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Sunday, 03 August, 2025

Bangladesh Bank Maintains 10% Repo Rate, Signals Ongoing Inflation Fight

Express Report
  31 Jul 2025, 17:42

Bangladesh Bank has announced that it will continue to implement a contractionary monetary policy for the first half of the new fiscal year, keeping the policy interest rate unchanged while further reducing the credit growth target in the private sector.

The decision was taken with the aim of maintaining control of inflation, the central bank governor Ahsan H Mansur told the journalists in a press briwfing Thursday at the head office of Bangladesh Bank in the Motijheel.

Bangladesh Bank Deputy Governor Habibur Rahman read out the policy. The new policy target for private sector credit growth for the rest of 2025 is 7.2 percent, down from the 9.8 percent target in the last monetary policy declaration, he said.

According to the BB, the repo rate will remain at 10 percent from July to December this year. BB Governor had previously said that the rate would not be decreased until the inflation rate fell below 7 percent.

Banks can borrow money for a single day at the repo rate. As such, it is known as a major policy tool in the banking sector and the interest rate charged on it is also known as the policy interest rate.

The central bank can control the rate to control the level of liquidity and investment in the market.

When the repo rate rises, it becomes more costly for banks to obtain funds from the central bank. It also increases the interest rate on loans that businesses can obtain from banks.

By keeping the rate unchanged, the central bank is maintaining its control over the flow of money in the market without loosening it.

Public sector credit growth, on the other hand, has jumped from 17.50 percent in the last declaration to 20.40 percent in the new one. In December last year, it had stood at 14.2 percent.

“Controlling inflation is Bangladesh Bank’s main challenge at the moment,” Mansur said. “We hope to reduce inflation further going forward. Inflation has already decreased from what it used to be.”

The new monetary policy has kept the Standing Lending Facility (SLF) at 11.50 percent and the Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) at 8 percent.

The monetary policy states that Bangladesh Bank will continue to intervene in the market to stabilise the exchange rate of the dollar and rebuild foreign exchange reserves.

 

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Bangladesh Bank Maintains 10% Repo Rate, Signals Ongoing Inflation Fight

Express Report
  31 Jul 2025, 17:42

Bangladesh Bank has announced that it will continue to implement a contractionary monetary policy for the first half of the new fiscal year, keeping the policy interest rate unchanged while further reducing the credit growth target in the private sector.

The decision was taken with the aim of maintaining control of inflation, the central bank governor Ahsan H Mansur told the journalists in a press briwfing Thursday at the head office of Bangladesh Bank in the Motijheel.

Bangladesh Bank Deputy Governor Habibur Rahman read out the policy. The new policy target for private sector credit growth for the rest of 2025 is 7.2 percent, down from the 9.8 percent target in the last monetary policy declaration, he said.

According to the BB, the repo rate will remain at 10 percent from July to December this year. BB Governor had previously said that the rate would not be decreased until the inflation rate fell below 7 percent.

Banks can borrow money for a single day at the repo rate. As such, it is known as a major policy tool in the banking sector and the interest rate charged on it is also known as the policy interest rate.

The central bank can control the rate to control the level of liquidity and investment in the market.

When the repo rate rises, it becomes more costly for banks to obtain funds from the central bank. It also increases the interest rate on loans that businesses can obtain from banks.

By keeping the rate unchanged, the central bank is maintaining its control over the flow of money in the market without loosening it.

Public sector credit growth, on the other hand, has jumped from 17.50 percent in the last declaration to 20.40 percent in the new one. In December last year, it had stood at 14.2 percent.

“Controlling inflation is Bangladesh Bank’s main challenge at the moment,” Mansur said. “We hope to reduce inflation further going forward. Inflation has already decreased from what it used to be.”

The new monetary policy has kept the Standing Lending Facility (SLF) at 11.50 percent and the Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) at 8 percent.

The monetary policy states that Bangladesh Bank will continue to intervene in the market to stabilise the exchange rate of the dollar and rebuild foreign exchange reserves.

 

Comments

Garment Sector to Boost US Cotton Imports to Secure Trump-Era Trade Benefits
CA Praises Negotiators for Securing Major Tariff Concession from US
Tariff Cut Sparks Mixed Political Reactions Amid Transparency Concerns
Commerce Adviser Rejects Claims of Secret Deal on US Tariffs
US Slashes Tariffs on Bangladeshi Goods to 20pc—But at What Cost?