Forex reserves fall
Monday, 2 June 2014
Foreign exchange reserves slipped in May for the first time since December, Bangladesh Bank (BB) said on Sunday, reports Reuters.
Reserves at the end of May eased to $20.23 billion from a record high of $20.37 billion the previous month, but were up from $14.53 billion a year earlier. The reserves are enough to cover six months of imports.
Rising exports, strong remittances from Non-resident Bangladeshis (NRBs) working overseas and slower imports have helped build the reserves, a senior central bank official said.
The marginal drop in May was due to a rise in imports as political unrest subdued after a January election that was boycotted by main opposition party.
The country's exports in July-April, the first 10 months of the current fiscal year, increased 13 per cent to $24.65 billion over the same period in the previous year on the back of clothing sales.
However, the country's garment industry has been hit by a string of fatal factory disasters that killed more than 1,130 people.
Imports rose 17 per cent to $29.77 billion in July-March on year-on-year after a more than 4.0 per cent drop in the 2012-13 fiscal year that ended in June 2013.
Remittances from NRBs fell nearly 4.8 per cent to $11.73 billion in July-April from the year-ago period, although inflows rose 3.0 per cent in April, the third straight month of gains.