Commuters in Dhaka and across the country are being forced to pay increased bus fares despite no official announcement regarding fare adjustments following the recent increase in fuel prices.
This unregulated spike has triggered widespread frustration, often leading to heated altercations between conductors and passengers, with reports of passengers being forcibly offloaded for protesting the hikes.
Passengers said buses are charging an additional Tk5 to Tk10 for short distance travel, while for long-distance, some operators are demanding Tk200 to Tk250 above the usual rate.
They also said a significant portion of the city's buses operate on CNG, but fares are being hiked based on diesel price hike, raising questions about the legitimacy of the adjustments.
Shamim Hossain, who regularly travels on the Rangpur-Jaldhaka route, said the fare was previously Tk95 but has now increased to Tk100, with transport workers citing higher fuel prices.
Meanwhile, visits to bus terminals found that fares on the Dhaka-Moulvibazar route have increased from Tk570 to Tk620. Passenger Nur Nabi Mostafa said buses on the Dhaka to Cox's Bazar, Chattogram and Sylhet routes are charging an additional Tk100 to Tk200.
The Bangladesh Road Transport Authority (BRTA) is responsible for determining the fares for non-AC buses and minibuses. As per official regulations, the fare for long-distance buses is fixed at Tk2.12 per kilometer.
In the Dhaka metropolitan area, the rates are Tk2.42 per km for buses and Tk2.32 per km for minibuses. However, passengers said these rates are rarely followed.
Back in August 2022, the government increased the price of diesel by 42% to Tk114 per liter. Consequently, bus fares were raised by BRTA to a maximum of Tk0.40 per kilometer. However, diesel prices were later reduced in three phases to Tk100 per litre, but fares were not lowered.
Transport operators said the fare structures fixed in 2022 are no longer commercially viable. They cited rising operational costs driven by currency depreciation and the soaring prices of spare parts.
According to passenger welfare groups, transport owners failed to implement either of these reductions.
Md Mozammel Haque Chowdhury, secretary general of Bangladesh Jatri Kalyan Samity, told the media that some transport owners are raising fares before any formal decision, putting pressure on passengers. He urged a participatory process to set fair fares and proposed a Tk 0.15 per kilometre increase.
Amid the situation, Prime Minister's Adviser for Information and Broadcasting Zahed Ur Rahman said the government is working to rationalise transport fares in alignment with fuel price changes. Speaking at a briefing yesterday (21 April), he said that discussions are ongoing to reach a balanced decision.
The government on Saturday raised diesel prices to Tk115 per litre, octane to Tk140, and petrol to Tk135, marking increases of Tk15 per litre for diesel, Tk20 for octane, and Tk 19 for petrol.
The next day negotiations between transport operators and the BRTA hit a deadlock, as owners demanded a comprehensive fare hike reflecting broader economic pressures, while the regulator insisted on capping increases strictly to rising fuel costs.
Despite official assurances of adequate fuel stocks, underpinned by Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation (BPC) data, long queues and intermittent supply disruptions continued at filling stations across the country yesterday.
While analysts and experts have proposed measures such as an odd-even rationing system and digital tracking to manage demand and ease pressure on pumps, proposals remain sidelined, leaving motorists to endure hours-long waits and sporadic "no fuel" notices.
In response to the strain, the BPC has announced a 10-20% increase in supply of diesel, petrol and octane, with 13,048 tonnes of diesel, 1,422 tonnes of octane and 1,511 tonnes of petrol being distributed daily through three state-run marketing companies. However, the retail situation has yet to stabilise.
On the ground, the supply boost has not fully translated into availability at pumps. While waiting times have eased slightly in parts of Dhaka and Chattogram, motorists across much of the country continue to face delays and uncertainty.
Imports and stock data show no shortage
According to port and BPC sources, between 28 February and 21 April, 823,170 tonnes of fuel arrived at Chattogram port in 26 shipments.
Of this, 624,452 tonnes came as diesel in 16 vessels, 124,087 tonnes furnace oil in six, 53,364 tonnes octane in two, and 21,266 tonnes jet fuel in two. A Singapore-flagged vessel, Hafnia Cheeta, carrying 32,000 tonnes of diesel from Malaysia, docked yesterday around noon.
Based on an average daily demand of 12,500 tonnes, diesel imports over 53 days could meet around 50 days of demand. With a 12-day opening stock in early March, total availability should have covered about 65 days, indicating no supply shortage.
For octane, the country had an 18-day stock at the start of March. Imports of 53,364 tonnes, against a daily demand of 1,200 tonnes, add 45 days of supply. Local refineries produce around 700 tonnes daily, adding roughly 37,000 tonnes or 30 days' supply. Combined, availability reaches about 93 days.
Despite these figures, retail-level disruptions have continued.
Mismanagement, panic and weak oversight
The strain began between 28 February and 6 March, when over 175,000 tonnes of fuel were sold in just seven days – more than double normal demand – rapidly depleting reserves. In response, authorities introduced rationing measures, after which long queues formed across fuel stations nationwide. Many motorists were forced to wait for hours and often returned without fuel.
According to Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation (BPC) and port sources, 26 vessels carrying 823,170 tonnes of fuel arrived at Chattogram between 28 February and 21 April. Of this, 624,452 tonnes were diesel, alongside furnace oil, octane and jet fuel shipments. BPC data show that, in theory, the combined stock and imports were sufficient to meet demand for extended periods.
Despite this, retail disruptions persisted, with officials announcing a 10–20% increase in daily fuel distribution to ease shortages. Yet filling stations continued to report uneven supply, shortened operating hours and "no fuel" notices.
Analysts attribute the crisis to distribution failures rather than supply shortages. They cite irregular withdrawals in early March, panic buying triggered by expectations of price hikes, and weak monitoring across depots and stations as key factors. Some fuel was reportedly hoarded, while portions may have been smuggled due to price gaps with neighbouring countries.
Former Eastern Refinery general manager Monjare Khorshed Alam said early excess demand was not contained. "If the excessive fuel supply during the first week had been controlled, the crisis would not have become so severe," he said, adding that expectations of price hikes encouraged stockpiling.
Energy expert Professor M Tamim pointed to gaps in monitoring and the absence of tracking systems, which allowed irregularities in distribution. He also criticised early signals of price increases, saying they intensified hoarding behaviour.
Experts suggest that tools such as app-based fuel tracking and odd-even number plate rationing could have helped stabilise supply and reduce congestion at pumps.
In recent weeks, making a simple phone call has become a daily struggle for Md Mosharraf at Char Bahadurpur, a village at Phulpur upazila in Mymensingh district. For it, he blames prolonged power cuts.
“Nowadays, we get electricity for less than five hours a day. Once the electricity is gone, there is no network,” said Mosharraf. “I can’t even speak through my phone most of the time.”
