The Bangladesh Bank is seeking technical assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to implement the crawling peg system for exchange rates. This system allows a currency with a fixed exchange rate to fluctuate within a defined range.
The move aims to manage the volatile dollar market and is not dependent on the IMF, according to the central bank official. Governor Abdur Rouf Talukder announced the exchange rate system on January 17, intending to implement it by March. The crawling peg system, used in countries like Vietnam and Argentina, ensures controlled dollar price fluctuations based on economic fundamentals. Bangladesh’s year-and-a-half-long dollar crisis prompted the central bank to inject funds, depleting forex reserves from $48 billion to $20.03 billion.