Pune Media

Few steps to cut inflation-induced poverty

High inflation has become the bane of low-income people’s existence for the better part of the past two years as spiralling prices have dramatically eaten away at their purchasing power.

The interim government tried to appease them through the budget for fiscal year 2025-26 by proposing to increase the food subsidy allocation by about 20 percent to Tk 9,663 crore. Alongside this, the allocation for social safety net schemes has been proposed to be increased by 0.9 percent to Tk 91,297 crore.

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Additionally, as many as 55 lakh poor to low-income families will get food aid, up from 50 lakh this fiscal year.

Moreover, each family will receive 30 kilogrammes of rice per month at Tk 15 per kg for six months, up from five months at present, according to the budget proposal.

“But this is not enough,” said Selim Jahan, former director of the Human Development Report Office and Poverty Division at the United Nations Development Programme.

The government has aimed to bring down inflation to 6.5 percent in the upcoming fiscal year.

“The government’s entire premise is based on the assumption that it will be able to bring down the inflation rate to that level. I do not think that is a realisable target,” he said.

Inflation has stayed above 9 percent since March 2023, the longest streak in 40 years, according to data from the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics.

But the problem is that if the actual inflation rate remains higher than 6.5 percent, the suggested quantities of food subsidy measures will not be enough to provide the intended relief to the targeted people, Jahan said.

The World Bank recently warned that the national poverty rate is projected to rise to 22.9 percent in 2025, up from 18.7 percent in 2022. Extreme poverty is expected to rise to 9.3 percent from 7.7 percent mainly due to high inflation.

The data indicates an additional 3 million people in Bangladesh are likely to fall into extreme poverty this year.

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