ORAWEK Digest - Daily Brief
🗞️ ORAWEK Digest — ভোরের সংক্ষেপ | Friday, 12 June 2026 Business · Economy · AI — in under 300 words.
Bangladesh FY27 Budget Passed: What Dhaka’s Professionals Must Know This Weekend — ORAWEK Digest, 12 June 2026
By ORAWEK | ভোরের সংক্ষেপ — The Morning Brief Business · Economy · AI · Every Weekday at 8:00 AM · Free Forever
On Thursday, June 11, 2026, Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury stood in the Jatiya Sangsad and placed Bangladesh’s largest budget in history before parliament. Tk 9.38 lakh crore. A number larger than the entire economy produced in output just a few years ago. This was the BNP government’s first budget after winning the February 12, 2026 general election — and the first time in 20 years a BNP finance minister has had the floor.
This is ORAWEK’s long-form weekend read: every number that matters from the digest of Friday, June 12 — built for Dhaka’s professionals who need to make better decisions, not just stay informed.
📋 SECTION ONE: THE FY27 BUDGET — THE NUMBERS, THE PRIORITIES, THE RISKS
The Headline: Tk 9.38 Lakh Crore — Bangladesh’s Biggest Budget Ever
The FY2026-27 national budget comes in at Tk 9.38 lakh crore — a 19 percent jump from last year’s Tk 7.9 lakh crore. This is not a budget for a nation coasting. It is a budget for a government that made large promises to a large electorate and is now trying to fund those promises while managing one of the most difficult macroeconomic environments Bangladesh has faced in a decade.
The key numbers at a glance:
- Total outlay: Tk 9.38 lakh crore
- Revenue target: Tk 6.95 lakh crore (10.2% of GDP)
- NBR tax revenue target: Tk 6.04 lakh crore
- Annual Development Programme (ADP): Tk 3 lakh crore (1,277 new projects)
- Budget deficit: Tk 2.43 lakh crore (3.6% of GDP)
- Debt interest payments: Tk 1.27 lakh crore — that is 13.6% of the entire budget
- GDP growth target: 6.5%
- Inflation target: 7.5% (current rate: 9.42%)
- Government bank borrowing target: Tk 1,12,000 crore
- FDI target: 2.7% of GDP — a six-fold rise from current levels
The Interest Problem No One Is Talking About Loudly Enough
Tk 1.27 lakh crore in interest payments. Of that, Tk 1.05 lakh crore goes to domestic debt servicing and Tk 22,500 crore to foreign loan interest. That is money already spent — on decisions made by previous governments, on infrastructure now in repayment phases (MRT Line-6, Karnaphuli Tunnel), on a banking sector that required Tk 40,000 crore in recapitalization just this fiscal year.
This means 18.3% of the government’s revenue target is already spoken for before a single classroom is built or a single hospital is stocked. If NBR falls short of its Tk 6.04 lakh crore target — which it has, in every year since FY21 — that ratio climbs further, compressing every discretionary line item in the budget.
The arithmetic problem is not ideological. It is structural. And any professional making business decisions in FY27 should model it.
The 10 Strategic Priorities — What the Government Says It Stands For
Finance Minister Khosru laid out 10 broad priorities for the fiscal year:
- Inclusive development
- Quality education and healthcare for all
- Universal social protection
- An economy driven by investment, employment, and production
- Deregulation and business environment simplification
- Financial sector stability
- Energy security
- Digital transformation and ICT development
- Environmental and water resource management
- Transparent, efficient, and accountable governance
These are not controversial priorities. What they are is a set of commitments that require revenue to implement — revenue the tax machine has not historically been able to generate at the pace required.
The Business-Facing Reform That Professionals Should Actually Watch
The budget proposes a Single Window system that would deliver business licences within 7 days. If this works, it is the most meaningful regulatory reform for entrepreneurs and investors in Bangladesh since 2018. The current licence maze — involving multiple ministries, layered approvals, and no real-time data sharing — is one of the most frequently cited barriers by both domestic and foreign investors in every World Bank Doing Business or BIDA survey.
