Executive Summary

Strategic Overview

Bangladesh has built one of the most resilient low-income economies in the world — but its government financial system remains structurally fragile. With a tax-to-GDP ratio of just 6.56% (FY2025), one of the lowest in Asia, the state cannot adequately fund health, education, infrastructure, or debt servicing without chronic deficits and escalating foreign borrowing.

The banking sector, meanwhile, has the highest non-performing loan (NPL) ratio in Asia at 24.13% (March 2025) — a direct consequence of political interference, regulatory laxity, and governance failures.

Assessment Without deep structural reforms in revenue administration, banking governance, and public expenditure management, Bangladesh risks fiscal consolidation failure — particularly as it faces LDC graduation in November 2026, potential loss of preferential trade access, and tightening IMF conditions under its USD 4.7 billion credit programme.
Section 01

Government Financial Architecture

1.1 Constitutional & Institutional Framework

The Bangladesh government financial system operates under Articles 84-93 of the Constitution of Bangladesh (1972). The Consolidated Fund, Public Account, and Contingency Fund form the three pillars of public financial management.

Institution Role Key Legislation
Ministry of Finance Budget formulation, fiscal policy, debt management PFMA 2009
National Board of Revenue (NBR) Tax & customs collection (88.72% of revenue) Income Tax Act 2023, VAT Act 2012
Bangladesh Bank Monetary policy, banking supervision, forex management Bangladesh Bank Order 1972
Finance Division Budget execution, expenditure control, accounts Government Accounting Rules
Economic Relations Division External aid, loan negotiations, donor coordination ERD Manual
Financial Institutions Division SOE oversight, banking policy, insurance regulation Financial Institutions Act 1993
Comptroller & Auditor General (CAG) Public audit, financial accountability CAG Additional Functions Act 1974
Planning Commission Development planning, ADP management Five-Year Plans

1.2 Budget Structure FY2025-26

Budget Parameter BDT USD % of GDP
Total Expenditure 7.90 trillion USD 65 billion ~13.7%
Total Revenue Target 5.64 trillion USD 46 billion ~9.7%
NBR Revenue Component 4.99 trillion USD 41 billion ~8.6%
Non-Tax Revenue 0.65 trillion USD 5.4 billion ~1.1%
Budget Deficit 2.26 trillion USD 19 billion 3.6%
Domestic Financing 1.25 trillion USD 10.3 billion ~2.2%
Foreign Financing 1.01 trillion USD 8.3 billion ~1.7%
Nominal GDP (Approx) 57.91 trillion USD 480 billion 100%

Source: Budget Speech FY2025-26, Ministry of Finance, Government of Bangladesh

Section 02

Revenue System — Structure, Performance & Critical Gaps

Critical Indicator Bangladesh’s tax-to-GDP ratio fell to 6.56% in FY2025 from 7.2% in FY2024 — moving in the WRONG direction. The IMF minimum threshold for developing nations providing basic services is 15%. Bangladesh is less than half that level.

2.1 Revenue Performance vs Target (FY2024-25)

Revenue Stream Target (BDT crore) Actual (BDT crore) % Achievement
Income Tax (Direct) 1,45,500 ~96,000 (est.) ~66%
VAT (Indirect) 1,80,000 ~1,20,000 (est.) ~67%
Customs Duty 42,000 ~30,000 (est.) ~71%
Total NBR Revenue 4,63,000 3,70,000 79.9%

2.2 Tax-to-GDP Comparative

Country Tax-to-GDP Gap vs Bangladesh Note
Bangladesh 6.56% Baseline FY2025 — falling
India ~17% +10.4 ppts Improving trend
Vietnam ~19% +12.4 ppts Strong reform gains
South Africa >26% +19.4 ppts Upper-middle income
IMF Threshold (Dev.) 15% +8.4 ppts Minimum benchmark
South Asia Average ~12-14% +6-7 ppts Regional context

2.3 Root Causes of Revenue Underperformance

  • Narrow Tax Base: Only ~4 million registered taxpayers out of ~17 crore population
  • Massive Informality: Agriculture (exempt) and urban informal sectors largely outside the tax net
  • Institutional Weaknesses: NBR reform stalled; automation only partially implemented
  • Tax Expenditure Leakage: Exemptions valued at ~2.9% of GDP — large corporate exemptions benefit politically connected entities
  • Corruption and Evasion: Estimated BDT 2.26 trillion in tax evasion annually
  • Political Interference: VAT reform law passed in 2012 but repeatedly delayed due to lobbying pressure
  • IMF Conditionality: Bangladesh needs to raise tax-to-GDP by 0.5% per year — a target it is currently missing
Section 03

