- By Gias Uddin CAP, ITP
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- Business Compliances, Income Tax, Investment
- Tags: Bangladesh economy, business cost reduction, business policy, corporate tax Bangladesh, digital tax system, double taxation Bangladesh, economic growth, economic reform Bangladesh, export competitiveness, FDI Bangladesh, fiscal reform, high tax rate Bangladesh, interest rate Bangladesh, lending rate Bangladesh, policy roadmap, SME finance, sustainable growth, tax compliance, VAT reform Bangladesh, VAT refund Bangladesh
The Triple Burden of Business: How High Corporate Taxes, VAT and Interest Hindering Bangladesh’s economic potentials?
Bangladesh’s economic narrative is one of remarkable success, marked by robust GDP growth and transformation into a formidable global exporter of Ready-Made Garments (RMG), Leather Goods, Information Technology Enable Services. However, sustaining this momentum requires addressing deep-seated structural challenges that impose a “triple burden” on businesses: complex Corporate Income Tax (CIT), High VAT rates and complex compliance procedures, and high borrowing costs.
These challenges not only increase businesses’ operating costs but also reduce productivity, stifle competitiveness, discourage formalization, investor confidence and drain the capital needed for innovation and expansion.
Drawing on the best international practices, this article outlines the core problems and presents a unified, business-friendly roadmap to minimize costs and unlock the next phase of economic growth.
1. The Burden of High Corporate Tax: Complex and Fragmented
While statutory Corporate Income Tax (CIT) rates in Bangladesh (e.g., 27.5% for non-listed companies) are comparable to, or sometimes higher than, regional peers, the real problem is the sheer complexity, Discourages reinvestment and uncertainty of the regime.
- Minimum Tax Trap: The imposition of a Minimum Tax on gross receipts (even if the company is unprofitable) often results in a cripplingly high effective tax rate. This penalizes start-ups and manufacturers during their essential early, low-profit years, discouraging investment.
- Administrative Overload: The total time required for compliance formalities-Audit to Tax Assessment process is excessive, placing a disproportionate burden on Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs). This friction promotes tax evasion and sustains informality.
- Sectoral Disparity: A multitude of specific rates, surcharges, and conditional rebates (for listed status, specific sectors like banking, or mobile operators) creates an opaque system that rewards lobbying over productive efficiency.
- Double Taxation on Corporate Income and Dividend: The issue of complexity is further compounded by systemic double taxation. The income of a company is first subjected to the standard Corporate Income Tax (CIT) rate. When the remaining profits are distributed to shareholders as dividends, these earnings are taxed again as income in the hands of the individual shareholder. This punitive dual taxation significantly erodes the total return on equity investment, creating a preference for debt financing and discouraging the distribution of legitimate profits to owners.
The result is a system that collects low overall revenue relative to GDP, despite extracting heavy compliance costs from honest firms.
Global Comparison
Most developed economies have corporate tax rates between 15%–25%, balanced by efficient tax administration and broader bases. For instance:
- Ireland — 12.5%
- Hong Kong — 16.5%
- Hong Kong — 16.5%
- Poland — 19%
- Singapore: 17%
- Sweden: 20.6%
- UK: 25%
These countries combine lower rates with strong compliance systems, encouraging voluntary payment and investment.
Best Practice for Bangladesh
- Reduce corporate tax gradually to 20% over 3 years to attract FDI and boost reinvestment.
- Declare Dividend from a limited company as tax free to avoid double taxation on same income.
- Broaden the tax base by digitalizing corporate tax returns.
- Introduce tax credits for R&D, export diversification, CSR and technology adoption.
Result: Simpler, fairer taxation encourages FDI, reinvestment, reduces evasion, and enhances business growth.
2. The Burden of VAT Distortion: High Rate, Complex Rules
Bangladesh’s standard VAT rate of 15% is among the highest in developing Asia. While the intent is to ensure revenue collection, the structure is narrow and complicated. Numerous exemptions, sector-specific rates, and delayed input refunds make VAT administration both confusing and costly.
How It Hurts Business & low-income consumers?
- Cascading cost: The current system is plagued by thousands of exemptions and special rates. While intended to shield the poor, these exemptions break the crucial “input tax credit chain,” causing tax-on-tax (cascading effects). This raises the effective cost of production for formal businesses and undermines export competitiveness.
- Cash Flow Strain: Exporters—the engine of the economy—are often forced to wait months or even years to receive VAT refunds on zero-rated exports. This ties up working capital, pushing trade-based firms toward wholesale borrowing at high interest rates.
- Regressivity without Simplicity: Trying to achieve social fairness through VAT exemptions fails on both fronts. It complicates administration while being less effective than direct cash transfers in protecting vulnerable households.
- Compliance cost: SMEs struggle with e-filing and frequent audits, diverting time and money.
The VAT system, meant to be a simple, revenue-neutral consumption tax, has become a significant source of inefficiency and cost for Bangladeshi businesses, particularly exporters.
Global Lessons
Developed countries like Singapore (GST 9%), Netherlands (GST 9%), Â Australia (GST 10%), and Japan (10%) maintain lower VAT rates with wider coverage. This simplicity improves compliance and reduces evasion.
Best Practice for Bangladesh
- Adopt a single, moderate 9% VAT rate with minimal exemptions and zero-rating for exports.
- Introduce automatic, time-bound refunds for exporters and digital e-invoicing for transparency.
