Kathmandu, Apr. 8
The World Bank has
projected that Nepal's economic growth in the current Fiscal Year 2025/26 will drop
down to 2.3 per cent from 4.6 per cent of the FY 2024/25.
The impact of the ongoing conflict in West
Asia and the lingering effects of the September 2025 unrest are the reasons
behind this slowdown, according to the World Bank’s latest economic update.
Looking ahead, reconstruction activities,
continued hydropower expansion, and consumption linked to the 2027 subnational
elections are expected to support a pickup in growth to an average of 4.4 per
cent over the next two fiscal years, it said in its report published on
Wednesday.
The Nepal Development Update, titled
'Growth Under Pressure: Navigating Domestic and Global Shocks', said that
the services sector is expected to be most affected in 2025/26, due to slower
tourism activity, higher transport costs, and potential supply chain
disruptions.
"The outlook remains highly uncertain.
A prolonged conflict in the Middle East could dampen tourist arrivals, reduce
remittance inflows, weaken consumption, and slow overall economic activity,"
read the report.
On the upside, improved political stability
following the elections in March, sound macroeconomic management, the
availability of ample buffers, and continued structural reforms could
strengthen investor confidence, boosting private investment and growth.
“Boosting private sector-led growth will be
critical to strengthening economic resilience and creating more jobs in
Nepal,” said David Sislen, World Bank Division Director for Maldives,
Nepal, and Sri Lanka. “To achieve this, Nepal must improve the business
environment, develop foundational infrastructure, mobilize private finance, and
support priority sectors such as tourism, the IT sector, and agribusiness.”
Sislen suggested that in order to attract
more Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) to Nepal, the country should improve its
transport infrastructure and implement reforms in information technology
sector.
Talking about the recent concessional loan
the multilateral donor recently approved, he said that the WB only provides
financial supports and the country designs projects as per its development
priority.
The Nepal Development Update is a companion
piece to the World Bank Group’s South Asia Economic Update, a twice-a-year
report that examines economic developments and prospects in the South Asia
region.
Likewise, the latest South Asia Economic
Update, Working with Industrial Policy, projects growth in South Asia to
slow to 6.3 per cent in 2026—from 7 per cent in 2025—due to disruptions in
global energy markets.
Despite the near-term slowdown, South Asia
continues to grow faster than other emerging-market and developing economies.
Growth is expected to recover to 6.9 per cent in 2027.
“South Asia's mixed success on industrial
policy in part reflects the region’s limited implementation capacity, fiscal
space, and market size in some countries,” said Franziska Ohnsorge, World
Bank Group Chief Economist for South Asia.
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