The test will come in Q1 FY27. Not the announcement. Not the portal launch. But the day when a small manufacturer in Narayanganj or a logistics firm in Chattogram applies for a licence and actually receives it within seven days. That day will tell you more about this government’s reform capacity than any budget speech.
Also announced: stock market settlement time to shift from T+2 toward T+0 in phases — a signal that the government wants to improve capital market liquidity and attract institutional participation back to the DSE.
Social Safety Net: The Human Side of the Budget
The government allocated Tk 1,44,338 crore to the social safety net — up from Tk 1,26,731 crore in the revised FY26 budget. A Family Card food subsidy of Tk 14,500 crore is proposed directly targeting food-insecure households at a time when food inflation has risen for four consecutive months and stands at 9.06% as of May 2026.
For the July Uprising families: martyrs’ families receive Tk 20,000/month; injured individuals in categories A, B, and C receive Tk 20,000, Tk 15,000, and Tk 10,000 per month respectively. The beneficiary count rises to 16,513.
Universal Pension Scheme reform: Private sector workers can now opt to withdraw 30% of their total accumulated pension fund as a one-time gratuity. This is a significant concession for workers who had resisted the scheme because locking capital away for decades felt inaccessible. Whether this drives meaningful enrolment growth is the question to watch.
Jobs target: The government formally targets 1 million new jobs in FY27, to be tracked through a new monitoring framework.
CPD’s Verdict: Right Priorities, Unrealistic Numbers
The Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) delivered its assessment hours after the speech. Executive Director Fahmida Khatun said the budget outlines structurally correct goals — but that the primary targets lack a realistic foundation.
The central concern: the Tk 6.95 lakh crore revenue target would require at least 42% revenue growth in a single year. In context: Bangladesh’s tax-to-GDP ratio has fallen below 7% — the lowest in South Asia and among the lowest globally. NBR’s revenue shortfall in FY26 was already projected at approximately Tk 1 lakh crore below target.
“Not allocation, but implementation” is FY27’s central challenge, CPD said.
BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir described the budget as “creative” and stood behind the government’s reform agenda. The Financial Express noted that debt interest now consumes 13.6% of the total budget — up from 12.4% in FY26.
📊 SECTION TWO: ECONOMY WATCH — THE DATA DASHBOARD FOR FRIDAY, 12 JUNE 2026
All figures sourced from the data points most recently available as of 8:00 AM Friday.
| Indicator | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| USD / BDT | 122.84 | BB interbank mid-market · 12 Jun · Taka in managed float · 30-day range: ~121.8–122.9 |
| Yuan / BDT (CNY) | 18.19 | Mid-market rate · 12 Jun · 7-day high: 18.16 (9 Jun) · CNY strengthening vs BDT YTD |
| DSEX | 5,520.40 pts | Thu 11 Jun close (2:30 PM) · +0.90 pts (+0.065%) · Muted budget-day session |
| Gold 22K / Bhori (BAJUS) | Tk 2,18,350 | Updated 11 Jun · Down from Tk 2,29,373 (Jun 2) · Peak Tk 2,50,193 (Apr 15) |
| Inflation Rate (May ’26) | 9.42% | Up from 9.04% in April · 16-month high · BBS released 7 Jun |
| Food Inflation (May ’26) | 9.06% | Up from 8.39% in April · Four consecutive months rising |
| Policy Rate (BB Repo) | 10.0% | Unchanged · Jun 4 consultation: hold unanimously · Bank lending: 15–16% |
| Bad Loans / NPL (Dec ’25) | 30.60% | Down from 35.73% peak (Sep ’25) · Total NPL: Tk 5.45 lakh crore |
| GDP Growth FY26 (Forecasts) | 3.7%–4.7% | Fitch: 3.7% · WB: 3.9% · ADB: 4.0% · IMF: 4.7% · FY25 actual: 3.49% |
| Private Sector Credit (Apr ’26) | 4.75% | Marginal recovery from 24-year low of 4.72% (Mar) · Govt crowding-out continues |