Currently, this problem is no longer limited to remote villages.
Mobile operators and tower companies say network quality has deteriorated over the weeks as power cuts have become more frequent and fuel supplies have worsened following the war in the Middle East.
During power outages, operators depend on battery backups at tower sites. Most sites, however, have backup capacity for only four to six hours.
“When cuts last longer than that, there is no way to recharge the batteries,” said Shahed Alam, chief corporate and regulatory affairs officer at Robi Axiata.
Mobile operators then turn to generators. But only about 25 percent of towers are equipped with fixed generators, forcing many to depend on portable units.
“Adding insult to injury, we are not getting fuel supply to the towers and our critical data centres,” Alam said.
There are 46,567 telecom towers across the country, operated by tower infrastructure companies and mobile operators. This provides network coverage to over 18.58 crore customers. Operators have around 27 data centres across Bangladesh.
Tower companies yesterday said that the fuel crisis could severely disrupt national connectivity.
“Bangladesh’s connectivity ecosystem is facing a real and immediate threat,” said Sunil Issac, interim president of the Bangladesh TowerCo Association and country managing director of EDOTCO Bangladesh.
He said telecom underpins all digital and economic activity and cannot be allowed to fail.
“If the telecom sector is not prioritised within national energy allocation and fuel access frameworks, we risk a cascading failure that will impact businesses, essential services, and everyday life. Ensuring uninterrupted connectivity is no longer a sectoral concern; it is a national imperative,” he said.
Data collected by tower companies through remote monitoring sensors show that electricity availability at tower sites has dropped over the past month.
In 12 districts, supply has fallen from 93 percent to 77 percent from the first week of March to the second week of April, according to tower company statistics.
A tower company official said operators run thousands of towers nationwide and track power availability continuously.
Sunil Issac said, “We have engaged with the relevant authorities to outline the risks and propose immediate, practical solutions, including priority access to fuel and enabling policy support to help the sector navigate this challenging period.”
He said that given the scale of dependency on digital networks, proactive and coordinated action is essential.
In recent weeks, mobile operators have sent at least two letters to the telecom regulator, saying an imminent nationwide disruption. The Association of Mobile Telecom Operators of Bangladesh said the electricity and fuel crisis has “reached a point where continued telecom operations can no longer be sustained without immediate government intervention.”
The association said prolonged outages have forced operators to run key infrastructure on diesel generators.
According to the letters, base transceiver stations (BTSs) consume more than 52,000 litres of diesel and nearly 20,000 litres of octane each day across operators. Each data centre uses an estimated 500 to 600 litres of diesel per hour, or about 4,000 litres a day per facility.
Industry insiders say such reliance on backup power cannot continue for long. Unlike tower sites, data centres manage call routing and internet traffic. Any shutdown at that level could cause failures across the network.
“If fuel can’t be managed and data centres go offline, it would cause widespread call drops, internet outages, and service blackouts,” said an official at a mobile operator, preferring not to be named.
Contacted, Tanveer Mohammad, chief corporate affairs officer of Grameenphone, said operators are facing electricity and fuel shortages.
“The evolving situation calls for timely and targeted measures to sustain uninterrupted telecom services nationwide,” he added.
He said that to “proactively avoid disruptions to essential services for millions”, operators need government support to secure priority electricity for critical infrastructure, streamline fuel supply and ease fuel transport for emergency operations.
Md Emdad ul Bari, chairman of the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC), said, “We have been trying to coordinate for over a month and have spoken to the telecom ministry and the energy ministry. In some places, there has been priority supply.”
He acknowledged that some tower sites are facing low fuel supplies.
“The regulator will meet the Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation tomorrow and other stakeholders later this week to improve fuel availability,” he said.
About two-thirds of agent banking outlets in Bangladesh were not engaged in lending as of December 2024, highlighting a major gap in credit delivery despite the network’s rapid expansion, a recent study has found.
Titled “Agent banking in Bangladesh: Strong expansion, some inclusion”, the research was funded by the UK-based International Growth Centre (IGC) and examines whether agent banking has translated into meaningful financial inclusion.
The study used a newly constructed dataset that collected information linked to the geographical location of agent banking outlets, developed by the Policy Research Institute (PRI), covering 2022-2024. It maps the expansion, distribution, and financial activity of agent banking outlets across Bangladesh.
Since its introduction in 2013, the agent banking network has grown from 2,601 outlets in 2016 to over 21,000 by 2024. However, recent trends suggest a slowdown, meaning expansion may be approaching saturation.
Despite growth, agent banking is more effective at mobilising deposits than providing credit, according to the study.
Deposits rose from Tk 380 crore in 2016 to Tk 41,960 crore in 2024, while cumulative credit disbursement reached Tk 24,030 crore, giving a loan-to-deposit ratio of 57.3 percent.
However, this increase in the provision of financial services is uneven and concentrated in fewer active outlets, it was found.
The research also highlights a shift in banking geography. Traditional banking is heavily concentrated in Dhaka and Chattogram, which account for around 65 percent of deposits and 78 percent of total lending.
In contrast, only about 11 percent of agent banking loans originate from these cities, showing that agent banking has helped decentralise credit flows.
Rural areas have benefited, with about 15 outlets per 100,000 people, improving access compared to traditional branch banking. Rural per capita deposits are also higher, indicating strong uptake outside urban centres.
However, credit delivery remains limited. The study identifies a “zero-loan phenomenon”, where about two-thirds of outlets had no outstanding loans in 2024, suggesting those outlets function mainly as deposit and transaction points rather than credit providers.
This is more pronounced in remote and disadvantaged regions, including the Chittagong Hill Tracts.
Outlet distribution is closely linked to existing branch density, suggesting agent banking often extends traditional banking rather than expanding independently into underserved areas.
There is also no strong evidence that poorer upazilas are prioritised, while higher literacy levels are associated with greater activity.
On gender, over 92 percent of operators are male, but women are using the system more and more. Female account growth outpaces male growth between 2022 and 2024.
“As expansion begins to slow, policy should shift from improving access to strengthening financial intermediation. This requires enabling agent-based lending through appropriate regulatory frameworks, using digital data for credit scoring, and aligning incentives so agents can serve as effective credit channels for underserved communities,” said Ashikur Rahman, principal economist at the PRI and co-author of the study.
He also called attention towards a stark gender imbalance among agents and stressed that addressing this issue must become a policy priority to ensure that financial inclusion is both deep and equitable.
The study concludes that while agent banking has significantly expanded access to financial services, its next challenge is strengthening credit intermediation, particularly in underserved and rural areas.
US President Donald Trump said he would indefinitely extend the ceasefire with Iran to allow for further peace talks, although it was not clear on Wednesday if Iran or Israel, the US ally in the two-month war, would agree.
Trump said in a statement on social media the US had agreed to a request by Pakistani mediators "to hold our Attack on the Country of Iran until such time as their leaders and representatives can come up with a unified proposal ... and discussions are concluded, one way or the other."
Pakistan's leaders have hosted peace talks in Islamabad to end a war that has killed thousands of people and shaken the global economy.
But even as he announced what appeared to be a unilateral ceasefire extension, Trump also said he would continue the US Navy's blockade of Iran's trade by sea, considered an act of war by Iran.
On my personal behalf and on behalf of Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir, I sincerely thank President Trump for graciously accepting our request to extend the ceasefire to allow ongoing diplomatic efforts to take their course.
With the trust and confidence reposed in, Pakistan…
— Shehbaz Sharif (@CMShehbaz) April 21, 2026
There was no response early on Wednesday to Trump's announcement from senior Iranian officials, although some initial reactions from Tehran suggested Trump's comments were being treated skeptically.
Tasnim News Agency, affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, said Iran had not asked for a ceasefire extension and repeated threats to break the US blockade by force. An adviser to Iran's lead negotiator, the speaker of parliament Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, said Trump's announcement carried little weight and may be a ploy.
Trump's wartime rhetoric has veered between extremes. In an expletive-filled threat against Iran only two weeks ago he promised that a "whole civilization will die tonight", while at other times has appeared keen to end the violence and market uncertainty.
With his announcement, Trump again pulled back at the last moment from his threats to bomb Iran's power plants and bridges. United Nations Secretary General António Guterres and others have condemned those threats, noting international humanitarian law forbids attacks targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure.
NEXT PEACE TALKS UNCERTAIN
The US and Israel began the war on February 28 with aerial bombardments of Iran. The conflict quickly spread to Gulf states that host US military bases and to Lebanon once the Iran-allied militant group Hezbollah joined the fighting.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has for decades sought to oust Iran's leadership, but Trump has given shifting and sometimes contradictory rationales for joining Israel to launch the war and how he foresees it ending, stirring confusion in global markets.
More than 5,000 civilians have been killed across the region and hundreds of thousands displaced so far, mostly in Iran and Lebanon, and the war has led to the virtual closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a vital chokepoint in global energy markets between Iran and Oman, sending oil prices soaring and fears that the global economy could enter a recession.
Iran has repeatedly exploited its ability to control the passage of oil tankers and other ships in the strait in response to US and Israeli attacks.
Trump said in his statement he was willing to extend the ceasefire because "the Government of Iran is seriously fractured, not unexpectedly so," a reference to US-Israeli assassinations of some of the country's leaders in the war's first weeks, including the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has been succeeded by his son.
A few hours before his announcement, Trump had told the CNBC news channel that he was not inclined to continue the temporary truce and the US military was "raring to go."
Those comments came as tentatively scheduled peace talks in Islamabad seemed on the verge of falling apart: US Vice President JD Vance, whose presence has been requested by the Iranians, had planned to return to Pakistan on Tuesday.
Before Trump's latest announcement, a senior Iranian official told Reuters that Iran's negotiators had been willing to attend another round of talks if the US abandoned a policy of pressure and threats, and rejected negotiations aimed at surrender.
Iran has condemned the US Navy intercepting and seizing two commercial Iranian ships at sea as part of its blockade, the second earlier on Tuesday, with its foreign ministry accusing the US of "piracy at sea and state terrorism." The US, joined by multiple other countries, has condemned Iran for impeding freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.
A first session of talks 10 days ago produced no agreement, with much of the focus on Iran's stockpiles of highly enriched uranium.
Trump wants to take the uranium out of Iran in order to prevent the country from enriching it further to the point where it could develop a nuclear weapon. Iran says it has only a peaceful civilian nuclear program and a sovereign right to continue that as a signatory of the nuclear weapons non-proliferation treaty.
Speakers at a high-level workshop yesterday emphasised the critical role of robust shariah governance in ensuring transparency, accountability, and public trust within the Islamic banking sector.
The remarks were made during the opening session of a three-day special training workshop, titled “Shariah Governance for Members of Shariah Supervisory Committees”, held at the Bangladesh Institute of Bank Management (BIBM) in the capital. The programme is being jointly organised by BIBM and the Bangladesh Bank.
Md Kabir Ahmed, deputy governor of Bangladesh Bank, inaugurated the workshop as the chief guest.
He stated that effective shariah governance is essential for upholding public confidence in the Islamic banking system.
He further noted that shariah-based supervision plays a pivotal role in ensuring accountability across all banking operations.
Abu Bakar Rafique, chairman of the Shariah Advisory Board of Bangladesh Bank, attended as a special guest.
He stressed the need for a strong institutional framework to guarantee transparency in Islamic financial activities.
Supporting this view, Mohammed Abdul Mannan, chairman of the Executive Committee of the Central Shariah Board for Islamic Banks of Bangladesh (CSBIB), highlighted that as the country’s Islamic banking sector continues to expand rapidly, the need for effective shariah oversight has become more crucial than ever.
The inaugural session was presided over by Md Ezazul Islam, director general of BIBM. In his address, he reaffirmed BIBM’s commitment to enhancing good governance and professional expertise in the banking sector through regular training, research, and knowledge-sharing initiatives.
The workshop, which runs from April 21 to April 23, 2026, is being attended by members of Shariah Supervisory Committees from various Islamic banks and financial institutions across the country. The sessions will focus on shariah governance frameworks, regulatory policies, and global best practices.
Earlier, Mohammed Tazul Islam, professor and director at BIBM, also spoke in the opening event.
A refund system for businesses that paid tariffs, which the US Supreme Court ruled President Donald Trump imposed without the constitutional authority to do so, launched Monday.
Importers and their brokers could begin claiming refunds through an online portal beginning at 8 am, according to US Customs and Border Protection, the agency administering the system.
It’s the first step in a complicated process that also might eventually lead to refunds for consumers who were billed for some or all of the tariffs on products shipped to them from outside the United States.
Companies must submit declarations listing the goods on which they collectively put billions of dollars toward the import taxes the court struck down on February 20. If CBP approves a claim, it will take 60-90 days for a refund to be issued, the agency said.
The government expects to process refunds in phases, however, focusing first on more recent tariff payments. Any number of technical factors and procedural issues also could delay an importer’s application, so any reimbursements businesses plan to make likely would trickle down to consumers slowly.
The co-owner of a clothing company based in Washington, D.C., said the system seemed buggy on Monday when she tried to create an account on the portal, which was required before companies could do anything else. A lawyer in Northern Virginia said his clients reported some system delays and lag time.
