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[🇧🇩] Monitoring Bangladesh's Economy
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GDP growth accelerates, led by industrial expansion

Economy grew 4.5% in the first quarter of FY26 compared with 2.58% a year earlier


By Rejaul Karim Byron and Ahsan Habib

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Bangladesh's economy rebounded in the first quarter of the current fiscal year of 2025-26 due mainly to stronger agricultural and industrial production.


The overall output, or Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which measures the total value of goods and services produced in a given period grew by 4.50 percent in July-September, according to estimates from the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS) released today.

This rate is higher than the 2.58 percent quarterly growth a year earlier.

The industrial sector led the expansion of the economy, posting 6.97 percent growth in the first quarter of FY26. The latest industrial growth is almost double the 3.59 percent recorded during the same period last year, when production was hit hard by mass uprisings and labour unrest.


Factory floors this year were noticeably busier compared with the corresponding quarter.

Agriculture, the largest employer in the economy, expanded by 2.3 percent, recovering from losses caused by repeated floods in 2024. The services sector, the country’s second-largest employer, also grew during the first quarter.

“This is an encouraging sign,” said Prof Mustafizur Rahman, distinguished fellow at local think tank Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD). “The growth shows signs of recovery as the difference from last year is high.”


Rahman, however, said that this improvement is based on a low growth base from last year. And the growth in the service sector is not big, while agricultural output depends on the weather.

“There is a challenge in the sustainability of the growth,” said the economist.


Although the performance in the industrial sector was strong, export-oriented industries did not do well in the second quarter of the current fiscal year, which could have a negative impact, said Rahman.

Besides, imports of machinery and raw materials for export-oriented industries have not increased despite revived imports of capital machinery. “So, we have to wait to see whether this is a full recovery of the economy or not,” he added.

Zahid Hussain, another noted economist, described the overall recovery as “modest” compared with Bangladesh’s historical growth.

He said, “In the overall growth rate, a large contribution came from the agricultural sector.”

BBS data showed agricultural growth of 2.30 percent, up sharply from a negative 0.6 percent in the first quarter of the previous fiscal year.

Farming growth in the same quarter was also slight in 2023-24, at only 0.62 percent.

Last year, floods heavily affected Aus rice and Aman seedbeds, but this year production rebounded, said Hussain, a former lead economist at the World Bank’s Dhaka office.

Hussain said the sustainability of growth will depend on electricity supply and diesel availability.

According to him, while fuel imports are stable, electricity generation remains a concern. Investment remains lacklustre, and exports have slowed, adding to the challenges.

Historically, growth in the services sector ranges between 5 percent and 6 percent, higher than the current trend.

Disruptions from year-round street protests and a weak law and order situation have had a huge impact on services. High inflation has also reduced people’s purchasing power, limiting consumption of services, he added.

Headline inflation reached 8.49 percent in December, up from 8.29 percent in November and October’s 39-month low of 8.17 percent, according to BBS data.​
 
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Bangladesh receives $1.59b in remittances in first 13 days of Jan

UNB
Published :
Jan 14, 2026 21:15
Updated :
Jan 14, 2026 21:15

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The upward trend in remittances sent by Bangladesh expatriates has continued in January, with receiving over US $1.59 billion in 13 days of the month.

Bangladesh received $17.85 billion in inward remittances from July to January 13, 2026, in the current fiscal year, FY 2025-26. It was 14.7 billion in the same period of the previous FY2024-25, and saw a growth of 21.5 percent.

Blessings on the remittance, the gross forex reserves of Bangladesh cross $33 billion. As per the IMF standard BPM6, the forex reserves stood at $29 billion plus.

Arif Hossain Khan, Executive Director and spokesperson of Bangladesh Bank, confirmed that the expatriates have sent $1.59 billion in the first 13 days of January 2026, which was $926 million in the same period of January 2025. It means the remittance earnings grew by 71.8 percent in this time.

The growth is attributed to several factors, including incentives offered for sending money through legal banking channels, increased encouragement for using the formal system and the active role of exchange houses.

In FY2025-26, Bangladesh received $2.47 billion in remittances in July, $2.42 billion in August, $2.68 billion in September, $2.56 billion in October, $2.88 billion in November, and $3.22 billion in December.

The data revealed that the average inward remittance flow was over $2.42 billion in the last six months. This robust flow of remittance influences Bangladeshi policymakers to discourage lending from the IMF with tough conditions.​
 
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