Inflation to stay at 8.6% in FY27, above BB target
Inflation is likely to remain high and reach 8.6 percent in the fiscal year 2026-27 (FY27) due to higher energy prices driven by the war in the Middle East, according to BMI, a provider of insights, data and analytics.
The firm, owned by Fitch Solutions, said inflation may remain above the Bangladesh Bank’s (BB) 6.5 percent target set in its latest monetary policy.
It added in its report on Bangladesh published on Tuesday that this is partly due to base effects from low food price inflation during FY26.
Inflation averaged 10 percent in FY25, up from 9.7 percent in the previous year. It is expected to stay high at 9 percent in FY26, according to the Asian Development Bank in its April issue of the Asian Development Outlook.
The ADB projects inflation at 8.5 percent in FY27 as external shocks ease and domestic supply conditions improve.
BMI said that as inflation is expected to remain high, the BB may keep the policy rate unchanged at 10 percent in FY27 instead of cutting it, as it had previously projected.
“Our revised forecast reflects high projected inflation, a recent decline in long-term borrowing costs, and a renewed need for International Monetary Fund (IMF) financing,” said the report.
It added that the Iran conflict would add 0.13 percentage points to headline inflation in the coming fiscal year through higher energy prices.
“Elevated inflation threatens the BB’s price stability mission, making a rate cut in FY27 difficult to justify,” it said, adding that rising energy prices have made rate cuts untenable for many central banks worldwide.
The report said surging inflation in recent years has eroded real wages in Bangladesh, particularly for industry workers, who make up 21 percent of the economy’s labour force. Although salary declines have slowed in 2025, this follows five consecutive years of falling real wages, it added.
“An uncontrolled supply-side shock to inflation will worsen this problem. This will make the BB even more cautious about cutting rates, which could cause inflation to run unchecked.”
BMI also said falling long-term borrowing costs are another reason to keep the policy rate high. The 10-year treasury yield has trended down since January 2025, even though the policy rate remains elevated.
“Over the same period, credit growth has surged, driven by higher government borrowing. Apart from fuelling inflation, looser credit could also shift financial flows towards lower-quality investments. This is likely given the fragility of Bangladesh’s banking sector,” it said.
The report also noted the government’s request for $3 billion in financial support from the IMF and the World Bank.
“The government’s spending needs are real. Aside from cushioning the impact of the Iran conflict on Bangladeshi households, Dhaka will likely have to recapitalise several banks as it reforms the financial sector,” it said.
It added that IMF support is likely to depend on the government maintaining a degree of macroeconomic stability.
“Keeping monetary policy tight when economic conditions support it would help preserve confidence among international investors in Bangladesh’s medium-term prospects,” it said.
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