| Gross Forex Reserves | ~$34.57B | BB gross, May 23 |
| IMF BPM6 Reserves | ~$29.91B | May 23 |
| External Debt | $110.93B | Mar ’26 · Down $2.59B QoQ from Dec ’25 |
| FY27 Debt Servicing | $4.87B | Peak projected at $5.5B by FY30 |
| RMG Export YTD (Jul–May FY26) | $35.31B | Down 3.41% year-on-year |
| ADB Inflation Forecast FY26 | 9.0% | ADB ADO April 2026 |
| ADB GDP Forecast FY26 | 4.0% | ADB ADO April 2026 |
What the Exchange Rates Mean for Your Business
USD/BDT at 122.84 means the taka has been relatively stable in its managed float. The 30-day range has been tight at approximately 121.8–122.9 — a signal that Bangladesh Bank is actively managing the corridor. For importers: your dollar cost of goods has not deteriorated sharply. For exporters: RMG and other exporters are not benefiting from a depreciation tailwind. The structural story — Bangladesh’s low revenue-to-GDP, high import dependence, and a debt-servicing peak incoming — makes BDT depreciation pressure a medium-term risk, not yet a short-term one.
Yuan/BDT at 18.19 is the number every supply chain manager and RMG sourcing professional needs on their dashboard this week. China is Bangladesh’s single largest trade partner at 21.21% of total trade. At 18.19 BDT per yuan, Chinese-sourced raw materials, fabrics, and industrial inputs are meaningfully more expensive than they were six months ago when CNY/BDT was below 17.5. That cost is embedded in every factory invoice — and FY27’s manufacturing competitiveness story starts with this number.
🌐 SECTION THREE: GLOBAL SIGNAL — WHAT THE WORLD IS DOING TO BANGLADESH THIS WEEK
Oil Falls to $89 on Iran–US Peace Signals — The Hormuz Story is Dhaka’s Most Important Global Risk
Brent crude dropped to approximately $89/barrel on Thursday — its lowest since March — after President Trump suspended planned US strikes on Iran and announced that a peace deal was “largely negotiated.” WTI fell to approximately $86/barrel.
The framework on the table: a two-phase agreement where Phase 1 involves Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz and committing to no nuclear weapons development; Phase 2 involves 30–60 days of broader negotiations. Iran’s semi-official Fars agency said Tehran was “likely to accept.” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, attending a NATO summit in Sweden, said there had been “slight progress” but talks were still ongoing as of Friday morning.
The Strait of Hormuz remains technically closed under a dual blockade. Even if a deal is signed this weekend, experts — including the UAE’s state oil company — estimate full oil and LNG flows will not normalize until 2027, given the need to de-mine the strait, restart idled production fields, and repair facilities damaged by drone and missile strikes.
For Bangladesh, this is not abstract geopolitics. It is a direct cost driver. Bangladesh sourced over 50% of its LNG imports from Qatar and the UAE in 2025. Every week of Hormuz closure adds directly to BPC’s import bill, to the embedded energy cost of every factory running on spot-priced LNG, and to the electricity shortage that has constrained industrial output for months. A deal this weekend would be the single most important positive macro event for Bangladesh in Q2 2026.
Wall Street Surges — Tech Leads, SpaceX IPO Arrives Today
US equity markets closed sharply higher on Thursday as investors responded to Trump’s Iran strike cancellation and positioned ahead of SpaceX’s IPO:
- S&P 500: +1.75% to 7,394.30
- Nasdaq: +2.54% to 25,809.66
- Dow Jones: +1.86% (+930 points) to 50,848.75
Chip stocks led: Micron +11%, AMD +8%, Lam Research +12.7%, Intel +10% (upgraded by BofA on CPU order surge). Oracle fell nearly 9% despite an earnings beat, on a cloud revenue miss and rising AI infrastructure cost concerns.
