under the plan, the tax-free income threshold is expected to gradually rise to Tk 4.5 lakh by FY31 in an effort to ease pressure on taxpayers amid persistently high inflation.
At present, individuals can earn up to Tk 3.5 lakh a year without paying income tax. This limit is set to increase to Tk 3.75 lakh in FY28 under the interim government’s earlier two-year tax framework.
Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury is expected to go further in his first national budget on June 11 by introducing a broader three-year predictable tax system running through FY31.
Under the proposed roadmap, the tax-free income threshold will rise to Tk 4 lakh from FY29 and remain unchanged through FY30.
Prime Minister Tarique Rahman approved the proposal in principle on May 14 during a high-level meeting at the Secretariat, according to finance ministry officials who attended the meeting.
“The government wants to introduce a predictable tax plan so that taxpayers can set their financial plans accordingly,” a senior finance ministry official said, adding that the higher threshold would offer modest relief to lower-income earners.
However, economists and tax analysts have questioned whether the planned increases are sufficient given persistently high inflation.
“One positive aspect is that the government is providing predictability in tax policy. At the same time, it is making some adjustments for inflation, although we need to assess whether the increase fully matches inflation in percentage terms,” said Towfiqul Islam Khan of the Centre for Policy Dialogue.
Others argue that deeper structural issues remain.
“While policymakers understand the political economy needs to raise the tax-free threshold, they are also constrained by institutional pressure to boost revenue collection. Ultimately, that consideration appears to be driving their decisions,” Khan said.
“This is precisely why we have argued for separating tax policy from tax administration and revenue collection,” he added.
Inflation has remained around 9 percent since March 2023, significantly eroding real incomes. In April, inflation stood at 9.04 percent, according to the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics.
Amid rising living costs, economists and business groups have repeatedly called for a higher tax-free income threshold, with many proposing an increase to Tk 5 lakh.
“Globally, setting tax rates in advance helps with planning, but international best practice usually limits this to a two- or three-year window, along with an automatic inflation adjustment mechanism,” said tax policy analyst Snehasish Barua.
He warned that extending fixed tax brackets until FY31 could create structural distortions in the tax system.
“Locking in fixed tax brackets until 2031 means that as prices rise, people will be pushed into higher tax brackets without any real increase in their purchasing power or wealth,” said Barua, managing director of SMAC Advisory Services.
He also expressed concerns about fairness, saying that partial adjustments could disproportionately affect middle-income earners. “Global tax standards also emphasise vertical equity. If only the initial tax-free threshold is raised while higher slabs remain unchanged, it creates an unfair ‘middle-class squeeze’,” he said.
Barua added that predictability should be balanced with flexibility, arguing that “long-term fiscal certainty must be paired with proportional, inflation-linked adjustments across all income slabs, rather than rigidly fixed rates stretching to 2030–31,” to align with global norms.
Non-performing loans (NPLs) in the banking sector jumped by Tk 31,487 crore in the first three months of this year after a slight decline owing to the reclassification of rescheduled loans, lacklustre recovery, and overall economic slowdown.
At the end of March this year, total NPLs in the banking sector stood at Tk 588,704 crore, accounting for 32.26 percent of the total Tk 1,824,668 crore in disbursed loans, according to the latest data from Bangladesh Bank.
By the end of last year, the ratio of classified loans had dropped to 30 percent from 36 percent in September 2025, thanks to large-scale loan rescheduling under a special policy support programme by the BB.
Of the total NPLs, 94 percent falls into the bad and loss category, a level that economists say reflects not just economic stress but a breakdown of financial discipline among the country’s most powerful borrowers.
“Loan defaulting has emerged as a damaging culture in the country,” said Mustafa K Mujeri, executive director at the Institute for Inclusive Finance and Development (InM) and former BB chief economist.
“We are now seeing that even some of the country’s largest business conglomerates have become loan defaulters,” he said.
