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[🇧🇩] China is a Time Tested Friend and a Strategic Partner of Bangladesh

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[🇧🇩] China is a Time Tested Friend and a Strategic Partner of Bangladesh
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Duty-free advantage in China: opportunity or illusion?
Wasi Ahmed

Published :
Dec 02, 2025 22:17
Updated :
Dec 03, 2025 00:40

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Bangladesh's trade imbalance with China has continued to rise over the past decade, driven mainly by high imports of industrial goods from its single largest source. While Bangladesh's export earnings from China have remained largely stagnant despite enjoying duty-free access for 98 per cent of its tariff lines, imports have surged to fuel local manufacturing, infrastructure building and industrial expansion. This widening gap has inevitably raised a pressing question: why has Bangladesh been unable to capitalise on its almost fully duty-free status in the vast Chinese market?

The answer, however, is more complex than it appears at first glance. The link between export performance and duty-free access is far from linear. Market entry-even with tariff advantages-depends on a range of factors that go beyond trade preferences. A closer look at Bangladesh-China trade dynamics helps illuminate the structural realities shaping this outcome.

At present, China accounts for roughly 22 per cent of Bangladesh's total imports, dominating the supply of industrial raw materials, intermediate goods, chemicals, fabrics, yarn, accessories, and capital machinery. This heavy import footprint has, over the years, created a deep industrial reliance on Chinese inputs, which traders and analysts say is driven by competitive pricing, consistent quality and reliable availability. From textiles to electronics, leather to construction, Bangladeshi industries depend heavily on Chinese supply lines to keep production running.

Central bank statistics covering FY2019-20 to the first quarter of FY2025-26 show how significantly Bangladesh's import bills from China have outpaced its export receipts. Imports ranged between US$ 11 billion and US$ 20 billion annually, while exports remained confined to around US$ 500-600 million. Imports rose sharply from US$11.49 billion in FY20 to a historic peak of US$ 20.88 billion in FY22, supported by strong domestic manufacturing growth and major infrastructure projects. However, the trend reversed as macroeconomic pressures mounted. Foreign exchange shortages, currency depreciation, and subdued industrial activity pushed imports down to US$ 17.83 billion in FY23 and US$16.64 billion in FY24. The cautious stance continued in FY25, with import LC openings registering US$ 15.48 billion. During the first quarter of FY26, imports stood at US$ 4.04 billion, reflecting restrained industrial demand and a more conservative purchasing outlook.

In stark contrast, Bangladesh's exports to China have shown minimal movement over the same period. Yearly export earnings fluctuated mildly: US$ 595.39 million in FY20, US$ 680.50 million in FY21, US$ 674.62 million in FY22, before dipping to US$ 580.40 million in FY23 and then rising modestly to around US$ 670 million in FY24 and FY25. In the first quarter of FY26, exports reached US$ 190.89 million-consistent with past patterns, but nowhere near the scale required to narrow the deficit meaningfully.

This stagnation persists despite China's duty-free access for 98 per cent of Bangladeshi products. Tariff concessions alone cannot overcome the deeper structural challenges that constrain Bangladesh's export capacity. Several factors lie behind this limited utilisation of market access.

First, Bangladesh's export basket remains narrow. The country relies overwhelmingly on ready-made garments (RMG), a sector in which China itself is a global manufacturing powerhouse. Competing in China's domestic apparel market is very difficult, given its scale, cost efficiency and advanced industrial ecosystem. Beyond garments, Bangladesh has yet to develop diversified, high-value products that resonate with China's evolving consumption patterns.

Second, supply-side constraints weigh heavily on export performance. Bangladeshi firms face limitations in production capacity, quality consistency, product design, and technological sophistication-areas where China excels. Logistics, port efficiency, customs procedures, and transport systems in Bangladesh remain significantly behind Chinese standards, limiting the speed and reliability required for export-oriented supply chains.

Third, Bangladesh has struggled to leverage duty-free access effectively. Without diversified products and strong supply capabilities, preferential tariff access alone cannot stimulate a meaningful increase in exports. Many Bangladeshi firms lack the market intelligence, branding strength, compliance readiness, and long-term export strategies needed to enter and sustain operations in a competitive market like China.

Fourth, there is a clear mismatch between Bangladeshi export offerings and Chinese market demand. China's import preferences have shifted towards higher-value items-technology-infused apparel, specialised textiles, high-grade agro-products, electronics components, machinery parts and advanced materials. Bangladesh is yet to build competitive capacity in these sectors.

Fifth, China's domestic supply chains are exceptionally strong. With efficient manufacturing clusters, cheap logistics, and economies of scale, Chinese producers enjoy inherent advantages. Even when Bangladeshi products enter the market duty-free, competing against China's own low-cost producers becomes extremely challenging.