In a 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court found that Trump usurped Congress' tax-setting role last April when he set new import tax rates on products from almost every other country, citing the US trade deficit as a national emergency that warranted his invoking of a 1977 emergency powers law.
Although the court majority did not address refunds in its ruling, a judge at the US Court of International Trade determined last month that companies subjected to IEEPA tariffs were entitled to money back.
Not all taxed imports immediately eligible
Customs and Border Protection said in court filings that over 330,000 importers paid a total of about $166 billion on over 53 million shipments.
Not all of those orders qualify for the first phase of the refund system's rollout, which is limited to cases in which tariffs were estimated but not finalized or within 80 days of a final accounting.
To receive refunds, importers have to register for the CPB's electronic payment system. As of April 14, 56,497 importers had completed registration and were eligible for refunds totaling $127 billion, including interest, the agency said.
System requires accuracy
Meghann Supino, a partner at Ice Miller, said the law firm has advised clients to carefully list in their declarations all of the document numbers for forms that went to CBP to describe imported goods and their value.
“If there is an entry on that file that does not qualify, it may cause the entire entry to be rejected or that line item might be rejected by Customs,” she said.
Supino thinks the portal going live will require composure as well as diligence.
“Like any electronic online program that goes live with a lot of interest, I would expect that there might be some hiccups with the program on Monday,” she said.
“So, we continue to ask everyone to be patient, because we think that patience will pay off.”
Nghi Huynh, the partner-in-charge of transfer pricing at accounting and consulting firm Armanino, said most companies claiming refunds will have imported a mix of items, and not all will qualify right away.
“It’s about having a clear process in place and keeping track of what’s been submitted and what’s been paid, so nothing falls through the cracks,” she said. “Each file can include thousands of entries, but accuracy is critical, as submissions can be rejected if formatting or data is incorrect.”
Patience with the process
Small businesses have eagerly awaited the chance to apply for refunds. Rebecca Melsky, co-owner of the clothing brand and online store Princess Awesome, said she was unable to register for a portal account Monday despite trying to submit her CPB import code and company information using two different web browsers.
She said Princess Awesome would file for a refund eventually. The company imports some of its clothes from factories in Bangladesh, China, India and Peru. Melsky estimated it paid $32,000 in IEEPA tariffs.
“My expectations have been pretty low about whether we were actually going to see any money back to us,” she said.
“I’m heartened by the fact that there’s any system at all, but I’m only slightly more optimistic than I was last week, which was not very."
Justin Angotti, an associate attorney in the international trade practice of global law firm Reed Smith, said his clients ultimately had their declarations accepted Monday, even if it might have taken a few attempts.
“So far, Customs has been very responsive in trying to troubleshoot the issue,” Angotti said.
Oil prices fell on Tuesday while most stocks rose on lingering hopes for a deal to end the US-Iran war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, even as Tehran said it had not decided whether to attend peace talks.
With the end of a two-week ceasefire approaching, the White House said Vice President JD Vance was ready to return to Pakistan for fresh negotiations to end a conflict that has sent crude soaring and revived inflation fears.
However, the Islamic republic's position remained uncertain as it accused Washington of violating their fragile truce through its blockade of the country's ports and seizure of a ship.
Crude plunged on Friday after Tehran said it would allow ships to transit the Strait of Hormuz, which had been effectively closed since the war began on February 28.
But the commodity rebounded on Monday as Iran closed the waterway again, citing the blockade and seizure.
Donald Trump has similarly accused Tehran of violating the ceasefire by harassing vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, the transit passage for about one-fifth of global oil.
The US president said the blockade would not be lifted until an agreement had been reached.
"THE BLOCKADE, which we will not take off until there is a 'DEAL,' is absolutely destroying Iran," Trump said on social media. "They are losing $500 Million Dollars a day, an unsustainable number, even in the short run."
He told PBS News that Iran was "supposed to be there" at the talks in Pakistan.
"We agreed to be there," he said, warning that if the ceasefire expired "then lots of bombs start going off".
He separately told Bloomberg News it was "highly unlikely" he would extend the truce.
Based on its start time, the truce theoretically expires overnight on Tuesday, Iran time, although in his comments to Bloomberg Trump said the end was Wednesday evening Washington time.
The Middle Eastern country's parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said "Trump wants to turn this negotiating table into a surrender table or justify renewed hostilities, as he sees fit".
"We do not accept negotiations under the shadow of threats, and in the last two weeks we have been preparing to show new cards on the battlefield," he wrote on X.
Still, investors remained largely upbeat that the two sides will eventually come to a deal that will reopen the strategic strait.
US benchmark crude West Texas Intermediate rose more than one percent, while Brent was also higher.
Seoul led the equity market gains thanks to a resumption of the tech rally that had pushed the Kospi to multiple records before the war, while Tokyo and Taipei were also well up.
Hong Kong, Singapore and Manila also advanced, although Shanghai and Sydney fluctuated.
That came even after a down day on Wall Street, where the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite retreated from Friday's record closes.
Asia had opened "with a gentle lean into risk as signs Iran may join talks with the US offer a pathway, however narrow, toward easing tensions ahead of the ceasefire deadline", wrote SPI Asset Management's Stephen Innes.
"Markets are pricing the possibility of progress rather than its certainty," he said.
"Trump's remark that a ceasefire extension is 'highly unlikely' if no deal is reached has effectively put a clock on the market.
"However, traders recognize the playbook. Hard deadlines and firm rhetoric often soften as negotiations evolve, but the presence of a timeline still sharpens positioning and raises the stakes around each headline."
In company news, Japanese arms firms enjoyed healthy buying after Tokyo said on Tuesday it would ease decades-old export rules, paving the way for the sale of lethal weapons overseas.
The policy shift, which ends Tokyo's self-imposed restraint on the sale of lethal arms, comes as it seeks to enter the international arms market, hoping to bolster national defence as well as boost economic growth.
Fujitsu climbed 2.4 percent, NEC added 3.7 percent and Mitsubishi Electric was up 0.9 percent, while Mitsubishi Heavy gained 0.4 percent.
Bangladesh's total foreign exchange reserves stood at $30.46 billion as of last night (21 April).
Arif Hossain Khan, spokesperson and executive director of the central bank, confirmed while addressing journalists yesterday that the reserve position was previously $30.37 billion.
Bangladesh Bank purchased over $180 million from last week to Monday this week, contributing to the rise in reserves through increased foreign currency holdings.
A senior official of the central bank said Bangladesh Bank will make a payment to the Asian Clearing Union (ACU) next month, which prompted the purchase of US dollars from commercial banks.
The country's revenue collection has hit a historic deficit of approximately Tk98,000 crore against the target in the first nine months of the current fiscal 2025-26, surpassing the total shortfall recorded in any previous full financial year.
