Friday, 27 March, 2026
Friday, 27 March, 2026

Bangladesh's remittance inflows may slow as Middle East conflict intensifies: ADB

The Daily Star, Dhaka
  26 Mar 2026, 22:18
Representational image: Fatima Jahan Ena

Bangladesh and other South Asian countries could face lower remittances from the Middle East as the ongoing conflict in the region weakens labour demand and squeezes migrant worker incomes, according to new research by the Asian Development Bank (ADB).
The report, released today, estimates that the conflict could lower economic growth in developing Asia and the Pacific by up to 1.3 percentage points over 2026–2027 and push inflation up by 3.2 percentage points if energy market disruptions persist beyond a year.
Nearly half of Bangladesh's more than $30 billion in annual remittances comes from the Middle East. Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, the UAE, and Kuwait together accounted for 86 percent of Bangladeshi migrant workers who secured jobs abroad in fiscal year 2024–25, according to the Bangladesh Economic Review 2025.
The disruption is already visible. Hundreds of Middle East-bound flights from Bangladesh have been cancelled since the escalation of the US-Israel war on Iran, mostly affecting migrant workers.
The ADB warned that a remittance shock could compound the effects of higher energy prices and tighter external financing conditions by simultaneously weakening foreign currency inflows and household demand.
"This channel is especially important because remittance dependence does not always align with exposure based on trade or energy indicators, and may therefore represent an additional source of macroeconomic vulnerability," the report said.
The report said remittances to many Asian economies have historically exhibited countercyclical behaviour, often increasing and providing an important buffer during periods of stress.
“However, the current shock may differ, as it is centred in the Middle East—a significant migration destination and source of remittances,” the report said, adding that economies in South Asia appear particularly exposed, with inflows from the Middle East exceeding 5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in some cases.
The ADB brief said remittances from Middle Eastern economies accounted for 8.1 percent of Nepal’s GDP, 5.6 percent of Pakistan’s GDP, and 2.9 percent of Sri Lanka’s GDP in 2021.
For Bangladesh, remittances accounted for 2.8 percent of its GDP, according to estimates from five years ago.
The ADB also warned that higher energy prices could fuel inflation across the region, with the largest impact in South Asian economies.
The conflict affects economies in Asia and the Pacific through higher energy prices, supply chain and trade disruptions, and tighter financial conditions. Tourism and remittances could also be impacted, the Manila-based multilateral lender said.
“Higher oil and gas prices feed into energy and producer prices, with pass-through also determined by each economy’s dependence on imported energy and the degree of domestic energy price regulation. Because the shocks are assumed to be temporary, inflation moderates in 2027 as energy prices normalise,” it said.

Comments

  • Latest
  • Popular

Bangladesh's remittance inflows may slow as Middle East conflict intensifies: ADB

PM Tarique meets President Shahabuddin at Bangabhaban on Independence Day

On Independence Day, Bangladesh receives greetings from China, US and Russia

Operation Searchlight: 55 years on, the scars are still fresh

Zubaida Rahman urges boost to Education, Tech, and Healthcare for Children

Russian Ambassador Alexander Khozin met with Tarique Rahman

President, PM attend Eid-ul-Fitr main congregation at National Eidgah

U.S. President and First Lady Extend Greetings to Americans Celebrating Eid-ul-Fitr

Preparations underway for over 3,000 open-air Eid congregations across the U.S.

Grand opening ceremony of FOABANA’s 40th convention in Los Angeles on March 28

১০
World Bank Helps Bangladesh Create Economic Opportunities for Low-Income Youth
The World Bank approved $150.75 million to help Bangladesh scale up support to create employment,
World Bank Vice President for South Asia Region to Visit Bangladesh
The World Bank’s new Vice President for the South Asia Region, Johannes Zutt, arrives in Dhaka today.
IMF keeps Bangladesh’s economic growth forecast almost unchanged
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has kept Bangladesh's economic growth projection nearly unchanged for the
BRICS-backed bank to lend $1b to Bangladesh this year
The BRICS-established New Development Bank (NDB) has planned to raise its lending to Bangladesh development