“These groups have received various forms of policy support from the government and Bangladesh Bank over the years, yet they still fail to repay their loans,” added Mujeri.
The economist blamed the rising volume of NPLs on a lack of strict action against defaulters, pointing out that these conglomerates cite a range of global and domestic challenges to obtain policy support, but they do not use those facilities to settle their debts.
“Under loan rescheduling schemes, many of these borrowers have been granted up to 10 years to repay their loans, yet a number of them eventually default again,” he said.
Instead of continuing to provide concessions to these defaulting borrowers, the authorities must take strict action against them immediately, Mujeri suggested, adding that otherwise the country’s banking sector will face serious consequences.
Meanwhile, bankers also point out that some top borrowers and businesses have suffered losses due to weak demand amid high inflation and the economic slowdown caused by the war in the Middle East.
Many good loans are showing signs of stress, and the overall banking sector is going through a downturn, which is why NPLs may have increased, said Mashrur Arefin, chairman of the Association of Bankers, Bangladesh (ABB).
Arefin, also the managing director and CEO of City Bank, said when discussing the reasons for the spike in NPLs, either the policy support cases were overhyped, many borrowers could not make the required down payments, or external auditors did not agree with many of the weak cases during annual profit audits.
He added that some weak banks with newly formed boards decided to take higher provisioning hits once and for all, which also contributed to the increase.
According to BB, compared with a year earlier, bad loans increased by Tk 168,370 crore. At the end of March 2025, NPLs stood at Tk 420,334 crore, with a ratio of 24.13 percent.
Due to the high volume of defaulted loans in the banking sector, the provision shortfall stood at Tk 205,665 crore as of March this year, data shows.
A provision shortfall in banking refers to the gap between the funds a financial institution is legally required to set aside to cover potential losses from bad loans and the amount it actually has in reserve. When borrowers fail to repay, banks must absorb these losses by drawing on current profits or core capital.
NPLs in the banking sector have continued to rise since the fall of the Awami League-led government on August 5, 2024, as many businessmen fled the country and many of their businesses shut down, pushing up bad loans.
Large borrowers such as S Alam, Beximco, AnonTex, Abdul Monem, Nassa Group, and Sikder Group defaulted on a large scale after the fall of the Awami League government in August 2024, causing an unprecedented rise in bad loans.
Central bank data states that NPLs at state-run banks stood at Tk 149,785 crore, accounting for 46 percent of their disbursed loans. Bad loans at private commercial banks stood at Tk 416,482 crore, representing 31.1 percent of their disbursed loans.
NPLs at foreign banks stood at Tk 3,263 crore, or 5 percent of their outstanding loans.
NPLs at specialised banks stood at Tk 19,175 crore, or 41 percent of their disbursed loans, the data shows.
The upcoming budget for fiscal year 2026-27 will seek to widen economic participation by bringing traditionally overlooked groups into the mainstream economy, Finance and Planning Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury said yesterday.
Speaking at a pre-budget discussion organised by the Economic Reporters’ Forum, he said the government aims to create greater opportunities for low-income households, farmers, artisans, cultural workers and women to contribute to and benefit from economic growth.
The minister described the budget as an effort to “democratise the economy”, ensuring that the gains of development reach a broader segment of society rather than being concentrated among a few groups.
Particular emphasis has been placed on supporting women, especially homemakers, whose contributions to family welfare and the wider economy have largely remained outside formal economic structures, he added.
“The budget will also include measures aimed at strengthening livelihoods for farmers, artisans and cultural workers, while expanding opportunities for lower-income families to participate more actively in economic activities,” he said.
To reduce out-of-pocket healthcare expenses for people across the country, a groundbreaking Universal Primary Healthcare project will be implemented nationwide through a collaboration between NGOs and the private sector, he added.
For instance, he said the government’s planned Family Card and Farmers Card programmes could be managed by private firms and NGOs to minimise political influence, improve transparency and reduce leakages.
The minister acknowledged that weak implementation has long undermined the effectiveness of public spending, despite successive governments announcing large budgets and development programmes.
