Economy
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ADP implementation limps just over 40pc in ten months of fiscal

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The implementation of the Revised Annual Development Programme (RADP) recorded a slow pace during the first ten months (July-April) of the current 2025-2026 fiscal year, hitting an execution rate of 41.41 percent.

According to the latest report released by the Implementation Monitoring and Evaluation Division (IMED) of the Ministry of Planning, government agencies spent Tk 86,516.08 crore out of the total RADP allocation of Tk 2,08,935.53 crore earmarked for the fiscal year, UNB reports. 

This performance indicates a notable slowdown in project execution compared to previous fiscal years, highlighting persistent challenges in administrative momentum and development spending following recent structural and political changes.

An analysis of the IMED data reveals a consistent downward trajectory in both RADP allocations and execution rates over the last few fiscal years.

In the current FY 2025-2026, out of a reduced RADP allocation of Tk 2,08,935.53 crore, the ten-month expenditure stands at Tk 86,516.08 crore, reflecting an execution rate of 41.41 percent.

During the same July-April period of FY 2024-2025, the expenditure was Tk 93,424.83 crore against an allocation of Tk 2,26,166.88 crore, yielding an implementation rate of 41.31 percent.

In FY 2023-2024, the implementation rate stood significantly higher at 49.26 percent with an expenditure of Tk 1,25,315.68 crore out of a Tk 2,54,391.64 crore allocation.

For FY 2022-2023, the execution rate was 50.33 percent with Tk 1,19,064.39 crore spent out of Tk 2,36,560.67 crore.

In FY 2021-2022, the 10-month implementation reached 54.57 percent, with an expenditure of Tk 1,19,829.74 crore out of Tk 2,19,601.91 crore.

The monthly progress for April also reflected a sluggish development drive.

In April 2026 alone, the government managed to implement only 5.22 percent of the development budget, translating to an expenditure of Tk 10,908.84 crore.

This single-month progress is slightly higher in percentage than the previous year's performance, where April 2025 recorded a 4.66 percent implementation rate with a spending of Tk 10,530.75 crore, but it remains heavily constrained compared to historical trends. Planning Ministry officials cited multiple structural issues contributing to the slower release and utilisation of development funds this fiscal year.

The primary setbacks include the ongoing rigorous review of development projects to realign national priorities, which has temporarily paused funds for several major initiatives.

Furthermore, administrative reshuffles, delays in appointing new project directors, and strict compliance checks on new procurements have extended execution timelines.

The exit or inactivity of several contracting firms following political transitions late last year has also left numerous physical infrastructure projects partially stalled.

With only two months left in the current fiscal year (May and June), ministries and execution agencies face tremendous pressure to fast-track their pending bills and accelerate construction phases if they are to prevent large sums of development funds from returning unutilized.

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