Thursday, May 21, 2026

Need For Quarterly MPS

Unfulfilled remain the MPS objectives,
Quarterly MPS for timely directives.

The Monetary Policy Statement (MPS) for January-June 2026 is about to expire in June. Most of its goals remain unfulfilled. First take a look at its key objectives. The objectives are "to anchor inflation expectations, guide inflation toward BB's target, address the unacceptably elevated NPLs, and restore public confidence in the banking system through improved governance and close coordination with fiscal and other relevant authorities" (see Monetary Policy, Bangladesh Bank,https://www.bb.org.bd/en/index.php/monetaryactivity/monetarypolicy).

Restoring public confidence in banking system hit a dead end when govt passed mutilated Bank Resolution Act 2025,allowing wrongdoers to regain control of the bank. The Deposit Protection Ordinance 2025 further signals that govt will be obliged to pay each depositor a maximum of Tk 2 lac in case of any bank goes bankrupt,further thickening suspicion of closure of troubled banks.

The abrupt dismissal of previous governor is no sign "improved governance" and further makes hole into public confidence in the banking system.

War in the Middle East came as unforeseen shock. Amid shortfall of revenue and rising oil prices in the international market, govt raised fuel prices at home. It will have an upward pressure on kitchen commodity prices. Inflation already rose to 9.04% in April from 8.71% in March. High oil prices in international market also provoked higher inflation in major economies ,including our key export and import markets. Uncertainties stemming from war and rising inflation make a dent in consumer activity in our export destinations. In addition, imported goods will be costlier because of rising price levels in importing countries. Notwithstanding inflation easing expectations in the MPS, inflation as well as general inflation expectation is set to rise.

Contrary to MPS optimism about policy rate cuts across the globe, many central banks shelved their plans of policy rate cuts in the wake of war,fearing inflationary pressure. Delay in policy rate cut delays investment projects and business expansion ,further shrinking consumer activity. Against this backdrop, foreign financing gets costlier. So govt depends more on banks for financing the budget ,leaving little to the private sector. The MPS keeps the policy rate (10%) same but it has lowered Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) from 8% to 7.5% in a bid to generate more credit to private sector. But Bangladesh Bank's own finding reveals that private sector credit growth rate in January and in February was 6.05% ,lowest in 23 years( see "Rin e 23 Bochhorer Moddhey Sorbo Nimno Probriddhi(Lowest private sector credit growth in 23 years)", Daily Prothom Alo,May 21,2026).

The lowering of SDF did not help much. Rather banks find it safe and lucrative to lend money to govt and to buy govt securities. Let us see how the private sector credit behaves in the remaining four months.

The MPS acknowledges that the NPL reached 36% of total loans in September 2025. Given the dull economic situation and less commitment to financial reform, the NPL is likely to rise. However , govt reiterates its commitment to true auditing of businesses.

Despite pressure for lowering the policy rate, the central bank cannot slash it as inflation rate is still hovering above 9%. In the last quarter(April-June) of this fiscal year, there is little chance that inflation will reach the BB's desired 7% level. Now it is interesting to see how the govt reviews its reform commitment and addresses the pending issues in its future policies.

If the MPS were published quarterly,then it would review the policy objectives and fine tune the goals in light of emerging realities. Six months is a long time for such adjustment. Four MPSs in a given year will be more appropriate in this fast changing world.

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