Adding to these structural barriers are domestic challenges. Political instability, business uncertainty and periodic disruptions in transportation and logistics exacerbate export constraints. Investors-both domestic and foreign-often prefer to maintain a cautious stance, slowing down capital formation in industries that could otherwise diversify Bangladesh's export base.

Experts note that the Bangladesh-China trade imbalance reflects more than just a numerical deficit-it is symptomatic of deeper industrial dependence. Currently, 30-35 per cent of Bangladesh's industrial raw materials and machinery originate from China. This reliance, while difficult to avoid given pricing advantages, makes it harder for Bangladesh to build a competitive manufacturing base capable of producing a broader array of exportable goods.

To reduce the imbalance in the long term, Bangladesh must diversify its sourcing network, encourage local backward-linkage industries and upgrade manufacturing capacities. At the same time, developing new export-oriented sectors-IT services, agro-processed goods, pharmaceuticals, specialised textiles, light engineering and leather goods-can help tap into China's vast and dynamic market.​
 
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China-funded dormitory for female DU students likely to break ground next year
Necessary internal administrative procedures on Bangladesh's part completed, Chinese ambassador says

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Chinese Ambassador Yao Wen, and Dhaka University Vice-Chancellor Prof Dr Niaz Ahmed Khan. Photo: DU PRO

Construction of the Chinese government-funded "Bangladesh-China Moitree Hall" for female students of Dhaka University is expected to begin in the first half of next year, said Chinese Ambassador to Bangladesh Yao Wen.

He said all necessary internal administrative procedures on Bangladesh's part have already been completed, and a Chinese technical team has arrived in Dhaka. The final decision on the location will be taken within a few days.

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"I hope the construction work will begin in the first half of next year," the ambassador said.

He made the remarks this afternoon while visiting the proposed project area, along with a Chinese expert team tasked with site selection.

Ambassador Yao Wen said the new dormitory would be built to address the urgent need of female students, describing the project as a milestone in China-Bangladesh relations.

"The Chinese government is a trusted friend of Bangladesh, and we are keen to support the expansion of educational opportunities for female students," he added.

Dhaka University Vice-Chancellor Prof Dr Niaz Ahmed Khan expressed sincere gratitude to the Chinese government and the ambassador for their cooperation in constructing a dormitory for female students.

He said that with China's wholehearted support, the project would be implemented within the shortest possible time, expressing hope that construction work would begin within the next one or two months.

In addition to this dormitory, several more residential halls will be constructed under broader development projects at the university, he said, adding that these initiatives would help ease the accommodation crisis faced by students.

Once implemented, the Bangladesh-China Friendship Hall will provide residential facilities for around 1,500 female students, and the estimated cost of the construction is Tk 244 crore, according to the Dhaka University Public Relations Office.​
 
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China pledges continued support as Tarique stresses needs

Staff Correspondent 08 January, 2026, 00:46

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Chinese ambassador to Bangladesh, Yao Wen, hands over a bouquet to BNP acting chairman Tarique Rahman before holding a courtesy meeting with him at BNP chairperson’s political office at Ghulshan in Dhaka on Wednesday. | Focus Bangla photo

Chinese ambassador to Bangladesh Yao Wen on Wednesday reaffirmed China’s commitment to deepening bilateral cooperation across a range of sectors, as Bangladesh Nationalist Party acting chairman Tarique Rahman said that addressing Bangladesh’s key challenges would require collective efforts and international support.

The ambassador met Tarique at the BNP chairperson’s office at Gulshan in the capital Dhaka where the two sides exchanged views on bilateral cooperation, future development and broader political issues.


During the meeting, Tarique said that the two countries had to work together to address all the challenges Bangladesh was facing and that, in this regard, any kind of support was welcome, BNP acting chairman’s press secretary Saleh Shibli told New Age after the meeting.

After the meeting, BNP joint secretary general Humayun Kabir told reporters that the meeting was cordial in nature and included an exchange of pleasantries alongside discussions on prospective development programmes and cooperation initiatives.

During the meeting, the Chinese envoy reaffirmed that China would continue its partnership with Bangladesh in various sectors, with a focus on supporting economic growth, development and investment.

According to Humayun, the ambassador conveyed that China stands ready to work with the next elected government of Bangladesh and expressed his country’s support for a democratic political framework, while stressing that leadership decisions rest solely with the people of Bangladesh.

During the meeting, ambassador Wen also conveyed condolences on behalf of the Chinese government over the recent demise of BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia.

BNP secretary general Miza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir was also present at the meeting.​
 
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