The National Board of Revenue data shows that the gap has already exceeded the Tk92,000 crore shortfall seen in the entirety of the last fiscal year, with experts warning that the deficit will widen further by June.
In March – the first full month under the new administration – revenue collection fell short of the monthly target by nearly Tk26,000 crore, growing by a mere 2.67% compared to the same month last year.
Speaking to The Business Standard, economists and NBR officials attributed the weak performance mainly to lower imports caused by the Middle East conflict, sluggish domestic economic activity, continued revenue leakage, and an overly ambitious target that did not reflect the tax authority's actual capacity.
Despite the widening shortfall, overall revenue collection during the first nine months of the fiscal year increased by more than 11% from a year earlier.
Officials said the increase was not sufficient to keep pace with the target set for the year.
"The economy has slowed, revenue leakage has not been contained and imports fell in March because of the Middle East conflict," an NBR official said. "At the same time, the revenue target was set without taking into account the actual capacity and limitations of the NBR."
Economists warned that the weak revenue performance is creating immediate pressure on the new government, which is already facing higher spending commitments.
According to NBR data, import tax receipts in March declined from the same month a year earlier, while value-added tax and income tax collections rose by 4.86% and 2.77%, respectively.
Import duties account for the largest share of revenue collected by Chattogram Custom House.
Its commissioner, Shafi Uddin, said imports fell because of the Middle East conflict, reducing import tax collection.
He also said one of the country's largest taxpayers, Eastern Refinery, remained shut in March, leaving the government without any revenue from the company during the month.
In March of the previous fiscal year, Eastern Refinery alone had paid Tk500 crore in revenue, he said. "Because the refinery remains closed, the government is also unlikely to receive revenue from the company in April."
Bangladesh Bank data also shows that imports in March fell by nearly 27% from a year earlier.
Snehasish Barua, a tax expert and chartered accountant, said the Middle East conflict and weak domestic economic conditions both contributed to the decline in revenue collection.
"Alongside the Middle East crisis, there was little dynamism in the domestic economy in March. That is one of the reasons why revenue collection fell," he said.
A review of NBR data over recent years shows that revenue collection has repeatedly weakened during periods of domestic and international disruption.
Tax receipts fell sharply during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, during the July uprising in 2024 and during the protests by NBR officials in June 2025.
Zahid Hussain, former lead economist at the World Bank's Dhaka office, said Bangladesh's revenue performance is being held back by slower economic growth, weak institutional capacity and the lack of reform within the NBR.
"An external shock has further weakened growth," he said. "As a result, consumer spending is falling and the private sector has not expanded. These are among the main reasons behind the lower revenue collection."
Zahid also said the large shortfall was partly the result of an excessively ambitious target, a mistake that he believes the government is preparing to repeat in the next budget.
The government set a revenue target of Tk6.97 lakh crore for FY26.
"How the government plans to raise such a large amount remains unclear," Zahid said. "This creates a major challenge for the new government, and that challenge will become even greater if it adopts an expansionary budget."
Commenting on pressure from the International Monetary Fund, the economist said the lender wants to see whether the government is taking effective steps to meet the targets it has set for Bangladesh.
When the Strait of Hormuz – a corridor that carries nearly a fifth of global oil supply – became embroiled in the US-Israel war against Iran, the shockwaves were felt across the globe, and hiking fuel prices became inevitable for most countries.
Around 20 oil-exporting nations control 80% of the global petroleum trade. Any disruption in those countries or in supply routes sends prices soaring in the rest of the world and forces governments to choose between fiscal pain and public hardship.
According to AFP tracking of 150 countries, fuel price adjustments in many economies – big or small – ranged from below 5% to over 55%. South Asia, heavily dependent on Gulf crude channelled through Hormuz, felt the squeeze sharply. Yet the divergence in crisis management across the region has been striking – and revealing.
Pakistan and Sri Lanka moved quickly to acknowledge the crisis and took measures to check consumption, ease fiscal strain and keep impacts lower on people and the economy.
Pakistan raised fuel prices by up to 55% in phases. But the hikes were accompanied by relief: petroleum levies were slashed, diesel levies cut to zero, federal ministers forfeited salaries, and targeted subsidies were rolled out for farmers, bikers and transport operators.
Besides, free bus services were introduced in major cities. In Punjab and Sindh, registered transporters and motorcyclists received direct support on condition that they did not pass on the full burden to commuters.
Sri Lanka, still recovering from its 2022 economic collapse, raised fuel prices by 34% and paired the move with strict demand management.
The Ceylon Petroleum Corporation enforced QR-based rationing, an odd-even number plate system, and consumption ceilings, hoping to cut demand by 20%. The island nation also shifted to a four-day workweek and expanded work-from-home policies to prepare for prolonged disruption.
India, with its strong refining capacity and discounted Russian crude supplies, took a different route.
It maintained steady domestic pump prices for mass-consumed fuels by cutting excise duties, slightly adjusted only premium grades, preserved its strategic reserves, and continued fuel exports to neighbours, including Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.
Supply stability, rather than price shock, was India's primary shield.
Bangladesh lags behind
Bangladesh, by contrast, hesitated.
From the outset, officials maintained that fuel stocks were adequate and attributed shortages to panic buying and hoarding. Price hikes came much later than others.
Average 16% hikes, announced on 18 April, were quickly followed by a 10-20% increase in supplies. LPG prices were adjusted twice in a month.
But these moves were reactive, not supported by safeguard measures to cushion ripple impacts on public life. Immediate knock-on impacts were a disproportionate rise in transport fares, quickly translated into commodity prices.
Attempts at rationing were inconsistent, and supply monitoring through deploying "tag officers" did not work well. While Sri Lanka formalised and digitised its system, Bangladesh introduced informal ceilings at pumps but withdrew visible rationing ahead of Eid to ease public anxiety.
The absence of a consistent framework weakened demand management just when it was most needed. The core problem is not merely price adjustment. Crucial safeguard measures were also absent.
There were no targeted subsidies for farmers for irrigation, or for transport operators to force them not to raise fares. As a result, transport fares rose disproportionately, pushing up commodity prices.
Despite authorities' claim of adequate stock and BPC's reported increase in fuel supplies to state-owned companies, long queues of motorists and long-haul trucks persisted as pumps shortened operating hours or displayed "no fuel" signs.
Regional peers combined three elements: acknowledging the crisis, focusing on demand management and undertaking cushioning measures while hiking fuel prices.
Bangladesh largely focused on supply management and took belated and uneven steps to curb demand through inconsistent rationing and engaging "tag officer" with little or no visible impact.
But relief measures to help motorists, farmers, transporters and consumers cushion the price hike shocks remain almost absent. Despite the authorities' repeated announcement about adequate stocks, public perception of scarcity persists, prompting pumps to self-ration and motorists to struggle to keep tanks filled.