Public Expenditure — Allocation, Efficiency & Structural Issues

3.1 Expenditure Breakdown by Sector (FY2025-26)

Sector Allocation (BDT crore) % of Budget Assessment
Public Services / Administration ~1,89,600 ~24% Largest single head; high recurrent cost
Interest Payments on Debt ~1,18,500 ~15% Growing — reflects rising debt servicing
Education & Technology ~94,708 ~12% Chronically underfunded vs GDP
Transport & Communications ~80,000+ ~10% Key ADP focus area
Social Protection & Welfare ~1,05,000+ ~13% Safety net programs, stipends
Local Govt. & Rural Dev. ~46,553 ~5.9% Includes Union Parishad system
Agriculture ~35,000 ~4.4% Input subsidies dominate
Health & Family Welfare ~41,407 ~5.2% Well below WHO recommended 5-6% of GDP
Science, Technology, ICT ~8,000 ~1% Critically low for digital transition
ADP Implementation Gap ADP utilisation rarely exceeds 80-85% annually. Last-quarter (April-June) rush spending leads to quality issues. Projects suffer time overruns averaging 2-3 years and cost overruns averaging 30-50%. The Dhaka Metro Rail project (MRT Line-6) required multiple DPP revisions due to cost rationalisation under the interim government.
Section 04

Deficit Financing, Public Debt & External Borrowing

Bangladesh has run a fiscal deficit in 31 of the past 35 years. The government targets a deficit of 3.6% of GDP in FY2026, financed through domestic borrowing (BDT 1,25,000 crore) and foreign borrowing (BDT 1,01,000 crore).

4.1 Fiscal Deficit Trend

Year Fiscal Deficit (% GDP) Revenue (BDT Bn) Expenditure (BDT Bn)
FY2020 -5.5% (peak Covid) ~3,300 ~5,680
FY2021 -6.23% (record) ~3,430 ~6,605
FY2022 -4.9% ~3,700 ~6,200
FY2023 -5.0% ~4,330 ~6,605
FY2024 -4.60% ~4,780 ~7,144
FY2025 (Revised) ~4.8% (est.) ~4,330 (miss) ~7,000

4.2 External Debt Position

Indicator Value Source/Year
Total External Debt USD 101.45 billion 2023, World Bank
Growth vs 2020 (USD 73.55bn) +37.9% in 3 years Rapid accumulation
Public Debt (% of GDP) ~40.1% 2024, FocusEconomics
Government Debt (% Nominal GDP) 24.1% Dec 2025, CEIC
IMF Programme Size USD 4.7 billion Approved Jan 2023
Section 05

Banking Sector — Fragility, NPLs & Governance Failure

Bangladesh’s Most Urgent Financial Stability Risk Bangladesh now has the HIGHEST non-performing loan (NPL) ratio in Asia at 24.13% (March 2025) — up from 20.2% in December 2024. Total bad loans: BDT 4,20,334.94 crore. Provision shortfall: BDT 1,70,655.32 crore. Provision coverage: only 37.97%.

5.1 NPL Comparative — Regional Context

Country NPL Ratio Trend Note
Bangladesh 24.13% (Mar 2025) ↑ Sharply rising Highest in Asia — ADB 2025
India 2.5% ↓ Falling Benefited from banking reforms
Pakistan Improving ↓ Falling IMF programme compliance
Sri Lanka Improving ↓ Falling Post-default recovery
Vietnam <3% → Stable Strong credit discipline
Regional Average (Asia) ~5-7% Mixed Bangladesh a clear outlier

5.2 State-Owned Commercial Banks — The Epicentre

State-owned banks (Sonali, Agrani, Janata, Rupali) represent the worst segment of NPL concentration. Nearly 46% of their total loans are classified as non-performing.

  • Political lending: Large loans disbursed to politically connected business groups without adequate credit assessment
  • Regulatory forbearance: Loan classification rules repeatedly relaxed under political pressure (2012-2024)
  • Wilful defaults: Beximco, Nassa Group and others in financial crisis — contributing to NPL surge
  • Capital adequacy: Many banks undercapitalised; true picture still emerging from new disclosure norms
Section 06

Monetary Policy & Foreign Exchange Management

Bangladesh Bank operates a managed exchange rate system and targets monetary aggregates (M2, reserve money). The policy rate (Repo) has been adjusted upward multiple times since 2023 in response to inflation and IMF reform requirements.

Forex Reserves Under Pressure Bangladesh’s forex reserves declined sharply from a peak of ~USD 46 billion (2021) to around USD 20-25 billion in 2024-25, driven by import pressure, debt servicing on external loans (worsened by Taka depreciation), and reduced export growth. Remittances (~6% of GDP) from over 1.3 crore overseas workers remain the single most stabilising factor in Bangladesh’s balance of payments.

General inflation reached 10.87% by September 2025 (from over 9% for two consecutive years), driven by global commodity prices, Taka depreciation, and supply chain disruptions. The FY2026 budget targets average inflation at 6.5%.

