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[🇧🇩] Everything about Hasina's misrule/Laundered Money etc.

[🇧🇩] Everything about Hasina's misrule/Laundered Money etc.
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‘Big defaulters won’t be spared’
Finance Adviser Salehuddin Ahmed shares his plan to discipline rogues in banking sector

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Finance Adviser Salehuddin Ahmed has vowed to mete out exemplary punishment to big loan defaulters as the interim government scrambles to fix the ailing banking sector of Bangladesh.

The new government has begun its journey with banks struggling to cope with a ballooning bad debt. At the end of March, delinquent loans increased to Tk 182,295 crore, the highest in the history of Bangladesh. That means 11.1 percent of the disbursed loans have soured. The amount is even higher if outstanding rescheduled loans and outstanding restructured written-off loans are taken into account.

"How did it happen?" said Salehuddin, who worked as the central bank governor from 2005 to 2009. He presided over the financial system during the army-backed caretaker government until Sheikh Hasina formed a new administration.

In an exclusive interview with The Daily Star on Thursday, Salehuddin, the head of the finance ministry, spoke about his plans to take recourse to the judiciary to punish the big loan defaulters and tackle the ongoing situation through the central bank. On Friday, he got the additional charge of the commerce ministry.

"Big defaulters will not be spared. If necessary, we will urge the chief justice to form a special bench [to deal with such cases]," he said.

Salehuddin pointed out that the central bank, along with the banks, has a responsibility to reduce bad loans. He has already talked to new Bangladesh Bank Governor Ahsan H Mansur who assured him of taking stern action against the loan defaulters, including the big ones.

As part of the immediate steps to rein in default loans, the central bank will discontinue concessions and rescheduling facilities enjoyed by the loan defaulters over the years, Salehuddin said.

The interim government headed by Nobel laureate Prof Muhammad Yunus took charge earlier this month with a pledge to bring reforms as demanded by the student movement against discrimination that ousted Hasina.

Despite uncertainties amid chaos in the immediate aftermath of the uprising, the political changeover has brought optimism among economists and civil society who expect big changes, especially in the economic sector.

Salehuddin said they took charge when the country was reeling from a multi-pronged economic crisis caused by domestic issues alongside global headwinds. There were regulatory failures and irregularities in the name of development.

The adviser pointed out inflation, banking sector irregularities, low revenue collection, a sharp decline in foreign currency reserves, money laundering, and graft as the key challenges to the economy.

Along with restoring law and order, the government has prioritised steps to wipe out setbacks to economic growth, he said. The new central bank governor was appointed in a swift move to fill a vacuum created by the resignation of his predecessor. The interim government was also working to bring changes to the posts of chairman of different banks, he added.

In the past financial sector, rules and regulations were violated using "special power". For example, the single exposure limit was not followed in disbursing loans, Salehuddin said.

The new government has stopped such irregularities, he said.

"Most importantly, transparency and accountability in the financial sector have been ensured," he added.

The adviser said he has asked officials to end the culture of passing the buck in the sector where everyone has to take responsibility and be accountable.

Asked about medium-term reform plans, he said the authorities would bring some necessary changes to the financial and banking sectors, and he has talked with the development partners about the matter.

"Some reforms are required urgently which we will ensure," he said.

On the other hand, establishing a banking commission could be part of long-term reforms. The interim government may take initiatives to this end, he added.

CENTRAL BANK AUTONOMY

The full autonomy of the Bangladesh Bank has always been in question in the past. The finance adviser said the issue depends on the person who remains at the helm of the regulator.

"The Bangladesh Bank Order is a very good law which provides enough authority to the central bank. Yes, there are issues which demand discussion with the government. However, those are not day-to-day issues," he said.

It is the central bank's full authority to decide what will be the country's monetary policy, and interest or exchange rates. Besides, it is also the duty of the central bank to act against loan defaulters, Salehuddin said.

In his view, the central bank has enough autonomy. There are some limitations mainly because of the Bank Company Act.

The Daily Star asked whether the interim government will support the central bank when the latter needs to increase the policy rate to tame inflation and boost reserves, or slightly raise the crawling peg mid-rate against the dollar.

