BSEC chairman and four commissioners resign

Published at : 04 June 2026, 12:40 pm
BSEC chairman and four commissioners resign
Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) chairman Khondoker Rashed Maqsood resigns on Thursday (June 4, 2026).

Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC) chairman Khondoker Rashed Maqsood and four commissioners have resigned from their respective posts. 

They submitted their resignation letters to the Financial Institutions Division of the Ministry of Finance on Thursday (June 4, 2026).

The four commissioners who have resigned are: Md Mohsin Chowdhury, Md Ali Akbar, Farzana Lalarukh and Md Saifuddin.

For the past few months, BSEC officials and employees had been staging protests demanding the chairman's resignation. Besides, general investors had also been protesting and demanding restructuring of the BSEC in the wake of a massive drop in the stock market index. 

Khondoker Rashed Maqsood assumed office as the BSEC chairman on August 18, 2024, for a four-year term. Md. Mohsin Chowdhury was appointed as a commissioner on June 2, 2024. Subsequently, Md Ali Akbar joined as a commissioner on August 28, 2024, Farzana Lalarukh on September 3, 2024, and Md. Saifuddin most recently assumed office as a commissioner on July 29, 2025.

On Tuesday, during an event, Finance and Planning minister Amir Khasru Mahmud Chowdhury announced that the country's capital market regulator, BSEC, would be restructured within the next two weeks. Just two days after that announcement, the BSEC chairman and commissioners have stepped down.

END/ASA

Provident funds to pay 27.5% tax

Published at : 20 September 2023, 04:57 pm
Provident funds to pay 27.5% tax

Companies and organisations will be required to file tax returns on the income generated by employee welfare funds from the current fiscal year and pay a 27.5 percent tax on the earnings. 

The Income Tax Act 2023 incorporates the provision, lifting the tax exemption and amnesty on the compulsion to file returns for funds such as provident funds, gratuity funds and workers' profit participation funds maintained by the private sector.

The law, however, has exempted government-managed provident funds from taxation, raising questions.

TIM Nurul Kabir, executive director of the Foreign Investors' Chamber of Commerce & Industry, said there were many other avenues to collect tax.

"Employees benefit from provident funds after their retirement. So, the authority should not slap taxes on retirement benefit."

He said while levying the tax, the government has not treated provident funds of the private and public sectors equally.

"It is discriminatory," he said, adding that they would appeal to the tax authority for the withdrawal of the tax on income from provident funds.

Debabrata Roy Chowdhury, director for legal, regulatory and corporate affairs at Nestlé Bangladesh PLC, said the introduction of income tax on trust funds would lower the overall income from such schemes.

"This will have an adverse long-term impact on retired employees of private organisations."

Chowdhury urged the authority to address the issue in line with the spirit of the government's initiatives aimed at ensuring social security for private sector employees.

"The recent introduction of the universal pension scheme for private sector employees is a good example of that."

A senior official of the NBR, on condition of anonymity, said the income of government-managed provident funds was exempted in line with the Provident Fund Act 1925.

He said provident funds under the private sector had been historically exempted and there was no requirement to submit tax returns. As a result, it was unclear whether the funds were properly utilised.

"From now onwards, we will see proper disclosure."

The tax official said the contribution of payroll tax is about 3 percent of the total income tax although it should increase as the economy is growing.

Md Shahadat Hossain, a former president of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Bangladesh, said income from investment in savings certificates, where people invest as a source of future earnings, is already taxed.

"From that perspective, the imposition of tax on provident and other employee welfare funds seems okay."

However, Towfiqul Islam Khan, senior research fellow at the Centre for Policy Dialogue, said social protection for private sector employees was low.

"Provident and other workers' welfare-related funds provide little social protection. The imposition of tax will increase inequality. But there can't be any discrimination in taxation between private and government provident funds."

Khan, citing the latest income tax law that replaced the Income Tax Ordinance 1984, said the NBR tried to find new avenues to increase tax collection and improve the nation's revenue-gross domestic product ratio, which is one of the lowest in the world.

"We can see the desperation of the tax authority to boost collection. This ultimately reveals the inability of the NBR to catch the tax evaders and illicit money makers."