Bangladesh’s Missing Billions: Stolen in Plain Sight

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In September 2025, the Financial Times released a documentary titled *Bangladesh’s missing billions, stolen in plain sight*, shining an international spotlight on one of the most staggering allegations of systemic corruption and capital flight in recent South Asian history. The film estimates that approximately **$234 billion** was illicitly siphoned out of Bangladesh between 2009 and 2023 during Sheikh Hasina’s 15-year rule as prime minister. This figure, averaging around **$16 billion per year**, has since been echoed by Bangladesh’s interim government and referenced in official white papers.

The scale is enormous. Bangladesh’s economy, with a GDP hovering between $400–450 billion in recent years, reportedly lost resources equivalent to a significant portion of its national wealth through alleged elite capture of the banking system, trade misinvoicing, and politically protected embezzlement. While Hasina’s government oversaw notable economic growth, infrastructure development, and poverty reduction, critics argue that these achievements masked deep institutional rot.

### Mechanisms of Alleged Plunder

According to the FT investigation and supporting reports from the interim administration, the money was extracted through several well-documented channels:

– **Banking sector looting**: Politically connected business groups allegedly gained control over banks, extending massive loans to shell companies or associates that were never repaid. These “non-performing” loans were then diverted abroad. Bangladesh Bank Governor Ahsan Mansur (before his removal in early 2026) publicly estimated that around **$17 billion** (roughly Tk 2 trillion) had been spirited out through such fraudulent lending, sometimes with assistance from security agencies. Specific conglomerates, including references to entities like the S Alam group, were frequently cited in probes.

– **Trade misinvoicing**: A classic tool of illicit financial flows, where importers over-invoice or exporters under-invoice to shift value offshore. Separate analyses, including from Global Financial Integrity-style assessments, have pointed to tens of billions lost through this method alone over the decade, compounding the broader drain.

– **Infrastructure and public project kickbacks**: Allegations of inflated contracts in major initiatives such as power plants, metro systems, and bridges, though many specific cases remain contested or tied up in legal disputes.

Much of the alleged proceeds reportedly flowed to destinations like the **United Kingdom** (particularly London real estate), **UAE (Dubai)**, Singapore, Malaysia, the United States, Canada, and various tax havens. Transparency International and UK-based probes have highlighted suspicious Bangladeshi-linked property investments abroad.

The documentary features interviews with student protesters from the 2024 uprising that ousted Hasina, politicians, business figures, and economists who describe a “hall of mirrors” of regulatory capture and political protection that allowed the exodus to occur openly yet invisibly to ordinary citizens.

### Context and Counterpoints

Hasina’s Awami League government achieved average GDP growth of 6–8% in many pre-COVID years, alongside visible progress in garments exports, remittances, and infrastructure. Supporters have dismissed the $234 billion figure as exaggerated or politically motivated propaganda by the post-2024 interim government under Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus. Some Awami League voices have questioned the methodology behind the white paper estimates and accused international media of bias.

Nevertheless, independent indicators—such as persistent discrepancies in balance-of-payments data, sharp pressures on foreign exchange reserves after 2024, and high levels of non-performing loans—lend credence to concerns about large-scale illicit outflows. Trade misinvoicing remains a documented regional problem, but the alleged concentration under one political era has drawn particular scrutiny.

### Recovery Challenges

After Hasina fled to India in August 2024 amid mass protests, the interim government prioritized asset recovery, banking reforms, and institutional cleanup. Task forces were formed, bank boards overhauled, and international cooperation sought, especially with the UK. However, experts interviewed in the FT film and elsewhere describe recovery as a “years-long” ordeal.

Key obstacles include:
– Complex layering of assets through offshore shell companies and trusts.
– Limited forensic expertise and prosecutorial capacity within Bangladesh.
– Slow mutual legal assistance processes across jurisdictions.
– The risk that assets could be dissipated or moved further as time passes.

By early 2026, Bangladesh’s gross foreign exchange reserves had stabilized around **$34 billion** (with usable reserves under the IMF methodology closer to $29–30 billion), recovering from sharper dips post-upheaval but still reflecting ongoing vulnerabilities. Remittances have provided some buffer, yet the banking sector continues to grapple with legacy bad loans.

Central bank officials have stressed that time is critical—delays could allow laundered funds to vanish into new structures. Progress has been incremental at best, with some asset freezes and investigations underway, but large-scale repatriation remains elusive.

### A Cautionary Tale

The story of Bangladesh’s missing billions illustrates the dangers of state capture, where political power enables a small elite to extract wealth at the expense of public institutions and future generations. Whether the full estimated amount—or a verifiable portion—can ever be recovered is uncertain. What is clearer is the human cost: strained public finances, higher debt burdens, and eroded trust in governance.

The FT documentary, available on YouTube and the Financial Times platform, serves as both exposé and warning. As Bangladesh navigates its political transition and economic reforms under subsequent governments, the pursuit of accountability and transparency will likely define its path forward. Ongoing investigations and white paper findings continue to shape public discourse, underscoring that kleptocracy rarely stays hidden forever.

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