Salehuddin said the central bank governor has talked about revisiting some rates and spoke about the differences.

He said Governor Mansur will work to this end because if these issues are not addressed, then there will be uncertainty over inward remittances and the currency market.

DEVELOPMENT PARTNERS

The finance adviser identified development projects, some of which have not started while some are ongoing, as the biggest issue for the interim government.

Bangladesh's development partners also wanted to know the interim government's position on the projects and they were informed that the ongoing projects will continue.

However, some large projects could be placed at the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council.

This newspaper asked him whether the interim government would seek budget support from international development partners such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to ease pressure on reserves.

Salehuddin said support from development partners is not a "big issue" when it comes to improving the reserves, for which he emphasised increasing export earnings and remittances, and bringing more foreign direct investments.

The development partners set different conditions in line with Bangladesh's economic reforms in their loan programmes and these reforms are also the interim government's priority, he said.

If their priorities match, then the government will be able to secure funds from the development partners, Salehuddin said.

The development partners have pledged budget and project support if the government continues going forward on the path it has taken, he added.

MONEY LAUNDERING

Salehuddin also vowed action against money launderers, saying the government has heard about flights of foreign currencies from the country and it will look into the matter seriously.

The government has a committee on money laundering but it has not held a single meeting in the past two and a half years.

The committee sat on Wednesday within a week of the interim government taking charge.

Salehuddin said the committee has a list of money launderers and that it was asked to include names of old launderers alongside new ones.

Also, the government has ordered investigation authorities to make their job visible by conducting quick probes into allegations of money laundering.

Salehuddin said he has directed the National Board of Revenue to fix the collection system since revenue is crucial for the country's economy and the government's operations.

Although the digitalisation of revenue collection has been talked about for a long time, it has not been completed. The government will solve this problem soon, Salehuddin said.

He also said the current government will allow the universal pension scheme, introduced by the Hasina administration, to continue as many developed countries have strong social safety schemes, including health insurance.

However, some of the components of the universal pension scheme will be revisited, he added.​
 
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S Alam drains Janata branch dry

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As much as 90 percent of the loans disbursed by a branch of state-run Janata Bank was for S Alam Group, in yet another instance of how the Chattogram-based business giant exerted its influence on the country's banking sector.

Janata's Sadharan Bima Bhaban Corporate Branch in Chattogram provided Tk 8,216 crore to S Alam Group, which is 167 percent more than the branch's single borrower exposure limit, according to the bank's documents.

The business conglomerate took another Tk 2,233.45 crore from Janata to take the tally to Tk 10,449.45 crore, which is 451.57 percent of the struggling state-run bank's paid-up capital.

As per law, a bank is not allowed to lend more than 25 percent of its paid-up capital to a single client. At the end of June this year, Janata's paid-up capital stood at Tk 2,314 crore.

The loans to S Alam, which has controlling stakes in as many as eight banks, accounted for 10.7 percent of Janata's total disbursed loans of Tk 98,000 crore at the end of June.

As much as 49 percent of the bank's outstanding loans have turned bad, putting its financial health at risk.

Amid such a situation, the bank on June 25 rescheduled the Tk 1,844.60 crore loans taken by the six companies of S Alam Group for four years -- by breaching rules but with special permission from the central bank.

Of the sum, Tk 1,038.75 crore was for S Alam Refined Sugar Industries, Tk 1,186.43 crore for S Alam Trading Company, Tk 696.42 crore for S Alam Vegetable Oil, Tk 221.13 crore for Global Trading Corporation and Tk 1,229.55 crore for S Alam Cold Rolled Steels.

The companies were given the rescheduling facility although S Alam Group had outstanding loans of Tk 8,895.91 crore.

As per banking rules, a fresh loan rescheduling facility can be granted for a client only if it is within the permitted limits.

This was not the case for the S Alam companies: the rescheduled liabilities of the S Alam companies were Tk 4,372.28 crore against the limit of Tk 3,250 crore.

Yet the central bank gave a no-objection certificate for rescheduling the loans on July 28.

However, in its no-objection certificate, the central bank set some conditions, including the loan amount cannot be increased anymore, and the loan amount must be brought within the permitted limits by December 31, 2025.