“Budget implementation has been a problem. That is a correct observation,” he said, adding that the government is now trying to identify where projects get stuck and who is responsible for delays.
To address the issue, the government plans to introduce digital dashboards to monitor every development project, he said. “The dashboards will be accessible to individual ministries, the finance ministry and the Prime Minister’s Office, enabling authorities to track progress in real time and identify officials responsible for missed deadlines.”
Also speaking at the event, Fahmida Khatun, executive director of the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), identified revenue mobilisation as one of the biggest challenges for the upcoming budget, warning that Bangladesh has consistently failed to meet its tax collection targets over the past decade.
She spoke in favour of higher spending on education, healthcare and social protection, but noted that the real concern is whether the government can generate the revenue needed to finance its ambitions.
“Simply raising tax targets will not work without deep institutional reforms in revenue administration,” she said, adding that successive governments have relied on piecemeal measures instead of comprehensive reforms.
The policy expert also cautioned against putting greater pressure on existing taxpayers while failing to widen the tax net and tackle evasion.
She warned that excessive bank borrowing by the government could fuel inflation and crowd out private investment by pushing up lending rates.
Fahmida described inflation control as the budget’s foremost challenge, urging policymakers to focus spending on agriculture, energy, transport and logistics to ease supply constraints and boost production.
Sustainable growth, she said, will ultimately depend on better governance, stronger institutions, improved investment conditions and a stable law-and-order situation.
Azam J Chowdhury, chairman of East Coast Group, emphasised several longstanding concerns, including reforms to the Workers’ Profit Participation Fund (WPPF), removal of dividend double taxation, continuation of tax incentives for the ocean-going shipping industry, and simplification of land mutation procedures.
He called for a revision of the WPPF framework to ensure benefits reach workers as intended, while also addressing compliance challenges faced by listed companies.
Chowdhury emphasised the need for a more predictable tax regime and policy continuity to encourage private investment.
He also urged the government to go for administrative reforms, saying lengthy approval processes, particularly for land mutation and energy-sector investments, continue to deter businesses and delay new projects.
Shawkat Aziz Russel, president of the Bangladesh Textile Mills Association (BTMA), said supporting existing factories to upgrade capital machinery would yield faster and greater returns than building new facilities from scratch.
Modern equipment could raise productivity by 30-40 percent on average and, in some cases, by as much as 300 percent, while reducing gas and electricity consumption by around 30 percent, he said.
He stressed that such assistance should be implemented without delay, warning that lengthy decision-making processes have weakened the sector’s competitiveness.
The BTMA chief also criticised the interim government’s handling of the industry, saying timely policy support could have prevented the closure of hundreds of spinning mills and garment factories.
Russel further expressed concern over rising extortion and deteriorating law and order, noting that creating jobs and sustaining industrial growth remain essential to addressing such problems.
Chaired by Doulat Akhtar Mala, president of ERF, the event was moderated by Abul Kashem Khan, general secretary of ERF.
Stalled mass rapid transit (MRT) projects receive a substantial sum of Tk 126.49 billion in ADP allocations for the upcoming fiscal year as the government vows to construct three Dhaka metro-rail lines after prolonged dilemmas, officials say.The long-stalled MRT-1 and MRT-5 (Northern) lines have got significant allocations in the FY27 Annual Development Programme (ADP).The ongoing MRT-6 project has also been given a hefty allocation, Planning Commission officials say.
The National Economic Council (NEC) has approved a Tk 3.0-trillion ADP for FY27, where nearly 1,150 development projects, including the MRTs, have got large allocations.Economy Forecast Reports.In the new ADP, the MRT-1 line from Dhaka airport to Kamalapur has grabbed Tk 73.50 billion, 817-percent higher than that in the FY26 Revised ADP (RADP).
MRT-5 (Northern route) from Hemayetpur to Vatara secures Tk 34 billion, which is 431-percent higher.
