Nepal Records Rs 153.68 Billion Balance of Payments Surplus in Two Months
15th October 2025, Kathmandu
Nepal’s economy has kicked off the fiscal year 2082/83 with an impressive demonstration of external sector resilience. According to the latest data from the Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB), the country’s Balance of Payments (BoP) recorded a substantial surplus of Rs 153.68 billion in the first two months (Shrawan and Bhadra).
Balance of Payments Surplus
This massive surge, which is an over 50 percent jump from the Rs 101.77 billion surplus posted during the same period last year, confirms that the nation’s financial buffers are stronger than ever. This upward trajectory is a powerful antidote to past periods of external vulnerability, reassuring both domestic and international stakeholders of Nepal’s current macroeconomic stability.
A Leap in External Health: The BoP and Current Account Metrics
The Balance of Payments, a crucial indicator tracking all economic transactions between residents of Nepal and the rest of the world, has shown remarkable improvement. The surplus of Rs 153.68 billion translates to approximately USD 1.10 billion, marking a notable increase from the USD 760 million recorded last year. This strong positive balance signifies that the total inflow of foreign currency into Nepal—primarily through remittances, exports, and loans—significantly outstrips the total outflow used for imports and external payments.
Even more striking is the performance of the Current Account, the primary driver of the BoP. The current account, which measures the net trade in goods, services, income, and transfers, posted a surplus of Rs 130.69 billion. This figure represents an extraordinary increase from the Rs 54.41 billion surplus recorded in the corresponding period of the previous fiscal year, more than doubling the surplus. In US dollar terms, the current account surplus jumped from USD 410 million to a robust USD 930 million. This wide surplus implies that the non-trade sources of income, particularly remittance inflows, are aggressively compensating for Nepal’s persistent trade deficit, fueling a healthy accumulation of foreign exchange reserves, as highlighted in the previous financial report.
The Engine of Stability: Remittance and Secondary Income
The primary force sustaining this massive BoP and current account surplus is the unwavering and elevated level of remittance inflows. While the provided data does not explicitly state the remittance figure for the two months, macro data from the NRB consistently shows that the secondary income component, dominated by remittances from Nepali workers abroad, is the single most important factor. This foreign currency injection acts as a structural stabilizer, effectively plugging the large gap created by Nepal’s high dependency on imports.
The continuous growth in remittance volume, often driven by a steady stream of Nepalese labor migration and increased use of formal banking channels for transfer, has provided a reliable source of foreign exchange. This influx of capital has fundamentally altered Nepal’s external risk profile, pushing the country into a period of substantial external balance. The current health of the BoP is, therefore, a direct reflection of the sacrifice and hard work of the global Nepali diaspora.
Capital Flows: Mixed Signals and the FDI Challenge
While the current account shines, a closer look at the capital account components offers mixed signals, highlighting areas that require policy attention for sustainable long-term growth.
The net capital transfer saw a modest but positive increase, rising to Rs 2.20 billion from Rs 1.20 billion a year ago. Capital transfer typically includes government and private grants. This growth is a positive sign of international development cooperation.
However, a critical area of concern remains Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). FDI inflows (equity only) during the review period amounted to only Rs 1.27 billion, representing a significant decline from Rs 2.71 billion recorded in the same period last year. The search results consistently emphasize that while remittances provide a short-term cushion, sustainable economic transformation hinges on boosting exports and attracting greater FDI. The decline in FDI signals structural challenges related to the investment climate, bureaucratic red tape, and policy stability, which Nepal must urgently address to shift its economy from consumption-based stability (funded by remittances) to production-based prosperity (funded by investment).
Implications for the Nepalese Economy and Policy Outlook
The large and growing Balance of Payments surplus carries profound implications for Nepal’s financial and monetary policy environment:
- Foreign Exchange Accumulation: The surplus directly translates into an accumulation of foreign exchange reserves. The Rs 153.68 billion BoP surplus becomes part of the central bank’s reserves, ensuring that the country maintains its ample import coverage, as detailed in the previous period’s report (which noted a 16-month import cover). This robust reserve position is the ultimate safeguard against global economic volatility and price shocks.
- Monetary Easing: With external pressures significantly reduced, the NRB gains greater flexibility in managing domestic liquidity. The continuous inflow of foreign exchange enhances liquidity in the banking system, contributing to falling interbank interest rates and potentially creating room for a more accommodative monetary policy. This shift is crucial for stimulating private sector credit growth and investment, which have been subdued in recent years.
- Inflation Management: The stability of the external sector and the strength of the reserves help maintain the stability of the Nepalese Rupee (NPR) against the Indian Rupee (INR), to which it is pegged. This stability is vital for controlling imported inflation, as Nepal sources a significant portion of its essential goods from India.
- Investor Confidence: The impressive BoP numbers bolster domestic and international investor confidence in Nepal’s macroeconomic management, laying the groundwork for increased capital market activity and encouraging long-term investment decisions.
The Imperative for Structural Reform
While the current statistics paint a rosy picture of external stability, the foundation remains narrow. The decline in FDI and the persistent reliance on remittance highlight that the BoP surplus is more a factor of strong transfers than of a fundamental structural transformation in trade and production. Nepal’s policy imperative now is to use this current period of stability and ample liquidity as a strategic window to implement critical structural reforms.
These reforms must focus on:
- Export Promotion: Aggressively expanding value-added exports, particularly in emerging sectors like hydropower and specialized manufacturing, to reduce the chronic trade deficit.
- Ease of Doing Business: Streamlining regulations, guaranteeing prompt repatriation of profits, and ensuring policy predictability to unlock the potential for greater FDI and domestic capital formation.
- Channeling Remittances: Designing financial instruments and incentive schemes that channel the massive remittance flows from consumption into productive sectors like tourism infrastructure, technology, and industry.
The Rs 153.68 billion BoP surplus is a triumph of external resilience. It has bought Nepal time and policy space. The challenge now is to convert this temporary financial strength into sustained, broad-based economic growth, making the external stability a permanent feature of the Nepali economy, rather than a transient phenomenon reliant on external labor migration.
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