Saiful Alam, chairman of S Alam Group, and Md Abdul Jabbar, managing director and chief executive officer of Janata Bank, could not be reached for comment.​
 
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Awami League: From progressive politics to fascism


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Fast forward to 2024, and one finds that the AL-led 14-party alliance’s rule is being labelled “fascist.” VISUAL: SADATUDDIN AHMED EMIL

August 5 was a historic day for Bangladesh for more reasons than one. The Awami League (AL), the party whose cause was a cornerstone in Bangladesh's history, was ousted by the masses.

Since independence, political turmoil has been part of narratives closely related to Bangladesh. One of the factors which worked in the AL's favour, from the time the party assumed responsibility in 2009, was that it was regarded as the most progressive and liberal party to have gained power following liberation. At that point in time, AL's values struck a chord with the secular middle-class Bangladeshi. The preceding regimes association with elements such as the military, fundamentalism, and state-centric politics aided in this regard.

Fast forward to 2024, and one finds that the AL-led 14-party alliance's rule is being labelled "fascist."

The AL regime has been somewhat of a conundrum. The Perspective Plan of Bangladesh 2041 (PP 2041), which was published in 2020, envisioned to build on economic advancements and enhance the lives of people. The AL accommodated more public-private partnerships within the media world than any other party before and oversaw the widespread introductions of leading social media websites such as Facebook, YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram. Indeed, the regime looked outwards and allowed creative media productions to be released, which did not always comply with the more conservative National Broadcast Policy of 2014. Accordingly, the party is largely responsible for digitalising a new generation of Bangladeshis, many of whom have smartphones and global aspirations today and took to the streets during the recent protests. Student coordinators such as Nahid Islam and Asif Mahmud are surely part of that generation and are, in fact, products of "Digital Bangladesh."

"Digital Bangladesh" was a pillar that supported the party's return to the centre in 2009 and represented its defiance of right-wing politics. AL's reformist approaches resonated with the masses in the context of globalisation and the interrelatedness of international networks in the 21st century. Their alliance with left-wing parties enabled the AL to stay in power and inspire many in the country. But, as it has transpired, the 14-party alliance seems to have paved the way for more dreams than stairs to reach those ambitions.

The recent movement portrayed the angst and frustration of the people from various sectors in Bangladesh, including journalism. The protests that began in the first week of July should be credited for capturing on-the-ground reactions. The mass killings, detentions, disappearances and violence against unarmed protestors that took place during this movement truly called into question the ethos of AL's political mandate. Over 400 people have lost their lives during the quota reform movement between July 16 and August 4, with some claiming that the number may well be understated. It has also been put forward that hospital records have been tampered with and bodies hidden, further putting into question just how many people have sacrificed their lives to bring an end to AL's rule.

Students have always been integral to the political narrative of Bangladesh. The fall of the Ershad regime was not brought about only by workers, but students as well, who endeavoured to take the nation forward on the path of democracy. Students again played their part in 2008 and 2013, when the Shahbagh Protests signalled their support for secular and not communal politics. In 2024, students took a stance once against the fascist practices of the Awami regime.

The tragic reality is that the AL committed to preserving democracy in the country, but backed the said promise by fascist means. The quota reform movement, which eventually led to the AL government's end, stemmed from opposition to fascist practices which often granted AL supporters, activists, and leaders the license to terrorise communities around the country. Throughout its rule, the former ruling party publicly branded opposition parties, such as the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), and its allies as being fundamentalist and in conflict with the progressive agenda of the party.

While AL's statement may well be true when considering the realities of grassroots politics and the history of BNP and its allies, the Awami League's ideology also correlated with its globalist persuasions. The AL attained success in this sphere and was able to, for a period since 2009, be the flagbearer of the identity of the modern Bangladeshi. But, at present the premise of AL is being questioned and it remains to be seen how that plays out.

In essence, what the masses including the youths of Bangladesh have conveyed through this movement is that they are averse to right-wing politics in general, and both AL and BNP are considered part of that category today. This is very important to consider as we eventually transition to political-administrative rule again. Only time will tell whether progressive politics really do see the light of day in Bangladesh and who will be the leading stakeholders of the future. Meanwhile, the appointment of Nobel laureate Dr Muhammad Yunus as the chief of the interim government seems to be a step in the right direction.

