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‘Forex reserves to reach $50b by Dec 2021’


Bangladeshpost
Published : 04 Nov 2020 09:23 PM | Updated : 05 Nov 2020 06:53 AM

Finance Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal has said Bangladesh’s foreign currency reserves will reach $50 billion by December 2021, reports UNB.

“Hopefully, our foreign currency reserves will reach $50 billion within the next 14 months,” he told reporters while briefing them on the outcomes of a meeting of Cabinet Committee on Public Purchase on Wednesday.

Mustafa Kamal said the country’s foreign currency reserves will continue to grow.

Responding to questions, he said the money from the forex reserves could be invested in good projects which would be sponsored by the government.

“In such cases, our money will remain within the country, won’t go out of the country,” Mustafa Kamal added.

He said the demand for money has substantially declined globally after the outbreak of Coronavirus pandemic. “So, keeping the forex reserves in any foreign bank is not profitable option now. “  

About a private firm’s proposal to lend it from forex reserves, he said Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina is the absolute authority to take a decision in this regard.

Mustafa Kamal said the mechanism applied in foreign reserve management is her brainchild.  “As a result, the reserves jumped from $31 billion to $36 billion, then to $39 billion and now it has reached $41 billion,” the Finance Minister added.

BB Data on Forex Reserve

According to Bangladesh Bank data, the forex reserves were $38.85 billion in August, $37 billion in July, $35.85 billion in June, $33.22 billion in May, $32.92 billion in April, and $32.39 billion this year. Bangladesh’s forex reserves stood at $32.92 billion in August 2019.

Apart from increased remittance and exports, experts said, loan assistance from the World Bank, IMF, ADB, JICA and AIIB have also contributed to the rise in Bangladesh’s forex reserves.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina recently directed the authorities concerned to explore ways to channel funds from the country’s record-high foreign exchange reserves in the form of credit to finance the development projects amid the coronavirus epidemic.