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Importing Spice: A Strategic Study on Trade Policy, Smuggling, and Market Reform in Bangladesh

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dc.contributor.author Hasnain, Kazi Nehal
dc.date.accessioned 2026-06-29T03:30:26Z
dc.date.available 2026-06-29T03:30:26Z
dc.date.issued 2025-12-10
dc.identifier.citation MBA en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.daffodilvarsity.edu.bd:8080/handle/123456789/17752
dc.description Thesis Report en_US
dc.description.abstract This is the study of Bangladeshi spice sector. The study based on spice trade policy, import, export, smuggling and market reform. In this study, I try to explores the increasing import of spices, because of less domestic production, legal and illegal imports of spice. As less production but increasing use in household, industries and food processing unit. Nearly half of some spice needs of Bangladesh imports by legally and illegally. That’s why both opportunities and challenges in these sectors. In 2023 nearly $210million of price spices imports by legally and illegally trade routes. “Countries such as India, China, and Vietnam are Bangladesh's primary suppliers of key spices like turmeric, cumin, chili, and black pepper. In 2023, the total value of these imports exceeded $200 million. However, while demand remains high, the legal spice trade is burdened by a heavy tax structure. Importers face a combined duty load of up to 58.6%, including customs, regulatory, and supplementary duties, alongside VAT. These high costs make smuggling an appealing alternative for some traders — illegal imports now account for an estimated half of all spices consumed in Bangladesh. This informal trade poses several risks. This informal trade poses several risks. Like as, it bypasses health inspections of the goods by Smuggling, also It undermines legitimate businesses and deprives the government of significant tax revenue because of this, legal importers are struggling to remain competitive due to high tariffs, bureaucratic delays, and inconsistent regulations. I have got some Key findings from the study are include: Bangladesh's spice sector is large but it is heavily dependent on imports. Particularly from India, the legal trade is undermined by high costs and the unchecked spread of smuggling.it have problem on Policy support for local spice farming and better infrastructure is lacking. Trade agreements like SAFTA have not adequately addressed spice-specific barriers., I can make the study to address these issues. Some recommendations are: Bangladesh should need to reduce import duties for essential spices to boost legal imports. also need Improve border surveillance and invest in customs modernization. also need Introduce quality control labs and traceability systems. And also need to offer subsidies and technical support to encourage local spice cultivation. at the last we can say that spice importing can indeed be a golden opportunity. when Bangladesh reforms its trade policies, strengthens enforcement mechanisms, and invests in its own spice production capabilities. Bangladesh can reduce dependence on informal trade, boost food security, and position itself competitively in the regional spice market with strategic planning and targeted reforms. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship DIU en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Daffodil International University en_US
dc.subject Spice Import en_US
dc.subject Trade Policy en_US
dc.subject Market Reform en_US
dc.title Importing Spice: A Strategic Study on Trade Policy, Smuggling, and Market Reform in Bangladesh en_US
dc.type Other en_US


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