Bangladesh commerce minister Khandker Abdul Muktadir on Monday told the Jatiya Sangsad that Bangladesh is adopting a structured and multi-layered trade strategy to sustain export growth after its graduation from LDC status, placing Economic Partnership Agreements, Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements and Free Trade Agreements at the centre of its long-term economic planning.
He said that the country was moving away from a single-model approach and instead adopting a tiered system of trade agreements based on the level of economic engagement with different partners.
The minister made the remarks while replying to a question from Cumilla-9 lawmaker Md Abul Kalam in JS.
He explained that Free Trade Agreements were being treated as the most basic form of trade arrangement, mainly focused on tariff reduction, improved market access for goods and limited liberalisation of services trade.
In this context, the commerce minister said that Bangladesh was currently negotiating FTAs with countries including Singapore, while also engaging with the European Union to begin formal discussions.
Moving to broader frameworks, the minister said Economic Partnership Agreements were being pursued as wider arrangements that combine trade liberalisation with development cooperation.
According to him, these agreements typically include provisions on investment promotion, technology transfer, customs cooperation and capacity building, which are particularly important as Bangladesh prepares to graduate from LDC status.
He also informed JS that Bangladesh had already signed an EPA with Japan, which is the country’s first agreement of this kind, and efforts were ongoing to complete its ratification process.
At a more advanced level, Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements were being negotiated with key trading partners, Muktadir said.
He said that these agreements extend beyond goods trade and cover services, digital trade, intellectual property rights, investment protection and regulatory alignment.
The minister said CEPA negotiations with South Korea had already progressed through several rounds, while a similar agreement with the United Arab Emirates was scheduled to begin formal negotiations in May 2026.
He stated that the overall objective was to move gradually from simple tariff-based facilitation towards deeper economic integration to ensure the competitiveness of Bangladesh’s agriculture, industry and services sectors.
The minister also highlighted Bangladesh’s application to join the c, describing it as a strategic priority for the Asia-Pacific region.
He informed the House that the application had been formally submitted and was currently under review by member countries.
Commerce minister said that membership of the RCEP would provide access to one of the world’s largest trading blocs, including major economies such as China, Japan and South Korea.
However, he also cautioned that joining the bloc would require Bangladesh to strengthen its domestic industrial and trade competitiveness.
Referring to the broader policy context, the commerce minister stressed that these initiatives were being pursued in view of Bangladesh’s upcoming graduation from LDC status, which would lead to a gradual loss of existing preferential market access.
He said EPAs, CEPAs and FTAs would play a key role in securing continued duty benefits, reducing tariff and non-tariff barriers, and ensuring sustained access to major export destinations.
Alongside trade negotiations, he said the government was also working to diversify exports beyond the ready-made garments sector, expand into new markets and strengthen services exports, particularly in ICT and professional sectors.
Efforts were also underway to improve compliance standards, upgrade infrastructure and enhance economic diplomacy through Bangladesh’s overseas missions, the minister said.
Muktadir also said that the combined approach of FTAs for immediate access, EPAs for development-orientated cooperation and CEPAs for deep integration, along with potential entry into RCEP, would help Bangladesh maintain export momentum and strengthen its position in the global trading system in the coming years.