Besides, MRT-6 from Uttara to Kamalapur, which is near completion, gets Tk 18.99 billion, in an 86-percent increase.
The Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC) approved both the MRT-1 and MRT-5 (northern) projects in October 2019 with a combined estimated cost of Tk 937.9998 billion.
The estimated project cost for MRT-1 was Tk 525.61 billion and that for MRT-5 was Tk 412.39 billion.
Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) is financing all three MRTs.A senior Roads and Highways Division official told The Financial Express they had sought higher funds for the three projects."We are trying to restart the construction of MRT-1 and MRT-5 stalled for long. We recently held a meeting with all the parties, including the fund provider, for expediting work," he added.
Another official of the division says since the bidding prices of some of the packages of MRT-1 and MRT-5 are much higher than official estimations, they are working to renegotiate with the bidders to reduce prices.Finance Daily Reports
"We are hopeful of settling the issues within a short period of time and restarting construction," he adds.
A senior Planning Commission official says they have allocated higher funds for the stalled MRT projects in response to the demand of the Roads and Highways Division.
"Since they've vowed to restart construction, we have allocated higher funds," he adds.
Gold prices fell on Monday as renewed US-Iran tensions pushed the dollar and oil prices higher, fuelling fears of inflation and reinforcing the higher-for-longer interest rate outlook.
Spot gold was down 0.8 percent at $4,498.89 per ounce at 0909 GMT after hitting a two-week high on Friday. The yellow metal dropped 0.9 percent in May, its fourth consecutive monthly fall.
US gold futures for August delivery fell 1.4 percent to $4,528.90.
The dollar edged higher, making greenback-priced bullion more expensive for holders of other currencies.
The US said it struck Iranian military sites over the weekend and Iran’s Revolutionary Guards on Monday said they had targeted a US base in response, the latest exchange of attacks amid negotiations to end the three-month-old war.
“The optimism surrounding negotiations between the US and Iran aimed at ending the standoff in the Strait of Hormuz faded over the weekend,” ActivTrades analyst Ricardo Evangelista said. “As a result, energy prices rebounded, reviving inflation concerns and reinforcing hawkish Federal Reserve expectations.”
Brent crude oil prices gained more than 3 percent after the latest strikes. Higher oil prices can accelerate inflation and keep interest rates higher for longer. While gold is traditionally seen as a hedge against inflation, it loses its appeal in a high-interest-rate environment as a non-yielding asset.
Traders are now pricing in a Fed rate hike this year, with a 40 percent chance of a quarter-point increase in December, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.
A host of Fed board members are set to speak this week, while major data releases are scheduled to include the ISM survey of manufacturing and the May payrolls report on Friday.
“Traders will be closely watching this week’s key data releases as these have the potential to reshape expectations regarding the future path of Fed monetary policy, influencing demand for the US dollar and, consequently, the performance of gold prices,” Evangelista said.
Spot silver rose 0.7 percent to $75.79 per ounce, platinum gained 0.4 percent to $1,925.26 and palladium fell 0.8 percent to $1,343.55.
The global smartphone market is heading for its steepest annual contraction on record, with shipments projected to slump by 13.9% this year to 1.08 billion units, Counterpoint Research said on Monday, citing a worsening shortage of memory chips.
The forecast is a downgrade from the 12.4% decline projected in February, with the squeeze in global chip supply exacerbated by the Iran war.
Impact most acute at budget end of market
The impact is being felt most acutely in lower-end smartphones as chipmakers shift production capacity to AI-related chips, making entry-level devices less economical to produce.
Global smartphone wholesale prices rose 14% in the first quarter while shipments fell 3.1% year on year. That trend is expected to continue as inventory built before the supply shock becomes depleted, with some models priced below $150 likely to disappear from the market.
"Smartphone makers in the low and mid-tier are caught between cost increases they cannot absorb and consumers with limited spending power," said Wang Yang, a principal analyst at Counterpoint, an independent research company that publishes quarterly smartphone shipment data.
