Bangladesh gets 3-year extension till 2029
The United Nations Committee for Development Policy (CDP) has expressed a positive position regarding Bangladesh’s request to extend its preparatory period for graduation from the least developed country (LDC) category until November 24 in 2029, according to a statement from the Economic Relations Division (ERD) issued on Tuesday.
In a message to the government, CDP chairman Prof José Antonio Ocampo stated that the committee considers an extension fully justified.
Bangladesh was originally scheduled for formal LDC graduation in November 2026.
However, consecutive global macro shocks-including post-pandemic disruptions, the Russia-Ukraine war, commodity price hikes, dollar shortages, and escalating tensions in the Middle East-strained the domestic economy.
Recognizing these vulnerabilities, the government filed an official extension request with the CDP on February 18, followed by a direct appeal from the Prime Minister to the UN Secretary-General on April 6.
State planners argued that a three-year extension would allow the country to better insulate its economy and trade frameworks against post-graduation headwinds.
A highly positive aspect of the CDP’s review is that Bangladesh significantly exceeds the graduation thresholds across all three core evaluation metrics — Gross National Income (GNI) per capita, Human Assets Index (HAI), and Economic and Environmental Vulnerability Index (EVI).
The UN committee notes there is minimal risk of the country slipping below these baseline thresholds in the medium term.
However, the CDP highlighted critical external risks that could disrupt transition readiness, such as geopolitical friction, global energy market volatility, and supply chain fragmentation.
As Bangladesh’s economy remains heavily reliant on readymade garment (RMG) exports and inward remittances, it remains highly exposed to external shocks.
Upon formal LDC graduation, Bangladesh will phase out several international trade preferences, including duty-free quota-free (DFQF) access to the European Union market, special and differential treatment (SDT) under WTO rules, priority access to highly concessional foreign financing, and preferential international technology transfers and technical aid.
To mitigate these losses, the CDP praised Bangladesh’s comprehensive Smooth Transition Strategy (STS), which focuses on preserving export competitiveness, driving industrial diversification, and expanding bilateral trade diplomacy.
The CDP explicitly warned that the three-year extension must not be treated as a window to delay policy changes.
Instead, the extra time must be used to accelerate long-standing domestic reforms, specifically stabilizing the banking and financial sectors, enforcing strict containment of non-performing loans (NPLs), broadening the domestic tax base to improve the low tax-to-GDP ratio, and elevating private sector productivity and manufacturing diversification.
For policymakers, the CDP’s recommendation provides both relief and a clear warning.
While it confirms that Bangladesh has structurally outgrown its LDC status, it underscores that entering the developing-nation bracket without fixing banking frailties, revenue shortfalls, and a narrow export base will jeopardize long-term competitiveness.
The next three years represent the most critical preparatory window for the economy to turn an institutional milestone into a sustainable transformation.