As a result, queues at pumps lengthen, and hoarding continues despite raids by authorities and seizure of illegally stored fuels in basements or on rooftops.
In a region equally exposed to Gulf supply routes, Bangladesh's lag is not due to geography or dependency. It stems from delayed acknowledgement, ad hoc demand management, lack of proper communication and the absence of safeguards against price shocks.
The Strait of Hormuz crisis has shown that managing fuel shortages is not simply about raising prices and building stocks. It is about managing demand and supply, maintaining public trust and protecting vulnerable groups – farmers, commuters, bikers and transporters.
On all those counts, Bangladesh still trails its peers.
Commercial banks' borrowing appetite continues to fall amid a squeeze in credit demand in the face of persisting economic sluggishness in recent months.Economy news updates
Apart from the private sector's lower credit demand, the Bangladesh Bank (BB) keeps injecting liquidity in the form of buying US dollars from the market to keep the exchange rate stable, which further cut commercial lenders' borrowing appetite, according to money market experts.
It ultimately helps banks, which often go for borrowing either from the interbank market or the central bank to meet their requirements, lessen their liquidity appetite and borrowing by overcoming the demand-supply mismatch.
According to the latest Bangladesh Bank data, the monthly volume of call-money transactions, through which banks make short-term borrowing within themselves, dropped to Tk 945 billion in March from Tk 1.47 trillion and Tk 1.06 trillion recorded in September and December last year, respectively.
The central bank repo is another major instrument through which banks can borrow funds from the regulator.
The data shows commercial banks altogether borrowed Tk 1.55 trillion in July last year, but monthly borrowing dropped to Tk 996 billion in September and Tk 1.08 trillion in December.
This further dropped to Tk 986 billion in March 2026.Bangladesh market report
On the other hand, through the special liquidity facility, under which there are seven borrowing windows like assured liquidity support (ALS), assured repo (AR), and Islamic Banks Liquidity Facility (IBLF), banks overall borrowed Tk 1.43 trillion from the central bank in July last year.
The monthly borrowing volume declined to Tk 603 billion and Tk 383 billion in September last year and March this year, respectively.
Seeking anonymity, a central bank official says the banking regulator kept purchasing US dollars from banks since July 13 last year to stabilise the taka-dollar exchange.
Under such forex-market intervention, the central bank has so far bought $5.68 billion from the market and injected more than Tk 650 billion into banks, he says.
"This intervention plays a major role in commercial banks' plummeting borrowing trend," he says.
In fact, he says, commercial banks now park their surplus liquidity in the central bank's deposit instrument called Standing Liquidity Facility (SDF) significantly despite lower gains at the rate of 7.50 per cent, while the call money rate is around 10 per cent.
According to the central bank data, the monthly volume of fund banks deposited in the SDF increased to Tk 578 billion in March from last December's count of Tk 424 billion.
Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Mutual Trust Bank Syed Mahbubur Rahman says the private sector's credit demand keeps plummeting, reaching 6.03 per cent by the end of February 2026.
He says industrial units are facing difficulties in their operation due to various factors like the energy crisis and the recent crisis in the Gulf countries worsened the situation further.
"So, the investment avenues of banks kept shrinking in recent months. That is why their borrowing appetite continues to drop," the experienced banker adds.
Picture a garment factory in Ashulia on a Tuesday morning. Machines hum, deadlines loom, and a buyer waits on a shipment. Then the power cuts out. The generator kicks in. Diesel is expensive and polluting. The factory absorbs the cost and carries on. This is not a crisis. This is Tuesday. Bangladesh’s energy crisis is the “common cold” of the RMG sector: chronic, underestimated and quietly debilitating. Painful, yet rarely dramatic enough to force action. The prescription is known, and the reforms are within reach, but the cost of inaction is no longer theoretical. What was once a logistical headache has become an existential threat.
On the factory floor, reality is harsher. Chronic gas shortages idle machines, delay shipments and raise costs. Global buyers are asking tougher questions about carbon footprints. With only 5.24 percent of installed capacity coming from renewables, we are not merely missing targets; we are risking competitiveness in a market that rewards reliability and sustainability. The country aims to generate 40 percent of its electricity from clean sources by 2041. Yet, of 32,345 MW total capacity, renewables account for just 1,695 MW. In more than a decade, the renewable share has risen by barely 3 percent, while investment has continued to favour fossil fuels. The energy mix is also unbalanced. About 82.7 percent of renewable capacity comes from solar, with minimal contributions from wind and hydro. Limited diversification leaves the grid exposed to supply and price shocks.
Industry is already paying the price. Gas shortages, often exceeding 1,300 MMCFD, mean factories receive well below the required fuel. To keep production lines running, many rely on diesel generators. That raises costs and erodes margins already squeezed by currency depreciation and global price competition. Energy insecurity is making Bangladeshi goods more expensive, precisely when buyers demand lower prices. The greater risk lies in compliance. The EU, our largest export market, is tightening environmental standards. Buyers increasingly link orders to carbon intensity.
Waiting until 2030 is not an option. Four shifts are urgent. First, enable private power. A Merchant Power Plant framework should allow producers to sell directly to large industries at market rates. The policy must be bankable and free of excessive open access tariffs. RMG hubs should be able to sign long-term power purchase agreements with solar and wind developers. Second, modernise the grid. The transmission and distribution network was not designed for variable renewable generation. Scaling up clean energy requires smart grid investment, faster net metering rollout and a clear modernisation roadmap with financing and timelines.
Third, remove fiscal barriers. The FY2025-26 budget cut import duties on solar panels and inverters to 1 percent, but mounting structures still face duties of 58.6 percent and battery storage remains heavily taxed. Duty relief must extend to all essential components so that fiscal policy aligns with national energy goals. Fourth, mobilise green finance. Bangladesh needs up to $980 million annually until 2030 to meet renewable targets, several times the current annual investment of $238 million. The Tk 200 crore single borrower cap under the Green Transformation Fund is too small for utility-scale projects. Developing a liquid green bond market and securing risk guarantees from development partners would help attract investment at scale.
The textile and RMG sectors must be central to energy policy. Policies detached from factory realities will fail. The priority must shift from announcements to implementation. Renewable energy is no longer a distant aspiration or a branding exercise. It is an industrial necessity. If we do not accelerate the transition now, we risk leaving our most vital sector behind as global trade shifts towards low-carbon production.
The writer is a former director of BGMEA and additional managing director at Denim Expert Ltd
The positive trend in remittance inflows has continued into April, with Bangladeshi expatriates living in different countries sending US$2.12 billion in the first 19 days of April, according to the latest data from Bangladesh Bank.Bangladesh economic indicators
This marks a significant surge compared to the same period last year, when inflows stood at $1.71 billion. This year’s figures show an increase of $408 million.
