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Bangladesh

Bangladesh’s Banking Sector Drowning in Bad Loans – Over Tk 75,000 Crore in Interest Frozen

Khabor Wala Desk

Published: 5th May 2025, 11:09 PM

Bangladesh’s Banking Sector Drowning in Bad Loans – Over Tk 75,000 Crore in Interest Frozen

The latest report from the Bangladesh Bank paints a worrying picture for the country’s financial sector: bad loans are on the rise, and a staggering Tk 74,954 crore in interest earnings has been frozen — effectively turning into paper profits with no real cash flow.

📊 Key Highlights at a Glance

Indicator Figures (as of end 2023)
Total Outstanding Bank Loans Tk 17,11,402 crore
Total Default Loans Tk 3,45,765 crore (20.20% of total loans)
Classified as “Bad Loans” (Non-recoverable) Tk 2,91,537.75 crore
Total Suspended Interest Earnings Tk 74,954 crore

 

💣 A Ticking Time Bomb: Breakdown by Bank Type

Bank Type Bad Loans (Tk crore) Suspended Interest (Tk crore) Change from Last Year
Private Banks 1,59,461 41,254 ⬆️ Tk 12,393 crore
State-Owned Banks 1,24,442 31,131 ⬆️ Tk 5,090 crore
Specialised Banks 5,100 400 ⬇️ Tk 28 crore
Foreign Banks 2,533 2,169 ⬆️ Tk 255 crore

 

📉 Behind the Numbers: Why It’s a Red Flag

According to experts, this surge in non-performing loans (NPLs) isn’t just squeezing banks’ earnings; it’s also crippling their lending capacity. The reason? Under Bangladesh Bank’s loan classification and provisioning rules, banks must set aside provisions from their income against bad loans:

Loan Status Duration Required Provision
Substandard 3–6 months overdue 20%
Doubtful 6–12 months 50%
Bad Over 12 months 100%

 

When banks’ interest income is frozen, they cannot meet these provisioning requirements without eating into their core profits. As a result, many banks are now facing provision shortfalls, which, under the Bank Company Act, prohibits them from paying dividends to shareholders.

💬 What Bangladesh Bank Officials Are Saying

“Banks cannot count suspended interest as real income unless the bad loans are recovered,”
explained a senior Bangladesh Bank official.
“This rule is in place to protect depositors, or else banks could distribute illusory profits without any actual collections.”

⚠️ What Lies Ahead?

Financial analysts warn that the continued rise in bad loans and suspended interest may eventually erode public trust in the banking system. If left unchecked, this could undermine investor confidence and strain the overall economy.

✅ Recommended Steps Forward:

  • Enforce stricter loan recovery and classification rules
  • Ensure transparency in loan approval processes
  • Insulate banking policy from political interference

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