Kathmandu, May 22
Nepal has
initiated the formal process to temporarily postpone its scheduled graduation
from Least Developed Country (LDC) status to a 'developing nation'.
Minister for
Foreign Affairs Shisir Khanal has written to the Chair of the United Nations'
Committee for Development Policy (CDP) on May 13, requesting a deferral of the
country's graduation until November 2029.
"The
government has decided to seek the deferral, taking into account recent
national and internal economic and political circumstances," Spokesperson
of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) Lok Bahadur Paudel Kshetri informed
at a press briefing on Friday.
According to
the MoFA, Minister Khanal has cited five reasons to justify his request for the
delayed graduation: the impact of regional conflict on the economy, risks of
losing favoured treatment at international markets, slow transition
preparation, prolonged impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and risk of remittance
decline.
"The
Nepali economy has been adversely affected due to regional conflicts,
disruptions in global supply chains, and the impact on remittance
inflows," said the MoFA, while citing the poor economic growth prospects
of just 2.3 per cent in 2026 as projected by the World Bank.
Following
graduation from LDC to developing country status, Nepal risks losing benefits
such as duty-free and quota-free (DFQF) market access. It is estimated that
this could lead to a decline of up to 35 per cent in employment within the
productive sector.
The private
sector has also long been asking the government for the deferral. Its voice for
graduation postponement became louder following the destruction of the private
properties during the Gen Z movement last year. The Federation of Nepalese
Chambers of Commerce and Industry and Confederation of Nepalese Industries had
long maintained that the country should seek deferral for at least three years
and implement a robust transition strategy to reduce the cost of industrial
production, enhance the infrastructure and ensure access to the major
international markets.
The MoFA
acknowledged that for various reasons, the implementation of Nepal’s Smooth
Transition Strategy (STS) has been slower than anticipated. "While the
recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic has yet to fully stabilise, geopolitical
tensions and the effects of climate change have created additional challenges
for it," it said.
Likewise,
recent developments in the Middle East have affected remittances, which form
the backbone of Nepal’s foreign currency reserves. In addition, rising fuel,
food and fertiliser prices have impacted the tourism industry and the wider
national economy, which is likely to impact more jobs at home and abroad.
Graduation in
one and a half decades
Although Nepal
first met the criteria for the graduation from the LDC status in 2015 during
the review of the United Nations, the country decided not to graduate due to
the devastating Gorkha Earthquake the same year and its implications on the
economy and infrastructure.
In 2018, the
Committee for Development Policy of the UN formally recommended Nepal for
graduation and the country was to graduate in 2021. But the country requested
for a deferral amidst the ravaging COVID-19 pandemic and its pressure on
tourism, foreign and domestic employment, and remittance. The country got an
additional five years and was slated to graduate to a developing country status
in November 2026.
According to
the experts on LDC graduation, Bangladesh's deferral following the movement a
couple of years ago was a motivator for Nepal's deferral. Bangladesh, Laos and
Nepal were slated to graduate together in November. But this time, Laos will
witness the progress alone.
Once a country
is graduated from the LDC, it will lose the DFQF facility in the markets in the
developed countries, options for the concessional loans and grants from the
multilateral donors and support in programmes and travels to UN programmes.
However, Nepal
has missed the favoured treatment like the DFQF facility provided by the USA
and the European Union. The country failed to produce enough goods to export to
those markets, and only a small benefit could be attained by the private
sector.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 23 May 2026.
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