Section 07

Governance, Corruption & Institutional Weakness

Bangladesh scored 23/100 on the 2024 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) — ranked 151st out of 180 countries. In 2025, the score improved marginally to 24/100, but Bangladesh remains 13th most corrupt globally and 2nd lowest in South Asia after Afghanistan.

World Bank Control of Corruption Bangladesh scores -1.1 on the World Bank’s Control of Corruption Index (scale of -2.5 to +2.5), against a world average of -0.03 — a severe governance deficit. Household bribe payments are estimated at BDT 6,796 crore annually across 9 service sectors.

7.1 IMF Structural Reform Conditions

Under the USD 4.7 billion IMF Extended Credit Facility (January 2023), Bangladesh has committed to:

  • Raise tax-to-GDP ratio by 0.5% of GDP per year
  • Rationalise NSC interest rates to market levels
  • Move to a market-determined exchange rate
  • Strengthen Bangladesh Bank’s autonomy and prudential supervision
  • Reform energy subsidies and reduce fiscal subsidies
  • Improve ADP implementation and public financial management
Section 08

Statistical Benchmarks Against Global Peers

8.1 Economic & Fiscal Benchmarks

Indicator Bangladesh India Vietnam S. Asia Avg
GDP Per Capita (Nominal) USD 2,593 USD 2,695 USD 4,600+ USD 2,100
GDP Growth FY2025 3.49% ~6.5% ~6.3% ~5%
Tax-to-GDP Ratio 6.56% ~17% ~19% ~12-14%
Public Debt (% GDP) 40.1% 79.6% ~37% ~56%
FDI Net Inflows (% GDP) <1% ~2% ~4-5% ~2%
Govt. Spending (% GDP) 14% 27.9% ~30% ~22%

8.2 Banking & Financial Sector

Indicator Bangladesh India Vietnam
NPL Ratio 24.13% 2.5% <3%
State Bank NPL ~46% ~5% N/A
Provision Coverage 37.97% >60% >70%
Credit to Private Sector (% GDP) ~50% ~55% ~130%

8.3 Governance & Institutional Quality

Indicator Bangladesh India Vietnam Benchmark
CPI Score (2024) 23/100 38 40 Scandinavia: 85+
CPI Rank (2024) 151 of 180 93 83 Top 30 aim
Control of Corruption WB -1.1 -0.5 -0.2 +2.5 = best

8.4 Human Development Indicators

Indicator Bangladesh India Vietnam Global Average
HDI Rank (2024) 129th 134th 107th Median ~130
Life Expectancy ~73 years ~70 years ~76 years ~73 years
Adult Literacy ~75% ~77% ~96% ~87%
Doctors per 10,000 5.26 ~8.6 ~9.8 WHO: 10+
Education (% of GDP) ~2% ~4.5% ~4.2% UNESCO: 4-6%
Section 09

Structural Reasons for Bangladesh’s Global Lag — A Professional Assessment

9.1 The Revenue Trap

A government that collects less than 7% of GDP in taxes simply cannot fund the public goods needed to generate the next generation of growth — quality education, universal healthcare, reliable infrastructure, and R&D investment. This is a self-reinforcing cycle. Without revenue, the state borrows. Rising debt servicing (15% of budget) crowds out productive spending. Investment returns fall. Growth slows. Revenue falls again.

9.2 Export Monoculture Risk

Bangladesh earns approximately 84% of its foreign exchange from ready-made garments (RMG). This is an extraordinary concentration. Vietnam has diversified into electronics, machinery, and technology products. When Bangladesh faces a tariff shock (as happened in 2025 with US tariffs of 20%), the entire export sector is exposed simultaneously.

9.3 Banking Sector as a Liability

In most developing countries, banks function as growth catalysts. In Bangladesh, the banking system has instead become a liability. With NPLs at 24.13%, banks cannot lend competitively. Credit allocation is distorted by political relationships. The provision shortfall of BDT 1,70,655 crore represents a real fiscal risk — if state-owned banks require recapitalisation, it will be the taxpayer who bears the cost.

9.4 Governance Failure as a Tax on Growth

The World Bank estimates that improvements in governance could have increased Bangladesh’s output growth by 3.7 percentage points annually. That is the cost of institutional weakness — foregone development.