Central bank sources noted that this momentum follows a record-breaking performance in March 2026, which saw the highest single-month remittance inflow in the country’s history. In March, expatriates sent a staggering $3.75 billion.
Previous record highs include $3.29 billion in March 2025, $3.22 billion in December 2025, and $3.17 billion in January 2026.
Analysts attribute the surge in part to ongoing tensions and instability in the Middle East, which have affected global foreign exchange markets. The crisis has increased demand for the US dollar internationally, leading to a rise in the dollar’s exchange rate against the local currency. Consequently, expatriates are receiving a higher value in Taka for every dollar sent home.
While the high inflow provides a boost to the economy, economists warn that a prolonged Middle East crisis could pose risks to Bangladesh, similar to other global economies. Experts have advised the government to focus on maintaining a robust foreign exchange reserve to mitigate potential future shocks.
The government is facing mounting financial pressure as revenue collection continues to fall short of expectations, widening the budget deficit.
Instalments of loans from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are also being delayed due to unmet conditions, leaving the state with limited fiscal space for expenditure.
As a result, the government is increasingly relying on borrowing. It has already taken a record amount of loans from the banking sector and has sought more than $3.25 billion in fresh loans from development partners. Meanwhile, soaring global fuel prices have reduced the government’s ability to sell fuel domestically at subsidised rates, forcing it to raise prices in the local market.
Despite weak revenue inflows, the government is preparing an ambitious budget for the upcoming fiscal year. Expenditure, however, remains unavoidable, with debt servicing obligations—both domestic and foreign—continuing to rise. Data suggests the government is now operating under constraints comparable to a financially stretched middle-income household.
According to the National Board of Revenue (NBR), the revenue shortfall for the first eight months of the current fiscal year stood at Tk71,472 crore. Against a target of Tk325,802 crore, only Tk254,330 crore has been collected—around 22 per cent below target. Although nearly Tk300,000 crore needs to be collected in the remaining four months to meet the goal, the reality appears far from achievable. Monthly collections have not exceeded Tk40,000 crore so far, while more than Tk75,000 crore per month would be required to meet the target.
All three major revenue heads—income tax, VAT and import duties—have underperformed, with a particularly large gap in income tax collection. A significant number of taxpayers remain outside the tax net. Of approximately 12.8 million Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) holders, only 4.6 million have filed returns, highlighting structural weaknesses in the tax system. Lower import duty collection and sluggish business and development activities have also contributed to reduced VAT receipts.
Despite declining income, government expenditure remains high, covering salaries and allowances for public employees, infrastructure development and other sectors—even after austerity measures. With revenue underperforming, the government has been compelled to borrow heavily from the banking system.
Data from Bangladesh Bank shows that government borrowing from banks has surged to nearly Tk109,000 crore in just nine months of the fiscal year, already exceeding the annual target. Around Tk56,000 crore was borrowed between January and March alone. Analysts warn that continued reliance on bank borrowing could crowd out private sector credit, dampening investment and employment, and ultimately slowing GDP growth.
External borrowing is also on the rise. According to the Economic Relations Division (ERD), Bangladesh’s total foreign debt now exceeds Tk23,00000 crore. Even so, the government has sought an additional $3 billion from development partners.
Repayment obligations remain pressing. Sources indicate that Bangladesh will need to repay around $26 billion in external debt over the next five years—significantly higher than in previous periods.
Although the government secured a $4.75 billion loan from the IMF, further disbursements are uncertain due to unmet conditions. During recent talks in Washington, the IMF did not guarantee the release of the next tranche, increasing risks to budget implementation.
In this context, the government has moved to adjust fuel prices. While it has repeatedly stated that prices would not be increased for now, rising global costs have made it difficult to continue selling fuel at lower domestic rates without incurring substantial losses. Pressure from the IMF to reduce such subsidies has also played a role. The price hike may offer some fiscal relief but could also fuel inflation, economists warn, creating further economic challenges.
The government is now planning a budget exceeding Tk925,000 crore for the 2026–27 fiscal year. The larger outlay reflects commitments to election pledges, expansion of social safety net programmes, a new pay structure and increased subsidies. However, with revenue growth lagging, the budget deficit could approach 5 per cent of GDP—raising concerns about macroeconomic stability.
A growing share of expenditure is being absorbed by interest payments and subsidies. Around Tk122,000 crore has been allocated for interest payments in the current fiscal year, a figure expected to rise further. Subsidy requirements, particularly in the energy sector, are also increasing due to global price trends, alongside rising development expenditure.
Business leaders and economists caution that without appropriate policy measures, Bangladesh risks falling into a debt trap. They stress the need to boost revenue collection, modernise the tax system, curb tax evasion and create a more investment-friendly environment. They also emphasise careful selection of development projects and prioritisation of spending.
President of the Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA), Mohammad Hatem, warned that excessive bank borrowing could ultimately harm the economy, adding that repaying such large debts could become a major challenge for the government.
Distinguished Fellow of the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), Dr Mustafizur Rahman, said avoiding a debt trap should be the government’s primary objective. “While borrowing may be necessary under current circumstances, the focus must be on resource mobilisation and increasing revenue,” he noted.
Former Lead Economist of the World Bank’s Dhaka office, Dr Zahid Hussain, observed that although demand for long-term, low-interest loans is rising, borrowing alone cannot resolve the situation. He stressed the need for a clear assessment of macroeconomic pressures, including the balance of payments. Rising import costs, declining export earnings and risks to remittance inflows are adding to the strain, alongside growing fiscal deficits and subsidy burdens. Addressing these challenges, he said, will require coordinated crisis management, continued reforms and strong support from development partners.
Source: Kaler Kantho
The owners of 21 private inland container depots (ICDs) have announced an 8.5 percent increase in various container handling charges, effective from April 19.
Operators of lighter vessels transporting imported cargoes from Chattogram port’s outer anchorage to different destinations on inland water routes will meet with government authorities on April 22 to discuss freight adjustments.
The Bangladesh Inland Container Depots Association (BICDA), in a circular issued on Sunday, announced the increase in six types of container handling charges at ICDs by 8.5 percent following a 15 percent rise in diesel prices, from Tk 100 to Tk 115 per litre.
The charges include empty container transportation between Chattogram port and ICD, empty container transportation between Patenga Container Terminal and ICD, empty container lift-on or lift-off, export goods stuffing package, export loaded container verified gross mass and import goods delivery package.
There are 21 privately owned ICDs located in and around the port city. Almost 93 percent of export-loaded containers are handled by ICDs before shipment through Chattogram port.
