Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 10th December 2025, 8:37 PM
Bangladesh Bank has introduced a stringent set of regulations aimed at tightening the conditions under which private banks may award incentive bonuses to their employees. Under the updated rules, banks will no longer be permitted to offer such bonuses unless they generate actual net profit within the relevant financial period. This move, according to industry analysts, will significantly curtail bonus disbursement across much of the private banking sector.
On Tuesday, the central bank issued an official circular outlining the revised guidelines. The notice states that an alarming number of banks have been providing incentive bonuses by inflating income figures or relying on accumulated profits, practices that undermine financial discipline and distort the true health of the banking sector. Bangladesh Bank expressed concern that these habits contradict the principles of sound governance and robust financial management.
The circular sets out several strict conditions under which bonuses may or may not be paid:
| Condition | Eligibility for Incentive Bonus |
|---|---|
| Bank posts actual net profit in the current year | Allowed |
| Bank has no net profit | Not allowed |
| Utilising accumulated/retained earnings for bonuses | Not allowed |
| Bank faces a regulatory capital shortfall | Not allowed |
| Bank has deficiencies in statutory or security reserves | Not allowed |
| Bank has taken delayed relaxation from Bangladesh Bank regarding reserve requirements | Not allowed |
| Bank shows visible progress in recovery of classified/write-off loans | Required |
| Bank demonstrates genuine improvement in banking indicators | Required |
These conditions make it clear that only banks operating on strong, genuine financial footing will be eligible to reward their staff with incentive bonuses.
Bank officials have acknowledged that the new regulations will halt bonus payments at many institutions. Several banks currently distribute incentive bonuses immediately after the year-end, often relying on temporary accounting gains or special concessions to justify the payouts. Under the new rules, such practices will be strictly prohibited.
Executives note that only banks with demonstrably healthy capital positions, transparent reporting, and genuine profitability will now qualify. Staff at underperforming banks, or those carrying unresolved capital and reserve shortages, will likely miss out on bonuses altogether.
While the restrictions primarily target private commercial banks, the circular also clarifies that state-owned commercial and specialised banks must adhere to the Incentive Bonus Guidelines 2025 for Employee Compensation in State-Owned Banks and Financial Institutions. These guidelines remain distinct from those applied to private institutions.
Bangladesh Bank’s tightening of bonus policies is widely viewed as an effort to restore discipline within the financial sector. By preventing the distribution of bonuses based on artificial profits or book adjustments, the central bank aims to ensure that rewards reflect genuine performance, not creative accounting.
For employees across the industry, the implications are significant: only those working in well-managed, consistently profitable banks will enjoy incentive bonuses in the coming years. Meanwhile, the directive is expected to encourage banks to improve their asset quality, strengthen capital structures, and prioritise authentic financial stability over superficial profit reporting.
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