News

Metropolitan Chamber seeks supportive, growth-oriented budget
20 Apr 2026
Source: The Business Standard

Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MCCI) President Kamran T Rahman today (19 April) called for a "supportive and growth-oriented" national budget for fiscal year 2026-27, warning that businesses, particularly small and medium enterprises, are under severe strain from high inflation, sluggish investment, elevated interest rates and foreign exchange pressure.

Speaking at a seminar of MCCI and the Economic Reporters' Forum (ERF) on budget priorities, he said the upcoming budget must be balanced and realistic, arguing that a sensible tax policy can simultaneously boost revenue, encourage investment and generate employment rather than punish businesses further.

Kamran proposed full integration of the National Identity (NID) and Tax Identification Number (TIN) databases to expand the tax net, noting that though over one crore taxpayers hold TINs, fewer than half file returns.

He also recommended introducing a symbolic minimum tax to bring new taxpayers into the fold and simplifying return filing through mobile applications.

The MCCI chief urged the government to reconsider conditions tied to corporate tax benefits, especially restrictions on cash transactions.

He further suggested cutting tax rates for both listed and non-listed companies by an additional 2.5% to stimulate investment.

Kamran proposed a unified taxpayer profile covering income tax, VAT and customs to reduce administrative complexity and harassment, along with online hearings and digital notices to cut time and cost for businesses.

On VAT and customs, he urged simpler procedures, transaction-based valuation, stronger automation, and allowing quantity disclosure instead of value in some VAT forms to protect confidentiality.

The MCCI President called for special policy support for SMEs, including separate tax treatment, input tax credit facilities and reduced duty and VAT on raw materials.

Comprehensive reform roadmap presented

Md Shahadat Hossain, former President of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Bangladesh, presented policy recommendations in a paper titled "National Budget 2026–2027: Private Sector Priorities & Perspectives," outlining reforms in corporate tax, VAT, customs and capital markets.

He said the budget should go beyond revenue and spending to serve as a broader policy framework for growth, investment, jobs and inflation control.

Shahadat flagged Bangladesh's tax-to-GDP ratio hovering between 6.5% and 7.3% in FY2024-25 as among the lowest globally, well below the 15% threshold considered necessary for sustainable development.