Nihad Nowsher works in business development.​
 
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Ex-water resources minister Ramesh Chandra sent to jail
Staff Correspondent 17 August, 2024, 16:02

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Ramesh Chandra Sen and MA Latif | Collected photo

Former water resources minister Ramesh Chandra Sen was sent to Thakurgaon jail on Saturday under the Explosives Act in a case filed with the Thakurgaon Sadar police station.

Ramsesh, also a former AL lawmaker for Thakurgaon-1, was arrested by a team of police headquarters at his house in Ruhia area of Thakurgaon district and taken into custody at about 11:00pm on Friday.

Thakurgaon district superintendent of police Uttam Prashad Pathak said that they produced him before the court and the court sent him to jail.

Superintendent of the police office issued a statement in this regard saying that he was arrested in a case filed with the Thakurgaon Sadar police station.

Ramesh Chandra Sen is a member of Awami League advisory council. He served as water resources minister from 2009 to 2014.

Ramesh first became lawmaker for Thakurgaon-1 in a by election in 1997 and later he was elected in 2008, 2014, 2018 and 2024.

A Chattogram court, meanwhile, on Saturday placed former Awami League lawmaker from Chattogram 11 MA Latif on three-day remand.

Latif was arrested earlier in the day in a case filed over shooting and injuring protesters during the quota reform student movement.

Chattogram metropolitan magistrate Jewel Deb passed the order this afternoon after the police produced him before the court and sought 10-day remand.

Latif was arrested by the police in the Bayazid Bostami area in the morning and sent to the court.

At about 12:30am he was brought to the court, said Fazlul Quader Patwari, officer-in-charge of the Double Mooring police station.

The arrest was made following the case filed by one Ershad with the police station, he added.

According to the case statement, Latif and 15 named and 100 to 150 unnamed individuals have been accused of opening fire on the protesters that left many people injured on August 4.

On August 10, the former lawmaker was allegedly picked up by the army personnel from his relative’s house in the port city’s Madarbari area, where he was hiding.​
 
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AL govt leaves behind $156 billion debt

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When Sheikh Hasina returned to power in 2008, Bangladesh's total debt was just $33.66 billion. When she fled amid an unprecedented student-led uprising on August 5, she left behind a burden of $156 billion in local and foreign loans for the country to carry.

Converted to the local currency, the country's total debt stood over Tk 18.35 lakh crore as of June 30, according to finance ministry data.

These included $88 billion or over Tk 10.35 lakh crore from domestic sources and the remaining $68.33 billion or nearly Tk 8 lakh crore was external debt.

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To put in words how the vast debts are affecting Bangladesh's finances: Tk 1.135 lakh crore or 14.02 percent of the total has been kept for interest payment in the proposed budget for this fiscal year, which is the highest among the sectors in the outlay of over Tk 8 lakh crore.

Economists have blamed stagnant revenue growth against a huge rise in expenditure, coupled with corruption in mega projects, for the massive debts.

The government spent around Tk 54 lakh core in total in its three consecutive terms while revenue earnings amounted to just Tk 37 lakh crore. Government expenditure increased from Tk 94,000 crore in FY09 to over Tk 7 lakh crore in the revised budget for FY24.

Bangladesh's revenue-GDP ratio has hovered around 9 percent, one of the lowest rates in the world.

A lack of government initiatives to bring reforms to the National Board of Revenue (NBR), along with tax dodging and huge tax exemptions provided to different pressure groups is blamed for the low revenue collection.

Besides, corruption in different mega projects increasingly made the revenue-expenditure gap bigger, said some leading economists.

Most of the mega projects were riddled with corruption, said Zahid Hussain, a former lead economist at the World Bank's Dhaka office.

"Big Projects, big corruption," he told The Daily Star last night.

He mentioned Bangladesh built the Padma Bridge with its own funds that came from domestic loans while the funds for the Karnaphuli Tunnel and the under-construction Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant have come from foreign sources.

