Bangladesh Seeks IMF Loan as Inflation Rocks
South Asia
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Power cuts and Diesel Shortage Return
As trade deficits widen, governments in
the region struggle to import increasingly expensive diesel, gasoline and cooking
gas.
Just a week after introducing
scheduled power outages in response to the soaring cost of fuel in Bangladesh, the
government said it was seeking help from the International Monetary Fund, joining
two other nations in South Asia to do so in recent months.
Government officials said the
country was running low on foreign reserves, the problem that prompted both Sri
Lanka
and Pakistan to pursue
I.M.F. assistance.
“We can’t print dollars; we have
to earn them,” A.H.M. Mustafa Kamal, the finance minister of Bangladesh, said Wednesday.
“We earn dollars by the hard work of our people who work or do business abroad.
They are the driving force of our economy.”
Both money sent from Bangladeshis
living overseas and exports have fallen amid fears of a global recession.
High inflation caused by Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine is dealing a hard blow to developing countries
whose economies run on imported fuel. As trade deficits widen, governments are struggling
to shore up enough foreign reserves to import increasingly expensive diesel, gasoline
and cooking gas.
In Sri Lanka, where drivers have
to wait in line for days to refuel, the government defaulted on its debt in April,
prompting a crisis that led to the president’s ouster this month. Observers fear
that other countries may face similar turmoil.
“Sri Lanka’s government was the
first to fall. There have already been protests related to food and fuel prices
in at least 17 countries because of inflationary pressures,” Samantha Power, administrator
of the United States Agency for International Development, said Wednesday in New
Delhi during meetings on the global food crisis. “If history is any guide, we know
that Sri Lanka’s government will likely not be the last to fall.”
Nepal, among the poorest countries
in the region, had not fully recovered from the shocks of the pandemic and a drop
in Mount Everest tourism when global inflation hit, further depleting its foreign
reserves.
Nepal’s government spends about
a fifth of its budget on imported diesel, gas and other petroleum products, and
has seen its indebtedness to India — its sole source of fuel — rise to dangerous
levels.
Government fuel rationing has
sent consumer prices even higher.
Pakistan this month reached a
preliminary agreement with the I.M.F. for the revival of a $6 billion bailout program
as the country neared the brink of a balance of payments crisis.
The deal broke a deadlock in
discussions that had dragged on for months and came after Pakistan’s Prime Minister,
Shehbaz Sharif, introduced tough economic measures to
meet I.M.F. demands, including raising electricity rates, increasing fuel prices
and ending government subsidies.
Those moves have prompted public
outcry and deepened the country’s political crisis as it struggles with a cratering
economy, depreciating currency and double-digit inflation.
While other countries in South
Asia reported sharp economic declines in 2020, Bangladesh was an outlier. Its powerhouse
garments-for-export industry, the second-largest in the world, helped keep the economy
growing.
But the invasion of Ukraine,
and the surge of commodity prices, have proven a greater challenge.
The government began scheduled
power cuts last week, and has shut off diesel-run power plants indefinitely because
of the high cost of diesel. It has also ordered gas stations to close at least once
a week.
Rising fuel prices are cutting
into the garment industry’s profit margins.
Showkat Osman
Heera, a manager at Lyric Industries, a garment manufacturer
in Bangladesh, said frequent power cuts mean diesel generators must be used to keep
assembly lines running.
“Before the recent power crisis,
we needed only 100 to 150 liters of diesel a day; now we need more than 1,000 liters,”
Mr. Heera said. “We did not miss any shipments yet, but
if this situation continues, we may face real trouble.”
Mr. Kamal, the finance minister,
said last week that Bangladesh would not need I.M.F. support, downplaying the country’s
economic vulnerability. He did not explain his about-face on Wednesday.