This web page presents information about the work of the IMF in Bangladesh, including the activities of the IMF Resident Representative Office. Additional information can be found on the Bangladesh and IMF country page, including IMF reports and Executive Board documents that deal with Bangladesh.
At a Glance : Bangladesh's Relations with the IMF
- Current IMF membership: 191 countries
- Bangladesh Joined on August 17, 1972; accepted the obligations under Article VIII, Sections 2, 3, and 4 on April 11, 1994.
- Quota: SDR 1,066.60 million
- Outstanding loans: 630.82 million as of December 2017, equivalent to 59.14 percent of quota.
- The last Article IV Executive Board Consultation was on March 2, 2022 (Country Report 22/71)
News and Highlights
-
Bangladesh Economic and Financial Indicators April 2022
June 14, 2022
-
Bangladesh Economic and Financial Indicators March 2022
March 31, 2022
-
Bangladesh Economic and Financial Indicators February 2022
February 28, 2022
-
Bangladesh Economic and Financial Indicators, January 2022
January 31, 2022
-
Bangladesh Economic and Financial Indicators, December 2021
December 15, 2021
Bangladesh and the IMF
-
Transcript of Asia - Pacific Regional Economic Outlook - Tokyo Launch October 2024
November 1, 2024
Good morning, everyone in the room and those who are watching us online and around the world. Welcome to the press briefing on the release of the regional economic outlook for the Asia and Pacific.
-
Transcript of Press Briefing: Asia and Pacific Department Regional Economic Outlook October 24
October 24, 2024
In the first half of this year, Asia's economies grew stronger than we had expected. As a result, we have upgraded our regional forecast to 4.6 percent in 2024 and to 4.4 percent in 2025. With this, Asia remains the world's engine of growth. It generates 60 percent of global growth, far more than its share in global GDP of about 40 percent.
-
IMF Staff Concludes Visit to Bangladesh
September 30, 2024
IMF Staff Concludes Visit to Bangladesh
-
September 20, 2024
Series:Technical Assistance Report No. 2024/079
-
Transcript of IMF Press Briefing
September 12, 2024
MS. KOZACK: Good morning to those of you here in person and those online as well. Welcome to this IMF press briefing. I'm Julie Kozack, Director of the Communications Department of the IMF. As usual, this briefing is embargoed until 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time in the United States.
Regional Economic Outlook
October 31, 2024
Asia and Pacific: Resilient Growth but Higher RisksShort-term prospects for Asia and the Pacific have improved slightly compared to the IMF’s April forecasts, even though growth is still expected to moderate in 2024 and 2025. The regional growth projection for 2024 has been marked up to 4.6 percent from 4.5 percent in April, largely reflecting the over-performance in the first half of the year, and the region is forecast to contribute roughly 60 percent to global growth in 2024. In 2025, more accommodative monetary conditions are expected to support activity, resulting in a slight upward growth revision to 4.4 percent from 4.3 percent in April. Inflation has retreated in much of the region. At the same time, risks have increased, reflecting rising geopolitical tensions, uncertainty about the strength of global demand, and potential for financial volatility. Demographic change will act increasingly as a brake on activity, though structural shifts into high-productivity sectors such as tradable services hold promise to sustain robust growth.
Read the Report