Reform, revenue push key to stability
Delivering structural reforms, improving external liquidity and lifting revenue collection will be crucial to restoring macroeconomic stability in Bangladesh, said Fitch Ratings in a report released on Sunday.
The global rating agency said the general election held on February 12 has eased near-term political and policy uncertainty, creating room for progress on stabilisation.
The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP)-led alliance secured a parliamentary supermajority, along with a majority “yes” vote in a referendum that could pave the way for constitutional reforms.
However, the road ahead will not be straightforward, it warned.
Fitch said longstanding credit constraints such as weak governance, fragilities in the banking sector and a thin external liquidity buffer mean the new government’s ability to carry through its macroeconomic and fiscal reform agenda will determine the rating impact.
Fitch Ratings, one of the big three global credit rating agencies alongside S&P Global and Moody’s, said that execution will be decisive.
The referendum result could open the door to institutional reforms, including a shift from a unicameral to a bicameral system, stronger judicial independence and term limits for the prime minister.
“However, implementation could be complex and time-consuming, keeping execution risk elevated.”
Fitch underlined the importance of staying the course under the $5.5 billion programme with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Stronger tax mobilisation and prudent management of foreign exchange reserves will also be vital to underpin stability and support durable growth.
“The reform agenda appears consistent with the macro-stabilisation agenda under the IMF programme,” Fitch said.
It added that “ongoing reform implementation and durability of such reforms beyond the IMF programme will be a key condition for facilitating macroeconomic stability and growth.”
At the same time, external buffers remain a near-term watchpoint. “External liquidity remains another near-term indicator even as reserves improve,” Fitch noted, adding that policymakers must maintain stabilisation measures to “keep external financing risks in check.”
On public finances, the agency described the structurally low revenue intake as a core weakness. The BNP manifesto sets a target of raising the tax-to-GDP ratio to 10 percent through administrative reform, fewer exemptions and a broader tax base.
“This matters for credit quality,” the agency said, signalling that stronger revenue performance will be central to easing fiscal strain and entrenching stability.
Fitch projects general government revenue to GDP at 8.6 percent by FY27, up from 7.8 percent in FY25.
Policy signals in the BNP manifesto suggest the new government is likely to continue the economic and fiscal reforms initiated under the caretaker government. At the same time, plans for higher social spending could stretch public finances if revenue measures fall short, testing the authorities’ ability to balance growth ambitions and electoral pledges with fiscal discipline.
The manifesto also outlines a pro-private sector agenda. It promises simpler licensing rules, incentives for export-oriented industries and a push to lift foreign direct investment to 2.5 percent of GDP from an estimated 0.4 percent of GDP in FY25.
Efforts to strengthen governance in banks and tackle non-performing loans (NPLs) could, if delivered, ease a major constraint on the sovereign credit profile.
With a two-thirds majority in parliament, the BNP should have the numbers to press ahead with its policy plans. The election outcome also lowers the risk of a prolonged political vacuum that could have hampered economic decision-making.
Still, political risk has not disappeared. Bangladesh, rated B plus with a Stable outlook, has a history of polarisation and pre-election unrest. That leaves scope for renewed tension if promises prove hard to fulfil or if performance falls short of expectations.
“The military may also continue to play a role in politics,” said the agency.
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