Thursday, July 9, 2026

Weakening Of Taka: When Desirable

Competitiveness through depreciation,
Desirable when there is less inflation.

For the major part of the FY 2026,Taka remained stable against the USD. There is an overall balance in the Balance of Payment. And foreign exchange reserve is continuously increasing. Till June 2026, forex reserve stood at $31.74 billion. According to MPS, reference exchange rate was Tk 123.18/USD in June 2026,registering 0.39 % depreciation in FY 2026.

The depreciation rate is decent. But further weakening of Taka could be good for economy. Inflation is the obstacle in the path of major depreciation. Inflation in June was 9.14%, a slight decrease from 9.42% in May 2026. A larger depreciation may aggravate the inflation.

Export and remittance are the two sectors that enjoy greater benefit of depreciation. But the two jointly account for around 16% of GDP. Meanwhile, dollars earned and received go for paying up the import bills and foreign debt repayments. Our import was $61 billion in 2025 and external debt was around $112 billion (source: Wikipedia). They jointly account for 33.92% of GDP. Crux of the matter is sectors benefitted from large depreciation of Taka account lesser percentage of GDP than sectors affected by such depreciation. Large depreciation may spike the imported inflation and increase our debt service payment in Taka amount.

But depreciation is related to export competitiveness. So when competitiveness is top priority depreciation is the way. Vietnam, where export accounts for 90% of GDP, witnessed around 0.11% depreciation of its Dong in the first six months in 2026. Since a communist regime is in charge of running the country and export accounts for a huge percentage of GDP, Vietnam is in a comfortable position to use its currency to increase its export competitiveness.

Even India witnessed 10% depreciation of Rupee in one year and large part of it happened in the first six months of 2026. In India, export and remittance jointly account for 23.97% of GDP while import and external debt jointly account for 41.95% of GDP.

I think slow and gradual depreciation is ok for our economy. 1% or 2% depreciation will not aggravate the inflation that much. Regular intervention of the central bank,therefore, in the forex market is necessary. According to MPS,in FY 26,central bank spent $6.43 billion in forex market intervention.

Steady flow of remittance and BB's intervention translated into 0.39% depreciation of Taka. This is why central needs to hold lots of Taka. That is why it is not right to use central bank's money in other purposes, particularly in meeting political pledges. Central bank plans to spend Tk 19000 crore of its money as part of stimulus package. Central bank needs money to emergency intervention and that is why its money should be untouched.

Use of local currency to boost export competitiveness is indeed good for the economy. Timing and priority are the two factors that influence the decision regarding the depreciation. Since fuel price is rising amid high inflation at the local market, this is not high time for big depreciation. However, central bank's intervention ,which requires huge amount of money at its disposal, in the forex market at right time can thwart any appreciation pressure on Taka and ensure export competitiveness.

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