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ADB to provide $5 billion to Bangladesh as economic pressures mount

By Thomson Reuters May 25, 2026 | 3:44 AM

DHAKA, May 25 (Reuters) – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) will provide Bangladesh with $5 billion in support over the next five years, the lender said on Monday, as the ​country faces mounting economic pressure from global conflicts ‌and domestic financial challenges.

The funding, announced during a visit to Dhaka by ADB President Masato Kanda, will support the Integrated Growth Network Development Initiative, which is aimed at improving connectivity, boosting investment and promoting more ‌balanced ​regional development.

Kanda met Prime Minister Tarique ⁠Rahman and senior officials to ⁠discuss Bangladesh’s development priorities, economic reforms and external financing needs.

The announcement comes as Bangladesh’s import-dependent economy grapples with the fallout from the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, which has ​pushed up prices of fuel, liquefied natural gas, fertiliser and shipping. Inflation remains elevated, while the banking sector faces ⁠ongoing liquidity stress.

“Bangladesh is entering a ⁠critical new phase,” the Manila-based ADB quoted Kanda ​as saying. “ADB will help the country protect stability, unlock new sources ​of growth and build a more diversified and resilient ‌economy.”

The package will provide about $1 billion a year and will be integrated into ADB’s sovereign financing programme for Bangladesh.

During the visit, the ADB also signed agreements for about $1.4 billion in ⁠loans under its 2026 commitment programme, covering energy, transport, climate resilience and social development projects.

It also increased support by $250 million to help ⁠Bangladesh address financing ‌gaps linked to global commodity pressures and ⁠the Middle East crisis.

ADB plans to raise its ​annual ‌sovereign commitments to Bangladesh by 20%, from ​roughly $2 billion ⁠to $2.4 billion, to support investment-led growth, economic diversification, governance reforms and the country’s transition from least-developed-country status.

The lender said it is working with authorities to attract private investment by strengthening capital markets, preparing bankable projects and mobilising co-financing.

(Reporting by Ruma Paul; Editing ​by Thomas Derpinghaus)