Gas price hike fuels energy inflation: BB

Energy inflation rose to 14.9 percent in the third quarter of FY26 from 14.4 percent in the previous quarter
Star Business Report

Bangladesh witnessed a spike in energy inflation during the January-March quarter of the current fiscal year 2025-26 (FY26), driven by gas price hikes, according to a Bangladesh Bank (BB) report published today.

Energy inflation rose to 14.9 percent in the third quarter of FY26 from 14.4 percent in the previous quarter, the central bank said in its report titled Inflation Dynamics in Bangladesh.

The report said solid fuels such as firewood, agricultural by-products, cow dung, and jute sticks have consistently been a major driver of energy inflation.

However, inflation of solid fuels declined to 21.5 percent in the January-March period from 23.1 percent in the previous quarter. Gas inflation surged to 11.3 percent in the third quarter, rebounding from a 6.2 percent inflation in the preceding quarter.

During the January-March period of FY26, inflation averaged 8.81 percent, up from 8.3 percent in the preceding October-December quarter, mainly driven by increased food prices, especially vegetables and spices.

However, protein-based foods remained the top contributor, accounting for 44.6 percent of overall food inflation, the report said.

The average contribution of vegetables to food inflation rose to 22.7 percent in the January-March period of this year. The contribution of cereal items to food inflation saw a notable decline, dropping to 8.1 percent from 41.4 percent in the previous quarter.

In contrast, non-food inflation remained broadly stable at a high level of approximately 8.9 percent.

During the quarter, the BB report said that the contribution of domestic items to inflation increased to 71.7 percent, while the share of import-concentrated items fell to 28.3 percent.

Despite a spike in inflation, the wage-price gap slightly narrowed compared to the previous quarter. “This narrowing was primarily driven by a decline in headline inflation rather than any significant improvement in wage growth,” the report said.

“Despite some positive momentum effects, wage growth remained sluggish throughout the quarter, as the negative base effect persisted,” it added.