"The question is no longer how to grow shipments or market share, but whether to remain in the market at all."
The memory chip shortage is the most severe supply-side disruption the smartphone industry has faced, Wang said, adding that manufacturers are unable to offset the impact through pricing or product changes.
Premium end of the market more resilient
The premium segment has proven more resilient. Apple posted record revenue for the first three months of the year, helped by customers upgrading to its iPhone 17 series. Apple's 2026 shipments are expected to remain flat before rising 5% next year, Counterpoint projections show.
With more stable chip supply and stronger margins than many rivals, Apple is well placed to gain market share and could face less pressure to raise prices.
Samsung Electronics kept volumes steady in the first quarter and is expected by Counterpoint to register only a 4% decline in shipments over the full year, outperforming the wider market thanks to stable supply and a consistent product line-up.
Transsion, which is heavily exposed to the market for smartphones priced below $150, is forecast to suffer a 32% drop in shipments this year. Rivals Xiaomi and Honor, meanwhile, are projected to post full-year declines of 28% and 20% respectively, Counterpoint said.
Sri Lanka has expressed that the time is opportune to elevate its relations with Bangladesh to a higher level, underscoring the importance of arranging a state-level visit between the two friendly nations in the near future.
The observation was made by Sri Lanka's acting Foreign Minister Arun Hemachandra during a farewell call by Bangladesh High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Andalib Elias in Colombo yesterday, according to a press release issued on the occasion.
During the meeting, Hemachandra highly appreciated the Bangladeshi envoy's contributions to strengthening bilateral relations throughout his tenure in Colombo.
Expressing satisfaction over the progress achieved in bilateral cooperation, the acting Foreign Minister said Dhaka and Colombo should seize the opportunity to further advance their partnership through enhanced political engagement and high-level exchanges.
He particularly stressed the need for arranging a state-level visit between the two countries at an early date to open new avenues of cooperation.
High Commissioner Elias reaffirmed Bangladesh's commitment to deepening bilateral cooperation and expanding engagement with Sri Lanka in areas of mutual interest.
The envoy also expressed gratitude to the acting Foreign Minister for his personal support, guidance and goodwill throughout his diplomatic assignment in Sri Lanka.
The meeting reflected the longstanding friendship between Bangladesh and Sri Lanka and their shared determination to further strengthen and elevate bilateral relations in the years ahead.
Information and Broadcasting Minister Zahir Uddin Swapon says that due to Bangladesh’s import dependence on fuel oil, prices been increased to keep pace with the ongoing international crisis.
“Populist decision-making is not the only job of the government, the job of the government is to maintain good governance in the long term,” he said in response to a question while speaking to the media at the Secretariat on the first working day after the Eid holidays on Monday.In response to reporters’ questions regarding the increase in fuel oil prices, the information minister said, “You probably know that since the day the energy crisis began, all the countries that are dependent on import-based energy have been increasing prices in line with the international crisis. Everyone knows that even though everyone else has increased prices, our government has maintained fuel prices at their old level for a long time, despite being an import-dependent country.
“We have to import fuel. Our power minister and state minister have regularly informed the nation about this and provided the statistics. But if it is true that we have to continue importing, then we will have to continue relying on import capacity.”The Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Power, Energy, and Mineral Resources have already formed an advisory committee under the leadership of Wahiduddin Mahmud to deal with the war situation, the minister said.Financial Planning Services.He said, “The government is acting on the advice of the advisory committee and the advice of Wahiduddin Mahmud, a prominent economist in the country. According to his counsel, prices have not been increased for a long time.“Again, the crisis is not over yet, and we will have to continue importing. The government has to keep running while keeping all these things in mind.”
Chinese companies in 15 key industrial sectors received vastly more state support than their international competitors between 2005 and 2024, according to an OECD report released on Monday.
The 15 sectors received $108 billion in 2024 alone, according to data compiled by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development in its Manufacturing Groups and Industrial Corporations (MAGIC) database.