- Use targeted social transfers instead of multiple exemptions to protect low-income consumers.
Result: Lower business cost, higher compliance, and a more export-friendly tax structure.
3. High Loan Interest — The Financing Bottleneck
One of the most significant burdens on Bangladeshi businesses is high lending rates. While the central bank has taken steps to control inflation, commercial loan rates often exceed 14–16%, with SMEs paying even more due to perceived risk and collateral limitations.
Consequences
- Risk Premium for SMEs: Lacking robust credit scoring and a reliable movable collateral registry, banks charge high-risk premiums for SME lending. The bank’s inability to easily recover assets or assess risk accurately translates directly into higher interest rates for borrowers.
- Exporters’ Reliance on Expensive Credit: The delays in VAT and export incentive refunds force exporters to rely on costly short-term working capital loans just to cover day-to-day operations, eroding their profit margins.
- Lack of Deposit Competition: Arbitrary controls or lack of competition in the deposit market raise the structural cost of funds for banks, which they inevitably pass on to borrowers in the form of higher lending rates.
- Discourages entrepreneurship: New businesses can’t afford costly credit.
- Limits productivity: Firms delay automation or expansion.
What Developed Countries Do?
- Policy rates are stable and moderate: The U.S. and EU maintain predictable policy rates (3–5%) with competitive bank spreads.
- Targeted refinance facilities: Central banks offer low-cost credit windows for SMEs and exporters.
- Credit guarantee funds: Reduce perceived risk and encourage banks to lend more affordably.
Best Practice for Bangladesh
- Introduce Single-Digit Lending Rate (8–9%) to encourage entrepreneurship and industrial expansion.
- Expand Credit Guarantee Schemes to cover 50–70% of SME loan risk.
- Strengthen credit bureaus and collateral registries to reduce default risk.
- Ensure predictable monetary policy — avoid sudden interest rate caps that distort markets.
Result: Reduce cost-push inflation, Increase private investment-to-GDP ratio, Strengthen export competitiveness by lowering financing cost per unit, align Bangladesh with regional peers like Vietnam (7–8%) and India (9–10%).
The Policy Roadmap: Best Practices to Minimize Costs
Minimizing these burdens requires a coordinated policy package that focuses on simplicity, transparency, and targeted relief.
A. VAT Simplification: 9% Single Rate and Digital Refunds
- Adopt a Single Standard Rate: Implement a single, moderate VAT rate of 9% (similar to Singapore or Japan’s effective consumption tax). This immediately simplifies compliance and reduces the incentive for informality.
- Zero-Rate Exports & Speed Up Refunds: Ensure genuine exports are immediately zero-rated and establish a risk-based, automated refund mechanism. Exporter refunds must be guaranteed within a strict 30-day window to eliminate cash flow strain.
- SME Presumptive Scheme: Introduce a clear, high registration threshold and a simplified, presumptive tax (e.g., 2–3% flat turnover levy) for micro-enterprises. This brings small firms into the system easily without imposing the burden of full invoice compliance.
- Equity via Transfers, Not Exemptions: Replace most social exemptions with targeted cash transfers or subsidies to poor households. This preserves the VAT base while ensuring social equity is achieved efficiently.
B. Credit Reform: Guarantees and Structural De-risking
The policy goal must shift from controlling nominal interest rates to structurally reducing the real cost of lending.
- Targeted Refinance Facilities: The Bangladesh Bank (BB) should use targeted refinance windows at concessional rates (e.g., policy rate + 0.5%) for participating banks, stipulating a capped margin when lending specifically to eligible SMEs and green projects.
- Scale Up Credit Guarantees: Significantly expand the Partial Credit Guarantee (PCG) fund. By covering 40–70% of the principal loss for banks on qualified SME loans, the government absorbs a significant portion of the risk premium, leading to lower effective borrowing rates for small firms.
- Build Core Credit Infrastructure: Accelerate the development of the National Movable Collateral Registry and modernize the Credit Bureau. Allowing firms to use easily verified assets (machinery, inventory) as collateral will drastically lower banks’ Loss Given Default (LGD) and reduce lending spreads sustainably.
C. Digital Compliance: Efficiency for All
Digitalization must be leveraged not just for revenue collection but as a tool to drastically reduce the administrative hours spent by businesses.
- Phased E-Invoicing: Mandate e-invoicing and real-time electronic returns, starting with the Large Taxpayer Units (LTUs) and expanding progressively. This cuts down on paper, reduces audit risk for compliant firms, and enables automated input credit verification.
- Simplified Tax Filing: Implement simplified, single-window filing platforms for CIT and VAT, streamlining the 30+ annual tax payments currently required into a handful of unified electronic submissions.
A Clear Path to Competitiveness
Bangladesh stands at a critical juncture. The old system of high, complex taxes, distortive VAT, and high-cost credit served its purpose, but it is now the single greatest structural constraint on the economy.
The key to minimizing business costs and accelerating growth is not in isolated fixes, but in adopting a cohesive policy roadmap: a 9% simplified VAT, targeted interest rate subsidies via guarantees and refinance, and a decisive push toward digital, low-friction tax compliance.
Implementing this agenda will not only boost export competitiveness and investment but will also encourage the millions of micro-enterprises currently operating informally to join the formal economy, securing a more predictable and prosperous fiscal future for Bangladesh.






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