Bangladesh is likely to start trading with India using Indian Rupee, instead of US dollar, soon. The central bank has recently carried out a trial in this regard, reports UNB.
According to the report, the commerce ministry placed a written recommendation at the last cabinet meeting regarding the possibility and opportunity of using Rupee instead of dollar.
Currently Bangladesh exports goods to India worth around USD 2 billion.
“The Bangladesh Bank has almost finished all kinds of trials in this regard. Trading in Rupee will be introduced in both countries only after a bilateral decision on some issues,” an executive director of Bangladesh Bank told UNB.
Wishing anonymity, he also said banking systems in India and Bangladesh have to sign separate agreements on using Rupee.
Meanwhile India-Bangladesh Chamber of Commerce and Industry (IBCCI) has submitted the total trade account to the central bank in the form of a proposal. The initiative is being taken to overcome the existing dollar crisis, sources said.
Bangladesh Bank spokesperson Mezbaul Haque said India-Bangladesh trade, using Rupee instead of US dollar, is still in the experimental stage. Some issues still need to be settled.
“There are some bilateral issues that need to be resolved. Then the banks have to prepare. But there will be a positive decision in this regard,” he added.
In response to a question whether there will be a fixed annual quota for opening LCs, he said, LCs will be opened as per the needs of traders. But the only source of Rupees is the export earnings of Bangladeshi goods in India.
“We are importing more from India than we export. This is why there is a trade deficit. As a result, the amount of Rupee is also being considered,” Mezbaul said.
Currently India is trading in Rupees with Russia, Mauritius, Iran and Sri Lanka.
At the Bangladesh-India ministerial meeting on trade, held in New Delhi on 22-23 December last year, India proposed to introduce the Rupee as a medium of bilateral trade.
Then, on the sidelines of the meeting of G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors held in Bengaluru, India on 24-25 February, there was a discussion between the two countries about moving the dollar as an exchange currency.
There, Bangladesh Bank governor Abdur Rauf Talukder and Reserve Bank of India governor Shaktikanta Das discussed the possibility of such a system using Rupee instead of US dollar.