9.5 LDC Graduation — An Inflection Point

November 2026 — Critical Transition Bangladesh will graduate from Least Developed Country (LDC) status in November 2026, removing access to preferential duty-free, quota-free trade in the EU (Everything But Arms) and other markets. WTO rules will require Bangladesh to phase out garment export subsidies. Without a diversified export base and competitive FDI environment, this transition creates significant downside risk.
Section 10

Reform Roadmap — What Needs to Happen

Revenue Reforms (Immediate Priority)

  • Full automation of NBR — eTIN, online VAT, e-payment integration
  • Expand tax base by bringing urban informal sector into income tax net
  • Rationalise BDT 1,15,056 crore in tax expenditures (2.9% of GDP)
  • Strengthen transfer pricing rules to prevent profit shifting
  • Introduce wealth taxes and strengthen property taxation

Banking Sector Reforms (Urgent)

  • Implement Basel III capital adequacy requirements strictly
  • Establish independent Asset Resolution Corporation for NPL recovery
  • Reduce government shareholding in SOCBs; introduce professional governance
  • Strengthen Bangladesh Bank’s supervisory autonomy
  • Fast-track prosecution of wilful defaulters

Public Financial Management

  • Strengthen IBAS++ for budget execution tracking
  • Introduce meaningful Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF)
  • Improve ADP project selection and cost discipline
  • Increase education spending to minimum 4% of GDP
  • Increase health spending to 3% of GDP (SDG commitment)

Governance & Institutional Strengthening

  • Restore and empower Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) with genuine independence
  • Digitalise all public procurement (e-GP system expansion)
  • Strengthen CAG audit function and Parliamentary PAC effectiveness
  • Fast-track judicial reforms to reduce contract enforcement time

External Sector Diversification

  • Invest in pharmaceuticals, IT services, light engineering, leather goods
  • Improve FDI climate: single-window investment service, stable regulations
  • Negotiate post-LDC bilateral trade agreements to minimise duty shock
Section 11

Conclusion

A Critical Juncture

Bangladesh’s government financial system is at a critical juncture. The country has achieved remarkable development milestones — poverty reduction, garment industry growth, social safety nets, and remittance-powered stability. But the financial architecture underpinning this progress is fragile in ways that now threaten the next phase of development.

The tax-to-GDP ratio at 6.56% is not simply a fiscal statistic — it is a statement about state capacity. The banking system’s 24.13% NPL ratio is not simply a banking sector problem — it is a reflection of the governance culture that allowed decades of politically directed lending to go unchecked.

Bangladesh’s global lag is not a mystery. It is the cumulative outcome of low revenue mobilisation, institutional weakness, export concentration, governance deficits, and delayed structural reforms — all of which are measurable, documentable, and ultimately addressable. The window for reform, however, is narrowing.

Final Verdict for Practitioners Bangladesh’s financial system is technically functional but strategically insufficient. The fiscal, banking, and governance deficits are interconnected — no single reform will work in isolation. As professionals in audit, finance, and banking, our role in advocating for and implementing rigorous financial discipline — in both public institutions and private enterprises — is more important now than at any previous point in Bangladesh’s financial history.

References & Sources

  • Ministry of Finance, Government of Bangladesh — Budget Speech FY2025-26 (June 2, 2025)
  • National Board of Revenue (NBR) — Medium and Long-Term Revenue Strategy; Tax Expenditure Report FY2021-22
  • Bangladesh Bank — Banking Sector Data, Monetary Policy Statements (2024-2025)
  • Asian Development Bank (ADB) — Nonperforming Loans Watch in Asia 2025
  • International Monetary Fund (IMF) — Bangladesh Article IV Consultation; Extended Credit Facility USD 4.7bn (January 2023)
  • World Bank — Bangladesh Development Update: Special Focus on Domestic Resource Mobilisation (2024)
  • Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) — Tax Evasion Study 2023/24; Budget Analysis dialogues (2025)
  • Policy Research Institute (PRI) — Bangladesh Tax-to-GDP Ratio Policy Brief
  • Transparency International — Corruption Perceptions Index 2024 & 2025
  • Adam Smith International — Fixing the Tax System in Bangladesh (May 2025)
  • Harvard Kennedy School — Policy Brief: Bangladesh’s Tax-to-GDP Ratio (2025)
  • FocusEconomics — Bangladesh Public Debt Data (2024) | CEIC Data — Govt. Debt % of GDP (2025)
  • Trading Economics — Bangladesh Government Budget and Fiscal Expenditure Data
SH
Md Shakhawat Hossain FCA
Fellow Chartered Accountant (ICAB) · Partner, M A Fazal & Co., Chartered Accountants
Financial Specialist (Consultant), Grameen Bank · Lecturer, ICAB · Tax & VAT Consultant, bdtaxmaster.com
With over 15 years of cross-disciplinary experience spanning audit, finance, banking, tax, VAT, project management, valuation, due diligence, and financial investigation, Shakhawat brings practitioner-level insight to complex financial and regulatory analysis. He holds an FCA from ICAB (2018), an Associate designation from the Institute of Bankers, Bangladesh (DAIBB 2019), and is currently pursuing an MPF from the University of Dhaka. He has served as Tax & VAT Consultant for the Dhaka Metro Rail (CP-6) project and held senior finance roles at Bank Asia Limited over a decade.
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