ADP spending rate ticks up
The rate of development spending improved marginally in the first ten months of the current fiscal year 2025-26, but the amount of money spent during the period was actually lower compared to a year earlier.
Spending under the Annual Development Programmes (ADP) stood at Tk 86,516 crore during the July-April period, or 41.41 percent of the total revised allocation, according to data released yesterday by the Implementation Monitoring and Evaluation Division (IMED). In April alone, spending rose 5.22 percent.
The ten-month execution rate is slightly higher than the 41.31 percent achieved during the same period of FY25 but is Tk 6,908 crore less in absolute terms.
The revised ADP allocation for FY25 stood at Tk 2.16 lakh crore, while it was Tk 2.08 lakh crore for FY26.
The marginal uptick in the execution rate does little to reverse a multi-year slide in budget implementation.
The 10-month ADP execution rate stood at 49.26 percent in FY24, 50.33 percent in FY23, and 54.57 percent in FY22.
In FY25, the full-year development spending hit a historic low, with only 68 percent of the revised ADP implemented, the weakest performance since FY1976-77.
The decline in the actual money spent reflects the disruption of a mid-year political transition following the uprising, which prompted several project directors and contractors to step away from their positions. Economic uncertainty compounded the slowdown.
The Health Services Division has performed the worst, implementing only 22.15 percent of its July–April target despite rising concerns over healthcare access.
With two months left in the fiscal year, analysts say Bangladesh is on course for another year of weak ADP execution.
The shortfall may also dent revenue collection by the National Board of Revenue, which collects advance income tax and VAT from implementing agencies. However, lower execution could also help contain the budget deficit and reduce government borrowing from the banking sector.
Among top-allocated ministries, the Ministry of Science and Technology’s execution rate stands at 80 percent, driven largely by the Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant expenditures.
The Energy and Mineral Resources Division follows at 68 percent, and the Ministry of Agriculture at 62 percent.
Meanwhile, despite the sluggish implementation trend, the new BNP-led government has announced an ambitious development budget of Tk 3 lakh crore for the upcoming FY27.
Comments