BICDA Secretary General Md Ruhul Amin Sikder said prime movers and all container handling equipment at ICDs run on diesel, with ICDs requiring over 70,000 litres of diesel per day.
“Following the diesel price hike and subsequent cost increase, there is no alternative to adjusting charges in order to maintain smooth operational activities,” Sikder said.
Currently, ICDs charge on average Tk 2,046 for each empty container transported between the port and ICDs, while the export goods stuffing package charge stands at around Tk 7,424 per 20-foot container and Tk 9,900 per 40-foot container.
Sikder noted that charges vary as ICDs individually fix rates through negotiation with clients.
Khairul Alam Suzan, former vice president of the Bangladesh Freight Forwarders Association (BAFFA), said ICDs had already increased their charges by 20 percent only four months ago.
He pointed out that Chittagong Port Authority (CPA) increased its tariffs by over 41 percent since December, adding that the cost of import and export businesses would sharply rise with the fresh hike in ICD charges.
Officials from different shipping agents opined that the newly revised ICD tariffs would adversely impact trade.
Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) Director SM Abu Tayyab expressed resentment over BICDA’s unilateral decision to raise tariffs without consulting stakeholders.
Tayyab said a government coordination committee needs to discuss the issue with stakeholders to assess the actual impact of the fuel price hike on ICD operations before any adjustment in charges.
He added that following recent hikes in port tariffs, ICD tariffs, and freight increases by shipping lines, the fresh hike by ICDs would badly hurt the already struggling readymade garment sector.
Meanwhile, the Director General of the Department of Shipping will meet with stakeholders in Dhaka on Wednesday to discuss adjusting lighter vessel freights due to the diesel price hike.
Bangladesh Water Transport Coordination Cell Convener Shafiq Ahmed said a lighter vessel requires on average 3,500 litres of diesel for a round trip from Chattogram to Dhaka.
Currently, freight for transporting cement clinker in a lighter vessel from Chattogram to Dhaka stands at Tk 550 per tonne, he said.
The government has simplified the industrial gas distribution system, allowing factories to rearrange equipment and transfer unused gas load with fewer approvals, in a move expected to boost productivity and reduce costs.
The Power, Energy and Mineral Resources Division issued a circular today (20 April) outlining the revised guidelines aimed at easing operational bottlenecks for industrial users.
Business leaders welcomed the initiative, saying the reforms would streamline operations, particularly for energy-intensive sectors such as textiles.
According to the circular, industrial units will be allowed to rearrange or replace gas equipment while keeping the approved hourly load unchanged. The commissioning work must be carried out by a contractor enlisted with the relevant gas company, but prior permission from the gas distribution company will no longer be required.
The circular also allows the transfer of unused gas load between industrial units located within the same premises and under the same ownership, subject to approval from the managing director or regional head of the respective gas distribution company. Previously, such transfers required approval from the head office board, often resulting in lengthy delays.
In addition, gas load allocated under the captive power category can now be transferred to the industrial category within the same premises and ownership, if required.
The directive further states that gas distribution and marketing companies must install meters within seven days, after which the quality of installation must be verified.
Textile mills are among the largest consumers of industrial gas in the country, making the sector particularly affected by the new measures.
The Bangladesh Textile Mills Association (BTMA) welcomed the decision, saying it would help improve operational efficiency.
In a statement issued today (20 April), the association said reforms in the energy sector would contribute significantly to increasing productivity, reducing costs and improving energy management in the country's textile and apparel industries.
Industries Minister Khandakar Abdul Muktadir today (20 April) informed parliament that Bangladesh witnessed its highest trade imbalance with India among Saarc member countries, with the gap reaching $7.86 billion in the 2024-25 fiscal year.
"Bangladesh's trade deficit [among Saarc members] with India is the highest. The gap stood at $7.86 billion in FY2024-25," he said, while replying to a starred question from treasury bench member SM Jahangir Hossain (Dhaka-18).
The minister said Bangladesh has also trade deficits with Afghanistan, Bhutan and Pakistan, but it enjoys trade surpluses with Nepal, Sri Lanka and the Maldives, among the Saarc countries.
Presenting detailed figures, he said Bangladesh exported goods worth $11.09 million to Afghanistan and imported $21.80 million, resulting in a deficit of $10.71 million.
Exports to Bhutan stood at $14.33 million, while imports reached $44.10 million, leaving a deficit of $29.77 million.
In trade with India, Bangladesh exported goods worth $1,764.24 million against imports of $9,624.10 million, resulting in a deficit of $7,859.87 million.
With Nepal, Bangladesh exported goods worth $35.40 million and imported $5.50 million, maintaining a trade surplus.
Exports to Pakistan were $74 million, while imports stood at $755.30 million, creating a deficit of $681.30 million.
Bangladesh exported $82.85 million worth of products to Sri Lanka against imports of $76.60 million, while exports to the Maldives were $6.35 million compared to imports of $3.50 million, both reflecting trade surpluses.
Bangladesh Bank (BB) purchased an additional US$60 million from commercial banks on Monday as part of its ongoing efforts to strengthen the country’s foreign exchange reserves.
The dollars were acquired through an auction at a rate of Tk 122.75 per dollar.
With this latest purchase, the country’s gross foreign exchange reserves have risen to $30.36 billion, according to the latest data from the central bank.
This move follows a similar trend from last week, where the central bank bought a total of $120 million over two days at the same exchange rate. Officials state that these consistent dollar purchases serve a dual purpose: increasing the national buffer of foreign currency and injecting money into the banking system to improve liquidity flow.
Financial analysts suggest that the central bank is strategically purchasing greenbacks from the market to maintain stability in the foreign exchange market while ensuring that commercial banks have enough local currency to meet domestic demand.
The government has simplified industrial gas distribution guidelines, a strategic move designed to cut operational costs and enhance productivity for the country’s manufacturing sector.
The Power, Energy and Mineral Resources Division issued a circular on Monday, introducing reforms that eliminate long-standing bureaucratic hurdles for industrial users.
Key changes under the new directive include: industrial units may now rearrange or replace gas equipment without prior permission from distribution companies, provided the approved hourly load remains unchanged. Installations must be performed by an enlisted contractor.
Businesses can now transfer unused gas loads between units under the same ownership within the same premises. Approval is now streamlined through the local managing director or regional head, bypassing the previous requirement for head office board approval.
Gas loads previously allocated for captive power can now be transferred to industrial categories within the same facility.
Distribution and marketing companies are mandated to complete meter installations within seven days, followed by mandatory quality verification.
The Bangladesh Textile Mills Association (BTMA) has lauded the initiative, noting that the textile and apparel industries-which are among the largest gas consumers-stand to benefit significantly from these reforms.
Business leaders expressed optimism that the measures will streamline operations and improve energy management across energy-intensive sectors.