Sugar prices in Bangladesh soar despite import duty cut

Published Nov 15, 2023

Tridge summary

Two weeks after the National Board of Revenue (NBR) reduced import duties on raw and refined sugar, prices continue to rise in the wholesale and retail markets. The duty cuts were intended to stabilize sugar prices before the upcoming national elections but have had no impact. Wholesalers blame millers for manipulating the market and not supplying enough sugar to meet the demand.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Highlights: NBR cut the duties by half on November 1 Duty on raw sugar cut to Tk1,500 per tonne Duty on refined sugar cut to Tk3,000 per tonne Retail price increased by Tk10 per kg over 2 weeks Wholesale price per maund rose by Tk500 Wholesalers blame millers for not providing supply as per demand 96% of demand for sugar is met through import ​​​​​​​​​The recent decision by the National Board of Revenue (NBR) to reduce import duties on both refined and raw sugar by half has failed to benefit consumers, as sugar prices continue to soar in wholesale and retail markets. On November 1, the revenue board reduced the import duty on raw sugar to Tk1,500 per tonne and refined sugar to Tk3,000 per tonne. The move was intended to stabilize the price of sugar ahead of the upcoming national elections. However, two weeks after the duty cuts were announced, sugar prices have actually risen. In the wholesale market in Chattogram, the price of sugar per maund (37.32 kilograms) has increased by ...
Source: TBS

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