Between 2005 and 2024, it added, “Chinese firms received on average three to eight times more government support than firms based in the OECD, a conservative estimate.”
“These subsidies were also considerably higher than the support received by firms based in non-OECD economies such as Brazil, India and Indonesia.”
The Paris-based organisation of 38 member countries said its “conservative” estimate was based on disclosures by the biggest companies in the 15 sectors, which underpin entire segments of the global economy.
It considers direct subsidies, tax breaks and favourable loans from banks and public financial institutions -- at times below their base lending rates -- to be public support.
“For Chinese firms, almost 60 percent of their global market share gains can be explained by the subsidies they received,” the OECD said.
Chinese firms have carved out huge market shares over 20 years in sectors such as solar panels, shipbuilding and steel, not because they are better than their US or European competitors but because of their unparallelled state support, it added.
- Effect of subsidies -
With subsidies, they have more financial leeway to invest in new production sites, more time to reach profitability and greater support against economic headwinds, according to the report.
This has led to overcapacity in some sectors, pushing down global prices to the detriment of other international players.
“Just like doping in sports, the risk is that subsidies help less productive players win unfairly at the expense of better, more innovative and more efficient ones,” the OECD’s Secretary-General Mathias Cormann told a press conference.
“Subsidies increased market share but that did not lead to significant gains in productivity or profitability,” Cormann added.
“Firms won market share not by being more efficient or more innovative but by being more heavily subsidised.”
The OECD looked at aerospace and defence; aluminium; car manufacturing; cement; chemicals; fertilisers; glass and ceramics; heavy machinery; semiconductors; shipbuilding; photovoltaic panels; steel; telecommunications equipment; rolling stock; and wind turbines.
Worldwide state support in these sectors reached its highest level since the 2008 financial crisis in 2023-24, amounting on average to 1.3 percent of companies’ revenues in 2024.
The OECD noted that the peak observed in 2009 coincided with a severe global recession, which was not the case in 2023-24.
That “indicates the recent increase in industrial subsidies to be more structural”, it added.
Guyana was already the world's fastest-growing economy before the US-Israeli war on Iran drove up oil prices. Now, the tiny Caribbean nation of nearly 1 million people will reap an even bigger bonanza as the conflict reshapes global energy markets.
The war that caused one of the largest energy disruptions in history highlights the growing importance of countries including Guyana that offer political stability and geographically unrestricted access to their estimated 11 billion barrels of oil reserves. This growing windfall from crude brings pressure from business owners and locals on the government to use its billions of dollars to boost other parts of the economy.
"The world has seen too many energy booms that left behind ghost towns, depleted forests and bitter populations. Guyana will not be that story," President Irfaan Ali said in an address at Rice University's Baker Institute this month.
Rapid development by an Exxon Mobil-led oil consortium, which controls all of Guyana's oil production, grew output to more than 900,000 barrels per day in just seven years, a pace without recent precedent as offshore projects can typically take twice as long just to produce the first drop of oil. Guyana's GDP more than quadrupled to $27.5 billion between the time the taps started flowing in 2019 and 2024, according to World Bank data.
Guyana was previously one of the poorest countries in South America and oil-fuelled growth can be seen across the capital of Georgetown, where construction is taking place on new modern office buildings, upscale hotels and rows of single-family homes that resemble those that could be found in US suburbs. Exxon billboards and adverts for other petroleum companies play on the radio, serving as reminders of the industry that helped enable the growth.
More money, more problems?
The government's long-term challenge is to fortify the country against an implicit pitfall – the economic cycle of boom and bust oil prices. Guyana needs to look no further than its neighbour Venezuela for an example of how political dysfunction and overreliance on oil money can cripple an economy despite having one of the largest estimated oil reserves in the world. One of Guyana's strategies is its 2019 sovereign wealth fund holding all oil revenue, which allows the government to draw funds for development projects at a steady rate.