SpaceX lists on Nasdaq today, Friday June 12, at an IPO price of $135/share — targeting a ~$75 billion capital raise that would make it the largest IPO in history. Oppenheimer initiated coverage with a $190 price target (outperform). New Street Research set a $165 target.
For Bangladesh professionals: Starlink’s low-earth-orbit satellite network already operates in Bangladesh. If SpaceX’s capitalization allows accelerated coverage expansion and more competitive pricing in South Asia, it becomes a meaningful infrastructure signal — particularly for fintech last-mile delivery and e-commerce logistics in underconnected districts.
US CPI May 2026: 4.2% Confirmed — Fed Likely Holds June 16–17
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics released May CPI data on Wednesday, June 10:
- Headline CPI: +4.2% year-on-year (in line with market forecast)
- Month-on-month: +0.5% (below the 0.3% consensus estimate)
- Core CPI (ex-food and energy): +2.9% YoY / +0.2% MoM — muted
The energy component drove the headline: energy prices rose 3.9% month-on-month and 23.5% year-on-year — a direct and quantified cost of the Hormuz closure. Core commodities actually declined 0.1%, meaning tariff pass-through is still absorbed rather than inflated. Markets are now pricing a hold at the June 16–17 FOMC meeting — not a hike.
US Fed Funds Rate remains at 3.50–3.75% under Chair Kevin Warsh. The FOMC’s hold scenario is good news for BDT: a pause on US rate hikes reduces the dollar-strengthening pressure on emerging market currencies including the taka.
Bitcoin: $63,569 — Still in Extreme Fear Territory
Bitcoin stands at approximately $63,569 on Friday — a modest recovery from a low of $61,165 earlier this week. The cryptocurrency remains down roughly 50% from its all-time high of ~$126,000 reached in October 2025. The Fear & Greed Index reads 12 — Extreme Fear. The $62,000 support level, roughly aligned with the 200-week moving average, continues to be tested.
The macro environment — elevated US inflation, Fed uncertainty, geopolitical tension — is structurally bearish for crypto risk appetite. For BD professionals who track crypto as a remittance or treasury instrument: current conditions do not support entry into speculative positions.
Gold: Tk 2,18,350/Bhori — Down as Iran Deal Hopes Reduce Safe-Haven Demand
BAJUS updated the 22-karat gold price to Tk 2,18,350/bhori as of Thursday, June 11 — down from Tk 2,29,373 on June 2 and well below the April 15 peak of Tk 2,50,193. International spot gold stands at approximately $3,200/oz — easing on the Iran peace signal that reduced safe-haven demand. BD gold buyers who were priced out at the April peak are now seeing a significantly lower domestic rate.
Key Regional and Trade Context
- India–Bangladesh trade: India’s deficit with Bangladesh reached $7.86 billion in FY25 — the highest with any single country. India has overtaken the US as Bangladesh’s second-largest trading partner (as of February 2026). India is currently supplying diesel via pipeline to Bangladesh amid the LNG shortage — a critical energy bridge given Hormuz.
- China trade constraint: Under the February 2026 ART agreement, Bangladesh accepted a 19% base US tariff but is prohibited from signing bilateral trade deals with “non-market economies” — effectively China. This is a binding policy constraint given China is BD’s #1 trade partner at 21.21% of total trade. The FY27 budget was designed under these ART obligations.
- US–China tariffs: Remain at approximately 45%, keeping competitive pressure on Chinese manufacturing and theoretically creating diversification opportunities for BD’s export sector — but only if BD’s energy and infrastructure costs allow competitive production.
🤖 SECTION FOUR: AI THIS WEEK — ChatGPT Is Now a Job Platform. Your Hiring Process Just Changed.