"Corruption happened through cost escalation. Many, many unnecessary layers were added to the projects," he said, citing the Rooppur power project as an example.

Dhaka University economics professor Dr Selim Raihan cited the government's failure to mobilise domestic resources to increase public expenditure as one of the key factors behind the rise in debt.

"The government failed to increase the revenue collection over the past one decade or so," said Selim, who is also the executive director of the South Asian Network on Economic Modeling (SANEM).

The second is corruption in activities surrounding the process of taking loans, especially for mega projects with foreign funds, he said.

"A group with vested interests exploited the foreign loan-based mega projects by massively increasing the costs multiple times."

As a developing nation, Bangladesh has to take loans, but the Hasina government had a tendency to take short-term loans as well as high-interest loans while the focus should have been on low-interest and long-term loans with favourable conditions.

This tendency grew over the years. Loans from single sources increased while borrowing from multilateral sources with more accountability and transparency was minimal.

Bangladesh's debt service-to-revenue ratio is projected to cross the 100 percent mark for the first time owing to rising loans and lower tax and export receipts, highlighting the growing risk to the country's capacity to repay.

The debt service-to-revenue and grants ratio stood at 58.7 percent in FY21 but it surged to 72 percent in FY22 and stood at 71.8 percent in FY23, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The ratio is projected to grow to 101.1 percent in the current financial year.

Debt service is defined as the sum of interest and amortisation of medium, long, and short-term debt.

"The increasing debt service-to-revenue ratio highlights the urgency of mobilising tax revenue to support much-needed spending to achieve pro-poor, green growth recovery," the IMF said in a report.

The ratio increased as the NBR missed its tax target for the 11th consecutive year in FY23, in the face of slowing growth of collections amidst economic slowdowns and ambitious goals set by the government.

The debt-to-GDP ratio of Bangladesh was forecast to cross 40 percent in the current fiscal year as the government continued to borrow to bankroll its expenditures amid the low collection of revenue.

It was 39.8 percent in FY23 and is forecast to be 41.41 percent at the end of FY24, according to a fiscal monitoring report of the IMF.

In the last decade, the debt-to-GDP ratio rose by 13 percentage points. The IMF forecast that the ratio would reach 43.5 percent in 2028-29.​
 
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S Alam, family barred from selling bank shares

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The Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) today barred Mohammed Saiful Alam, founder of Chattogram-based conglomerate S Alam Group, his family members and companies they own from transferring and selling their shares in six banks.

The six are Islami Bank Bangladesh, Social Islami Bank, First Security Islami Bank, Global Islami Bank, Union Bank, and Bangladesh Commerce Bank.

As per the central bank's request, the BSEC sent a letter instructing Dhaka Stock Exchange, Chittagong Stock Exchange, and Central Depository Bangladesh to issue the bar on the sale and transfer of the shares.

The letter lists 56 companies owned by Alam's 25 relatives which have come under the restriction.

The BSEC ordered the intermediaries to abide by the order with immediate effect.

Last week, the National Board of Revenue had asked banks to provide account details of Mohammed Saiful Alam and his family members.​
 
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Govt for China loan restructure
Staff Correspondent 21 August, 2024, 00:08

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Finance and commerce adviser Salehuddin Ahmed on Tuesday said that they had asked China for restructuring its loans given to the immediate past government for development projects on high interest rates and short grace periods.

He made the request for reduced interest rates and increased grace periods for the China-funded projects when Chinese ambassador in Bangladesh Yao Wen paid a courtesy call to the adviser at the finance ministry of the interim government.

‘We want repayment period to be extended by 10 years’, said the finance and commerce adviser of the interim government led by Nobel laureate professor Muhammad Yunus since prime pinister Sheikh Hasina was ousted from power on August 5 amid mass uprising.

The Chinese ambassador admitted that they received some requests and wishes during the meeting, and without elaborating what they were he said that there were scopes for discussion on the issues.

The Chinese ambassador highlighted that the relation between Bangladesh and China was based on mutual respect as well as benefits.

Calling the meeting with finance adviser constructive, the Chinese ambassador said that they had already extended support to the interim government committed to keep the country’s development.

Economic Relations Division officials who attend the meeting said that loans worth four billion had been disbursed so far by China against a commitment of $7 billion.