Crude prices, up 30% since the start of the Iran war in late February, could further swell Guyana's oil revenue. Assuming an oil price of $100 per barrel through the rest of the year at current production volumes, Guyana's share of oil revenue could be worth roughly $4.3 billion, 67% higher than last year, according to Reuters calculations.
More importantly, Guyana is poised to start receiving a significantly larger share of oil production earlier than expected. The Exxon consortium currently takes 75% of the oil to recoup its initial exploration and development costs. And now, the consortium could recover the costs this year, Exxon has said. When that happens, the country's share of the profit oil will climb from 12.5% to 50%.
Ali cautioned that expectations needed to be managed, as any windfall due to higher oil prices would be offset by higher import costs for nearly all goods including fuel and fertiliser.
"This is the complexity of the messaging when people wake up every morning and see the headlines that you're flush with money, it drives a certain expectation," he said in his Baker Institute address.
Some local infrastructure has not improved at the same pace that the oil industry has developed. Open sewage drains line the streets of Georgetown and electricity outages remain a common occurrence.
A changed world
Guyana sits at the centre of a region that includes the established oil and gas economies of Venezuela and Trinidad and Tobago, as well as Suriname, where the sector is emerging. The area benefits from direct, unrestricted access to the Atlantic, without maritime chokepoints vulnerable to blockades like the Strait of Hormuz.
Guyana's low break-even prices in the $25 to $35 per barrel range, and proximity to US markets that are supportive of fossil fuel development, further compound long-term advantages, said Tarron Khemraj, a professor of economics and international studies at the New College of Florida, who has studied Caribbean countries including Guyana.
Spot prices for Guyana's four crude grades – valued for their light to medium sweet quality – have surged over the past three months, with the Liza benchmark reaching a high of $120 per barrel from $68.98 on 27 February before the conflict in the Middle East began.
Even if traffic through the Strait of Hormuz resumes soon and oil prices return to pre-war levels, experts say Guyana's track record as a geopolitically stable source of oil will further solidify.
"The war may end next month, but it will be a changed world," Khemraj said.
Still, numbers that look like a boom may belie the full reality of the broader economy.
While Guyana has recorded double-digit percentage GDP growth each year since oil production began, most of that expansion has been concentrated in the petroleum sector, rather than broad-based activity. Oil and gas and support services accounted for more than 75% of the country's GDP last year, according to government data.
Sharing the wealth
As part of its effort to make sure more of the oil revenue trickles down, the government is also moving to expand its local content law, originally passed in 2021, that requires oil and gas firms to contract with Guyanese-owned suppliers and vendors in a number of specific areas, such as janitorial, food or transport.
The regulation requires petroleum companies to procure a certain percentage of services from Guyanese businesses, for example, 25% of medical services and 90% of catering services. The government is considering amendments to add more service areas and increase the percentage requirements for some existing ones, Michael Munroe, director of the local content secretariat, said in an interview.
Business owners say that expanding the requirements will help support more jobs and the development of skilled labour.
"We're able to provide all of the same medical services as an international company," said Ayesha Wilburg, founder and CEO of a Georgetown-based health clinic.
Rising oil activity has also led to a similar explosion in demand for private transport services in Georgetown, where residents often travel by cab.
Nazim Baksh, general manager of Sean's Transportation Services, said the company expanded from seven employees to about 20 and also upgraded its fleet from saloons to add more SUVs.
Challenges remain, however, including complaints from Guyanese business owners about so-called fronting. Panellists at the Guyana Energy Conference in February acknowledged the problem, where foreign companies use local entities but retain actual control of the business.
Vanita Ally, medical director and founder of Phoenix Clinicare, a Guyanese-owned medical centre, said that receiving a certificate to provide services to oil firms has not resulted in much additional revenue and inflation is also increasing her operating costs.
"International companies are benefiting a lot more than local people (from the oil industry)," Ally said.
Drivers are now paying more at the pump, like other countries, adding to cost-of-living concerns. Guyana lacks a refinery and must import petrol, diesel and other refined products.