This week, OpenAI launched a Jobs feature inside ChatGPT — surfacing live job listings from Indeed, Upwork, and Appcast, personalised to a user’s skills, experience, and career goals. Applications happen directly on source sites. Alongside it: a built-in CV editor that lets any user upload or create a résumé, tailor it to a specific role, and download it in a polished, professional format.
The CV builder is available worldwide right now, in English, across all ChatGPT plans — including the free tier — at chat.openai.com. The jobs search feature is currently US-only but the CV tool has no geographic restriction.
Why this matters for every professional manager in Bangladesh:
The bar for what a motivated job applicant can produce as a first-impression document has permanently shifted. A candidate using ChatGPT’s CV tailoring can produce a role-specific, jargon-matched, well-structured application in under ten minutes. They do not need to be a strong writer. They do not need a professional career coach. They just need to paste the job description and their work history into a chat window.
For HR teams and hiring managers: Your screening process — if it is still optimising for CV polish, formatting, or keyword density — is now screening for AI use, not for competence. The practical response is to move first-round screening toward scenario-based questions, practical assessments, or problem-specific conversations that demonstrate real judgment.
For anyone currently job-hunting: Open ChatGPT, upload your CV and the target job description, and ask it to identify the three most significant gaps between your background and the role requirements. Address those three gaps explicitly in your cover letter. That is the most effective use of the tool — not asking it to write your CV from scratch, but asking it to diagnose the mismatch and help you close it.
This is the most practically useful AI development for Bangladeshi professionals this week — not a frontier model benchmark or a research paper. A tool. Available now. Free.
✍️ ORAWEK NOTE — From the Founder
The budget is done. Tk 9.38 lakh crore in numbers, ten priorities on slides, a revenue target that asks the machine to grow 42% in a single year. I sat with the interest line this morning — Tk 1.27 lakh crore. That is the government paying for decisions made years before anyone in today’s cabinet was in office. It crowds out everything. Every new hospital, every road, every safety net has to compete with that number first.
The Single Window is the promise I’m watching most closely in Q1. Not because a 7-day licence is hard to say. But because it requires fifteen ministries to talk to each other in real time. That has never happened in this country before. If it actually works, it is a bigger reform than any tax rate in this entire document.
— Founder · Friday morning · Dhaka
📌 THE BOTTOM LINE FOR DHAKA’S PROFESSIONALS THIS WEEKEND
If you are in banking or credit: Private sector credit growth at 4.75% is at a near-24-year low. The government’s Tk 1,12,000 crore bank borrowing target will crowd out commercial lending. Model your FY27 credit access scenario with that constraint built in.
If you are in manufacturing or supply chain: Yuan/BDT at 18.19 is your embedded raw material cost baseline. Factor it into every FY27 contract. Watch the Hormuz deal — a weekend announcement could shift your energy input costs meaningfully.
If you are in HR or talent: The AI-powered CV editor is live and free. Update your first-round interview questions accordingly.
If you are watching the capital market: The T+0 settlement proposal and the SME tax threshold increase are the two budget provisions most likely to create DSE activity in Q1 FY27. Watch implementation timelines from BSEC.
If you are tracking the macroeconomic environment: The FOMC meets June 16–17. A hold is priced in. Any surprise hike would be the most significant negative macro signal for BDT this month.
ORAWEK — ভোরের সংক্ষেপ — The Morning Brief 5 Sections · Under 300 Words · 8:00 AM · Every Weekday · Free Forever · Zero Spam
📲 Join the WhatsApp Channel (8 AM daily brief link)
This article is the long-form weekend companion to the ORAWEK Morning Brief of Friday, 12 June 2026. All data points sourced from TBS News, The Daily Star, Dhaka Tribune, Financial Express, BSS News, Bangladesh Bank, BBS, DSE, BAJUS, Al-Amin Jewellers, BLS (US), TradingEconomics, OilPrice.com, exchange-rates.org, Wise, MetaMask/CoinGecko, CNBC, Reuters, CPD, and the House of Commons Library.