Some of the Chinese funded projects, including a tunnel underneath Rriver Karnaphuli in Chattogram, have failed to fulfil major aims, and a sewage treatment plant at Dasherkandi in Dhaka has remained inoperative despite inauguration of the project in 2023.

The government’s outstanding foreign debt already stood at $62.4 billion in FY23, marking more than a threefold increase in 14 years, and the outstanding domestic debt increased to Tk 10.35 lakh crore at the end of 2023.

The foreign debt as a percentage of GDP increased to 44 per cent in FY24 from 37 per cent in FY20, and the domestic debt dropped to 56 per cent in FY24 from 63 per cent FY20, according to the latest debt strategy released by the Finance Division in July.

Among the bilateral lenders, Japan stands out as the biggest creditor, accounting for 42 per cent of the bilateral debt. Russia, China, India and South Korea are the other major sources of bilateral external financing accounting for 25 per cent, 21 per cent, 5 per cent and 3 per cent respectively.

Chinese loans increased to 21 per cent of the total external debt in FY24 compared with 6 per cent in FY20.

Noting that the interim government is aware of the fact, the finance and commerce adviser said that loans would be taken in future to implement projects serving the best interest of people.

Answering a question, the finance and commerce adviser dismissed the speculation regarding withdrawing the Tk 1,000 note from the market.

Earlier, the adviser had also a courtesy call with Canadian high commissioner to Bangladesh Lilly Nicholls at his office.​
 
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White paper on state of economy in the offing
Debapriya to lead panel

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Debapriya Bhattacharya. File photo

The government will prepare a white paper on the state of the economy so that strategic steps can be taken to stabilise the economy, reach the SDGs, and mitigate the challenges after Bangladesh graduates from the LDC grouping.

Economist Debapriya Bhattacharya will be the chief of a panel of economists and eminent citizens, who will come up with the white paper.

Debapriya, convener of the Citizen's Platform for SDGs and a distinguished fellow of the Centre for Policy Dialogue, will choose the members of the committee after talking to the chief adviser.

He said, "It [the white paper] will be a very pertinent transparency exercise to establish the benchmark of the economy. It will inform the future reform measures. I am grateful to the chief adviser that he has recognised its necessity and has taken immediate action."

The panel was given 90 days, starting yesterday, to submit the paper to Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus, said a statement from his office.

Bangladesh's economy has been suffering for a decade and a half due to mismanagement, corruption, capital flight, and unnecessary projects, said the statement.

"In this situation, the interim government should have a clear picture of the economy and [an outline of] the way out of the challenging situation. So, it decided to form a committee to prepare the white paper," it read.

The focus of the white paper will be on public finance management, inflation, food management, external balance, energy and power, private sector assessment, and employment.

Regarding public finance management, the committee will concentrate on domestic resource collection, public expenditure (public investment, annual development programme, subsidies and debt), and financing of budget deficit.

To get the picture of inflation and food management, it will analyse production, public procurement, and food distribution.

For understanding the challenges of external balance, the committee will focus on export, import, remittance, foreign direct investment, foreign exchange reserves, foreign finance flow and debt.

The panel will also delve into power demand, supply, pricing, costs and purchase agreements to get a clear idea of the problems in the energy and power sector.

Regarding private investment, it will focus on access to credit, electricity, connectivity, and logistics. It will also emphasise on employment at home and overseas, formal and informal wages, and youth employment issues.

The committee members will work for free. The committee will have its office at the Planning Commission and have secretarial support from the General Economic Division of the commission.

The chief adviser's office in the statement said the Hasina-led government left a loan burden of Tk 18,36,000 crore. The government borrowed from internal and external sources to meet its budget deficit without driving hard to raise tax collection.

Although the government's plan was to raise the tax-to-GDP ratio to 14 percent in the current fiscal year, it is now 8 percent. This is an example of economic mismanagement, it said.

In general, people are suffering mainly due to corruption, opportunity of capital flight, and syndication in the market.

Inflation was around 12 percent in July while food inflation was above 14 percent, according to the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics.

The economy lost its path during the regime of the previous government, it added.​
 
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