"For Guyana, as a country that is now a net producer and exporter of energy, (higher oil prices) can mean positive things, but of course, that isn't necessarily what people see and feel every day because it means that energy prices are going up," said Alistair Routledge, president of Exxon's Guyana operations at a press conference in March.
"We recognise this is a mixed blessing for people in Guyana."
From Europe to Japan and Switzerland, huge bond issues by Big Tech companies are proving that smaller markets, often overshadowed by the US, can punch above their weight in the $40 trillion world of corporate debt.
Google-parent Alphabet is already one of the biggest outstanding borrowers in the sterling and Swiss franc corporate bond markets, while Amazon raised 14.5 billion euros ($16.88 billion) in March from an eight-part deal, the largest ever in the euro corporate bond market, according to LSEG.
Debt issues by so-called "hyperscalers" - or Big Tech companies - outside the United States are part of a push to diversify their funding early on, bankers said, as they look to finance trillions of dollars of investment in AI infrastructure, especially data centres, in the years ahead.
Raising debt in foreign currencies can also help the companies hedge the currency risk from their global assets, while taking advantage of relatively lower borrowing costs in places like Europe.
Alphabet smashed records across markets, with its yen, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and sterling deals all setting borrowing records in those currencies.
"If you look at the pace of investment of these companies and if you fast forward 12 months, some of these companies are already going to become among the biggest issuers globally in any currency," said Giulio Baratta, co-head of investment-grade finance at BNP Paribas.
In Europe, Alphabet and Amazon have helped push up borrowing by non-financial US firms to over 60 billion euros ($69.85 billion) this year, another record.
Record debt sales
Morgan Stanley expects around 50 billion euros of total borrowing from the hyperscalers in euro debt this year, which could help lead the US to overtake France as the euro zone's biggest source of overall corporate debt.
"A lot of these markets, including euro, have evolved and now offer a lot more depth and opportunity for larger capital raising than was historically the case," said John Servidea, global co-head of investment grade finance at JPMorgan, which led recent deals for the two hyperscalers.
With the hyperscaler deals, internationally placed non-financial corporate bond sales tracked by LSEG have surged in markets like the Swiss franc and yen this year.
The ability to raise significant amounts of money in such markets has not gone unnoticed by US companies beyond the hyperscalers, Servidea said.
"They're definitely looking at other markets more seriously than they would have previously."
More broadly, borrowing has also surged in currencies like the Australian and Hong Kong dollars as international companies diversify their funding sources.
Investors, meanwhile, have shifted focus to diversifying away from the US dollar given geopolitical tensions and policy uncertainty.
Building exposure to AI
Hyperscalers have seen their non-dollar issuance double to 30% of their total bond funding this year, according to Bank of America.
Raising money abroad also means Big Tech can leave longer periods between tapping the US market, JPMorgan's Servidea said, while borrowing at rates that are in some cases cheaper than the US dollar market, or at least similar.
Heavy borrowing can weigh on a borrower's bonds, and analysts see signs that hyperscalers are underperforming the US corporate bond market. Visiting it less often may help limit the hit.
Baratta at BNP Paribas, which also led deals for Alphabet and Amazon, said these companies were mainly keeping the funds in the currency they are raising rather than swapping them back to dollars.
As for investors, they're keen to build exposure to the AI theme in international bond markets, where technology names previously had a limited presence.
Nicolas Forest, chief investment officer at Candriam, for example, is buying into the euro deals from hyperscalers to build exposure to the tech sector in the European bond market.
By the end of April, Alphabet had already become the fourth-largest borrower in ICE BofA's sterling corporate bond index after just one round of issuance, and the sixth-largest in Swiss francs.
As tech issuance grows, corporate bond markets outside the US will become more exposed to tech sector developments, in good and bad times.
"If there are any problems with (AI), it will probably create more volatility," said David Zahn, head of European fixed income at Franklin Templeton.