After the landslide: Tough economic reform agenda ahead for new govt
Economists caution that electoral legitimacy, while necessary, is not sufficient to restore macroeconomic momentum
With 209 seats on its own and an expected 212-seat bloc with allies, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has secured a decisive parliamentary majority. Voter turnout stood at 59.44%, and the Election Commission's announcement of results has formally closed a chapter of political uncertainty.
For the business community, that certainty matters.
But economists caution that electoral legitimacy, while necessary, is not sufficient to restore macroeconomic momentum.
The new government inherits slowing private investment, persistent inflationary pressures, a stressed banking sector and a weak revenue base. The mandate is clear. The economic road ahead is less so.
From uncertainty to confidence
Professor Mustafizur Rahman, Distinguished Fellow at the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), describes the election outcome as a "necessary condition" for recovery — but not a guarantee.
"A peaceful and credible election has removed uncertainty and marked the beginning of a renewed democratic journey — an undeniably positive signal for the country's trade, commerce and overall economy. This was a necessary condition for boosting investment, as the private sector was reluctant to undertake new investments or expand existing businesses amid prolonged uncertainty," he said.
"However, a credible election alone is not sufficient to inject dynamism into the economy or to rebuild investor confidence. To translate this political development into tangible investment outcomes, several additional enabling factors must be addressed. Most important among them are improvements in law and order and the assurance of good governance," Mustafizur added.
At the same time, appropriate fiscal policy must be pursued. The ease of doing business needs to be enhanced, and the cost of doing business reduced. Necessary reforms across key economic sectors must be implemented, institutional efficiency strengthened, and overall macroeconomic stability ensured.
If these measures are put in place, confidence among both domestic and foreign investors will grow, leading to higher investment flows, the economist noted.
Mustafizur cautioned, "Investment will not surge from day one simply because these steps are initiated. However, they will send a strong positive signal to the market. As confidence gradually strengthens, investment will follow."
The emphasis is clear: Political stability must now translate into administrative predictability. For investors, law and order is not merely a security issue — it is a cost variable. Contract enforcement, customs clearance, dispute resolution and regulatory consistency all shape capital allocation decisions.
The first 100 days: Credibility on the line
For Jyoti Rahman, director of International Affairs at the Sydney Policy Analysis Center, the government's early actions will define its economic trajectory.
Ramadan is approaching — historically a period when prices of essential commodities rise. That seasonal inflation will be the administration's first credibility test.
"When a new government takes office, if it fails to immediately build confidence and credibility, that failure will have downstream effects later on."
He added, "Now consider the current moment. If the BNP government comes to power just as Ramadan begins — or right before it, since Ramadan is set to start next Wednesday or Thursday — we face a familiar and unfortunate pattern in Bangladesh: prices of essential commodities tend to rise during Ramadan. It may be onions, eggplants, or other staples. We have seen this before. Sheikh Hasina once even dismissed public concern by suggesting that people could simply avoid eating onions or eggplants. Such remarks damaged public trust.
"If the new government cannot manage the supply chain from day one, the impact on confidence and credibility will be severe. That erosion of trust will hurt the government later when it confronts larger macroeconomic challenges. As a macroeconomist, what I expect from the new government is clear: it must take supply chain management very seriously as an immediate confidence-building measure. In the long run, credibility is everything," Jyoti further said.
Second, he added, the budget is obviously critical. The interim government essentially operated with an interim framework — it did not introduce major new programmes or projects but simply kept things running.
"The new government, however, must now manage the debt legacy left behind by Hasina."
At the same time, the new government must fulfil its campaign promises — the mandate it received from voters. So it faces a threefold challenge: servicing past debt, delivering on electoral commitments, and maintaining a sustainable fiscal framework. This will be extremely difficult. The budget is not merely a technical exercise; it is a strategic priority that requires strong communication with the public.
"Third, the government must articulate a long-term development plan. We speak of becoming a $3,000-per-capita economy, but sustaining that level requires around 10% growth and structural reform. What is the mission? What is the long-term strategy? These questions must be addressed now," Jyoti Rahman said. "The upcoming budget will therefore be more than a financial statement — it will be a declaration of intent."
The revenue question
That intent, economists argue, must include deep institutional reform — starting with the National Board of Revenue (NBR).
Zaidi Sattar, chairman of the Policy Research Institute (PRI), is blunt in his assessment, "One of the major obstacles to Bangladesh's economic progress is the institution known as the National Board of Revenue. If the new government genuinely wants to advance economic development, this institution must be thoroughly overhauled and restructured."
Reforming the NBR could unlock significant benefits for the economy. In many ways, it is the key to growth and progress. If this key is not turned properly, the entire system remains stuck. This is not a minor issue — it is a serious structural bottleneck.
He said, "In my view, the NBR is one of the most critical institutional stumbling blocks to Bangladesh's economic advancement. It must therefore be treated with the highest level of priority. Comprehensive reform — administrative, structural and governance-related — is essential if the country is to achieve sustained and inclusive economic growth."
Bangladesh's tax-to-GDP ratio remains persistently low. A narrow tax base and complex compliance regime discourage formalisation. Without reform, fiscal space will remain constrained — limiting infrastructure spending, social protection and debt management capacity.
For a government seeking to move the economy towards higher-middle-income status, revenue reform is not optional, he said.
Lessons from the past
Economists also underline what the new administration must avoid. Jyoti Rahman outlined it neatly.
"First, macroeconomic orthodoxy must be restored and protected. Political interference in banking supervision and directed lending under previous administrations weakened financial discipline. Depoliticising the banking sector and strengthening regulatory autonomy are critical," he said.
He added, "Second, fiscal populism carries risks. Large-scale projects without transparent cost-benefit analysis strain public finances and crowd out private investment.
"Third, inequality must be addressed through opportunity creation, not merely redistribution. Expanding transfer programmes without improving labour productivity, education quality and SME access to finance risks entrenching dependency rather than growth," he added.
"Finally, communication matters," he said, "Markets respond not only to policy but to signalling. Transparent engagement with the business community and development partners can anchor expectations and reduce volatility."
A narrow but decisive window
The election has delivered a stable parliamentary arithmetic. But stability must now be converted into reform momentum.
The priorities, economists agree, are immediate supply stabilisation, law and order improvements, credible budgeting, NBR reform and banking sector discipline. None are politically easy. All are economically necessary.
Investment will not surge overnight. Growth will not rebound instantly. But early, coherent steps can reset expectations. The mandate is strong. The structural constraints are real. Whether the new government can bridge the two will define Bangladesh's next economic chapter.
Shadique Mahbub Islam is a journalist.
