Bangladesh’s persistent economic fragility cannot be overcome without establishing a genuine balance of power within society and dismantling a long-running ‘loot and plunder economy’ said Former Chairman of the Development Studies Department at Dhaka University, Professor Mahbubullah on Monday
The country has been stuck in a cycle of primitive accumulation since December 16, 1971, an economic structure he said continues to distort incentives, hinder productive growth, and sustain inequality, he said.
The eminent economist was speaking at a seminar on the publications “Bangladesh State of the Economy 2025” and “Sustainable Development Goals: Bangladesh Progress Report 2025” at the NEC Conference Room in the city.
He said that despite adopting numerous policies and reforms, Bangladesh has failed to achieve sustainable outcomes because ‘economic extraction and redistribution of wealth from one set of hands to another remain deeply embedded in the system.
“Unless we end this continuous reshuffling of wealth, real productive growth will remain elusive,” he cautioned.
Professor Mahbubullah underscored that meaningful economic reforms, including those relating to governance, investment, and market functioning, cannot take root unless the social and political power structure is rebalanced.
“We talk about democracy and good governance, but neither will materialise as long as this accumulation process continues. A fair distribution of power across society is the precondition for a functional economy,” he said, adding that without such a foundation, reforms risk remaining superficial.
Turning to inflation, the economist expressed doubt about the country’s ability to bring price pressures under control within the next one to three years.
He said supply-side bottlenecks, limited productive capacity, and a large demand burden partly driven by population growth make a quick recovery unlikely.
“Inflation cannot be tamed while commodity supply remains insufficient compared to money supply. Production must rise, but investment is stagnant. Without new investment, expanding supply in the short term is impossible,” he said.
He also pointed to the effects of prolonged government expenditure and increased liquidity injected into the economy, which have exacerbated the imbalance between money circulation and commodity circulation.
Professor Mahbubullah expressed deep concern over what he termed a ‘sluggish and depressed’ investment environment, warning that Bangladesh’s productive base is not expanding fast enough to absorb labour or support stable long-term growth.
He noted that while readymade garments and foreign remittances remain the two primary pillars of the economy, other promising sectors—such as pharmaceuticals, ceramics, and light engineering—have not been able to scale up due to structural constraints and unfavourable incentives.
“A proper incentive structure across fiscal, monetary and planning policies is yet to be formulated. Without it, investors cannot be expected to take risks or expand production,” he added.
Describing the prevailing economic order as one driven by extraction rather than production, he said that wealth continues to be generated and redistributed through rent-seeking, misuse of state power, and distortive incentives, rather than productive investment.
“This loot and plunder economy has existed under every government for 54 years sometimes more intensely, sometimes less but we have never truly escaped it,” he said.
Unless we transition to a production-based economy, the country’s growth will remain vulnerable and uneven, he added.