Bangladesh, IMF reach staff-level agreement for second review of loan programmes

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DHAKA, The International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff and

the Bangladesh authorities have reached a staff-level agreement on the

policies needed to complete the second review of the programmes being

supported by the IMF’s Extended Credit Facility (ECF), Extended Fund Facility

(EFF), and Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF).

“The staff-level agreement is subject to approval by the Executive Board,

which is expected in the coming weeks. Completion of the second review will

make available SDR704.70 million (about US$932 million, equivalent of 66

percent of quota) under the ECF/EFF and SDR166.68 million (about US$220

million, equivalent of 15.6 percent of quota) under the RSF,” said Chris

Papageorgiou, IMF Mission Chief to Bangladesh, at press briefing at the

Finance Ministry conference room in the city today.

An IMF mission team led by Chris Papageorgiou visited Dhaka during April 24 –

May 8, 2024 to discuss economic and financial policies in the context of the

second review of the IMF’s ECF,
EFF and RSF.

In his speech, Chris Papageorgiou said the authorities have made significant

progress on structural reforms under the IMF-supported program, including the

implementation of a formula-based fuel price adjustment mechanism for

petroleum products.

“Nonetheless, larger-than-expected spillovers from tightening of global

financial conditions, and still elevated international commodity and food

prices, coupled with domestic vulnerabilities, has led to persistently high

inflation and declining foreign exchange (FX) reserves. This has exacerbated

pressures on the economy and heightened the complexity of macroeconomic

challenges,” he added.

He said, “Against this backdrop, we welcome Bangladesh Bank’s bold actions to

realign the exchange rate and simultaneously adopt a crawling peg regime with

a band as a transitional step toward greater exchange rate flexibility to

restore external resilience. Following the liberalization of retail interest

rates, additional tightening of monetary policy sh
ould help alleviate any

inflationary pressures resulting from the exchange rate reform. Fiscal policy

should support these monetary tightening efforts through revenue-based

consolidation. If external and inflationary pressures intensify, the

authorities should stand ready to tighten policies further.”

“The macroeconomic outlook is expected to gradually stabilize as policy

actions start to take hold. Real GDP growth is projected to moderate to 5.4

percent in FY24 owing to the ongoing import compression and policy

tightening. However, it is anticipated to rebound to 6.6 percent in FY25 as

imports rebound and FX pressures ease. Inflation is projected to remain

elevated at approximately 9.4 percent (year-on-year) in FY24 but is

anticipated to decline to around 7.2 percent in FY25, on the back of the

continued tighter policy mix and projected lower global food and commodity

prices. Nevertheless, uncertainties surrounding the outlook remain high, with

risks predominantly leaning towards the downside,”
he added.

He said, “Considering Bangladesh’s low tax-to-GDP ratio, it is imperative to

prioritize sustainable revenue generation to bolster investments in social

welfare and development initiatives. To this end, tangible tax policy and

administrative measures should be incorporated into the FY25 budget to

augment tax revenues by 0.5 percent of GDP. At the same time, a medium- and

long-term revenue strategy, with an accompanying implementation framework,

should guide future reforms. Reducing subsidies, improving expenditure

efficiency, and managing fiscal risks will allow for additional spending on

social safety nets and growth-enhancing investment.”

“Reducing banking sector vulnerabilities remains a priority. Efforts to

implement the non-performing loan reduction strategy should help support the

growing financing needs of the economy. At the same time, Bangladesh Bank

should continue the transition to risk-based supervision to enhance financial

sector resilience, while continuing legal reforms t
o improve corporate

governance and regulatory frameworks. Looking ahead, domestic capital market

development will be instrumental in mobilizing long-term financing to support

growth,” he added.

He said, “Maintaining the reform momentum is critical to align with the

authorities’ goal of reaching upper middle-income country status by 2031.

Diversifying trade, attracting more foreign direct investment, enhancing the

investment climate, and strengthening governance will be crucial in this

regard.”

“Building resilience to climate change will help mitigate macroeconomic and

fiscal risks. Ongoing efforts to strengthen institutions and enhance spending

efficiency would help meet climate objectives and mobilize climate finance,

particularly from private sources. At the same time, the government should

prioritize climate-responsive fiscal management reforms and undertake green

and resilient infrastructure investment. Better management of climate-related

risks will enhance financial sector resilience as w
ell,” he added.

He mentioned that the IMF team is grateful to the Bangladesh authorities and

other stakeholders for their hospitality and candid discussions.

“The team held meetings with State Minister of Finance Waseqa Ayesha Khan,

Bangladesh Bank Governor Abdur Rouf Talukder, and other senior government and

Bangladesh Bank officials. The team also met with representatives from the

private sector, think tanks, bilateral donors, and development partners,” he

added.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha