Push for urgent tax reforms to boost revenue: experts
Bangladesh needs a decisive push to mobilise revenue by immediately launching reform measures, accelerating automation, and gradually phasing out existing tax exemptions, said economists and policymakers at an event organised by the National Citizen Party (NCP) yesterday.
The national convention on energy, economy, human rights, reform and referendum was held at the Institution of Diploma Engineers in Dhaka.
“Many discussions were held and numerous committees formed, but we saw no meaningful progress in the revenue sector,” said M Masrur Reaz, chairman and CEO of Policy Exchange Bangladesh.
“No reforms took place during the Awami League era, and unfortunately, the interim government also failed to act. A new government is now in place and may need time, but if reforms are not launched within the next two to three months, we risk losing this opportunity again,” he added.
Reaz described the country’s economic challenges as a “four-plus-one dimension”-- four domestic weaknesses alongside one global factor.
He said the country’s key drivers of employment and growth have stalled, while economic governance had largely collapsed before August 5, marked by banking irregularities, oligarchic control in energy, and mismanagement of public spending.
He also pointed to the absence of revenue reform, failure to formalise the informal economy, and rising dependence on external debt as major concerns.
At the event, Hasnat Abdullah, lawmaker and chief organiser (Southern Region) of the NCP, said that automating tax and customs systems through cashless, paperless processes integrated with NID is now essential.
He noted that complexities in the current manual tax system discourage compliance.
“If we automate the system and integrate it with NID, under-the-table compromises can be reduced to near zero. Many European countries have been practising this for years,” he said.
AKM Waresul Karim, dean of the School of Business and Economics at North South University, said governance failures have driven stagnation in the banking sector.
“Corruption, nepotism, politicisation, and prolonged authoritarian practices have undermined institutional integrity,” he said.
Confidence in state-owned commercial banks has eroded, he noted. Citing a review of Janata Bank, he said 70 percent of its loans are non-performing. Following recent political upheaval, the boards of a number of banks were reconstituted, and a Bank Resolution Ordinance was introduced, merging five banks.
However, he criticised the provision allowing previous bank owners to reclaim ownership by repaying only 7.5 percent of government liquidity support, calling it a tactic to restore control to specific individuals.
AKM Fahim Mashroor, CEO of Bdjobs, said overall unemployment in Bangladesh remains below 4 to 5 percent, but youth unemployment is three to four times higher. Each year, about 700,000 graduates enter the job market, of whom 50 to 60 percent remain jobless.
“Unemployment is not just an economic issue-- it is a social and political one,” he said, adding that high interest rates and energy constraints may deter investment in the near term.
He suggested promoting entrepreneurship and facilitating overseas employment through government-backed loans.
Sarjis Alam, chief organiser (Northern Region) of the NCP, chaired the first panel discussion. Shams Mahmud, former president of the Dhaka Chamber of Commerce, Chartered Financial Analyst Asif Khan, and Javed Rasin, joint convener of the NCP, also spoke at the event.
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