Preparing for post-graduation free- trade regime
Rollback of protective taxes begins under new budget
Tax package for 'Made-in-Bangladesh' products to be phased out
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Updated :
An envisaged rollback of protective taxes on 'made-in -Bangladesh' package of products begins in the upcoming fiscal year with the planned levying of standard 15-percent VAT on all goods after 2030.
Local manufacturers of blender, juicer, rice cooker, oven, mobile-phone set, sanitary ware, motor vehicles, and three-wheelers may come under the fiscal plan.
Also, income tax for corporate taxpayers, irrespective of being in profit or loss, is poised to go up to 1.0 per cent from the existing 0.6 per cent.
The tax is known as 'unjust' one in the corporate world as losing concerns are compelled to pay the tax, known as 'turnover tax'.
The Finance Ordinance 2026 ratifying the new budget under the current interim government may come with these significant changes tomorrow (June 2, 2025).
Chairman of Policy Exchange Bangladesh Dr Masrur Reaz hails the move to phase out rather than sudden imposition of high taxes.
"I welcome the move that government has not slapped high tax overnight and is coming with a phase-out plan. It would give investors a comfort," he told The Financial Express.
However, he finds the minimum tax against the principle of direct taxation that must apply to income.
"It's a fundamental question whether such tax should exist or not. Increasing the tax looks like nailing the coffin that would hurt small businesses," he observes.
Tax officials say corporate income-tax benefit for 'Made in Bangladesh' would continue as per Statutory Regulatory Order, issued in 2021.
A senior official of the NBR says the tax-expenditure policy 2025, issued earlier, has capped tax benefit for maximum five consecutive tax years which the revenue authority has to follow from the forthcoming fiscal year.
"As VAT exemptions were given for the current FY, it is easier to phase out while it is difficult for income tax to impose such tax now as the tax waiver was offered for 10 to 20 years in 2021," he adds.
Under the plan, an industry enjoying the zero-rated VAT under the package would have to pay 5.0-percent tax for next two years followed by 7.5 per cent in FY2027-29 and 10 per cent for only FY2030 and 15 per cent from FY31.
However, some of the items, including essential items, rice, pulses, green vegetables etc, would continue to enjoy tax exemptions.
Manufacturers of high-end battery would get VAT waivers for next two years and pay 5.0 per cent for the remaining three years until 2030.
Any investors willing to establish hospitals would enjoy VAT exemptions on import of many items and waiver at local stage, the official says.
Also, sanitary napkin would enjoy VAT exemption until 2030 on both import of raw materials and local manufacturing stage.
"Investors would get a predictable VAT structure to plan their business-operation cost," the official says, detailing the new fiscal measures.
He notes that wide-spread allegations over lack of predictability in tax structure would be resolved with the step.
Currently, motor-cars, three- and four-wheelers, home and kitchen appliances and light -engineering products, some IT hardware are enjoying tax benefits under the made- in - Bangladesh campaign.
In 2021, tax exemption was given to automobiles for 20 years, to different home appliances for 10 years and to agro-products, light engineering and IT hardware for 10 years.
Officials have said the government has pressure from development partners to increase country's tax-to-GDP ratio mobilising more domestic resources.
As per International Monetary Fund (IMF) conditions, the revenue board will have to collect Tk 3.0 billion from policy measures and Tk 1.0 billion from administrative measures by the next fiscal year.
The tax-expenditure policy defines that only parliament would be empowered to offer any type of tax exemptions.
The policy has tightened tax-breaks by barring any agency or authority but the government revenue board from placing any tax-exemption issue before parliament.
The draft framework, obtained by the FE, is an integrated one comprising income tax, customs and value-added tax (VAT) wings.
For transfer of land, the purchasers would be able to enjoy a pared-down 15-per cent tax on capital gains for five corresponding years. Thereafter, the tax rate would be determined on the regular tax slab.
Despite upward revision of tax-free income ceiling, individual taxpayers in the first slab would have to pay higher taxes with the upward revision of tax rate to 10 per cent from 5.0 per cent.
Currently, individual taxpayers exceeding Tk 3.8 million in annual income would be required to pay 30-percent tax and the threshold would be lowered down to Tk 3.5 million.
Tax liberty is also planned to be squeezed in the run-up to Bangladesh's graduation from the LDC status, set for next year, after which the country would have to lose many trade benefits on the global market.
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