Friday, October 31, 2025

The Road Management System in Bangladesh.

 

The Road Management System in Bangladesh.


Introduction

The road transport system is the lifeline of Bangladesh’s economy and social structure. Almost 80% of the country's passenger and freight movement depends on roads. Over the years, the government has expanded the road network, connecting rural and urban areas, boosting trade, and supporting industrial growth. However, despite these achievements, Bangladesh continues to suffer from a poor road management system, resulting in congestion, accidents, unsafe conditions, and inefficiency in transport operations.

The road management crisis is not just a technical problem but a systemic governance issue. While multiple factors — such as poor infrastructure, inadequate maintenance, lack of planning, and rapid urbanization — contribute to the situation, the primary reason lies in weak institutional coordination and governance failures. This essay explores in detail the root causes, institutional challenges, and the consequences of weak governance in road management, along with recommendations for reforming the system in Bangladesh.

 

Overview of the Road Management System in Bangladesh

Bangladesh has a road network of approximately 400,000 kilometers, comprising national, regional, and rural roads. The Roads and Highways Department (RHD) manages the national and regional highways, while the Local Government Engineering Department (LGED) oversees rural roads. The Bangladesh Road Transport Authority (BRTA) regulates vehicles, drivers, and road transport operations. The Traffic Police and Dhaka Transport Coordination Authority (DTCA) are responsible for enforcement and coordination in metropolitan areas.

Despite the involvement of several agencies, road management in Bangladesh remains fragmented. Roads are often poorly maintained, traffic regulations are weakly enforced, and safety conditions are inadequate. This fragmentation of authority and overlapping jurisdiction are central to the problem.


Main Reason: Weak Institutional Coordination and Governance

The core reason for Bangladesh’s poor road management system is weak institutional coordination combined with governance deficiencies. The responsibilities for road construction, maintenance, regulation, and enforcement are divided among multiple ministries and agencies that rarely work together effectively. This lack of coordination results in inefficiency, poor planning, duplication of efforts, and widespread corruption.

Let’s analyze this main cause in depth and explore how it manifests through several interconnected issues.

1. Overlapping Institutional Responsibilities

The biggest challenge lies in the fragmented nature of road governance. The RHD, LGED, BRTA, DTCA, and Police operate under different ministries with separate mandates. For example:

  • RHD constructs and maintains national and regional highways.
  • LGED handles local roads under the Ministry of Local Government.
  • BRTA manages vehicle registration, driver licensing, and road safety awareness under the Ministry of Road Transport and Bridges.
  • Traffic Police enforce traffic laws under the Ministry of Home Affairs.
  • DTCA coordinates transport planning in Dhaka under yet another administrative structure.

This multi-agency arrangement creates confusion, weak accountability, and limited cooperation. As a result, projects often overlap or conflict — for instance, roads built without proper drainage, signage, or safety audits, because one agency built the road and another was supposed to maintain or regulate it.

The absence of a single lead authority for road management means decisions are delayed, responsibilities are blurred, and maintenance suffers.

2. Corruption and Political Influence

Corruption is a deep-rooted problem in Bangladesh’s public sector, and the road management system is no exception. Weak governance allows corruption at multiple levels, including:

  • Issuing driving licenses without proper testing or training.
  • Granting vehicle fitness certificates to unfit and unsafe vehicles.
  • Manipulating tender processes for road construction and maintenance projects.
  • Bribery in enforcement, where violators often escape fines through informal payments.

This culture of corruption directly undermines road safety and management quality. Many road accidents occur because of unqualified drivers, poorly maintained vehicles, or substandard construction materials — all linked to corrupt practices. Political influence further worsens the situation. Transport owners’ associations and labor unions often have political affiliations. As a result, enforcement authorities hesitate to take strict action against violations, fearing backlash or political pressure.


3. Poor Planning and Policy Implementation

Bangladesh has several road transport policies, such as the National Integrated Multimodal Transport Policy (NIMTP) and the National Road Safety Strategic Action Plan (2021–2030). However, the implementation of these policies is weak due to poor inter-agency communication and lack of accountability mechanisms.

Long-term transport planning is often neglected in favor of short-term infrastructure projects aimed at political gain. Roads are frequently constructed without proper feasibility studies, environmental assessments, or safety audits. Maintenance budgets are either insufficient or diverted, leading to rapid deterioration of newly built roads.

Moreover, road expansion projects often ignore future traffic growth, non-motorized transport needs, and pedestrian facilities, creating unsafe and congested conditions.

4. Lack of Technical Expertise and Manpower

Effective road management requires specialized knowledge in transport engineering, urban planning, and traffic management. However, Bangladesh faces a severe shortage of qualified professionals in these areas.

In many cases, administrative officials — rather than trained engineers or planners — make technical decisions about road design, traffic systems, and safety features. This results in roads that are poorly designed, lack proper drainage, or are unable to handle mixed traffic flow.

The absence of professional training and research-based decision-making has hindered the development of a modern and efficient road management framework.

5. Inadequate Maintenance and Monitoring

Maintenance is one of the weakest aspects of road management in Bangladesh. Once a road is constructed, it often receives little attention until it becomes severely damaged. Factors such as overloaded vehicles, poor drainage, and substandard materials accelerate deterioration.

Although the government allocates funds for road maintenance, corruption and inefficiency mean that much of this money is wasted. Lack of systematic monitoring and quality control further exacerbates the problem.

For example, many highways develop potholes within months of completion due to the use of low-quality materials or improper construction supervision. The failure to conduct periodic maintenance leads to much higher repair costs later and contributes to accidents and traffic congestion.

 

 

 

6. Weak Law Enforcement and Traffic Management

The road management crisis is also reflected in poor traffic regulation. Traffic police are often understaffed, undertrained, and underequipped. Manual traffic control, absence of digital monitoring, and limited surveillance make enforcement inconsistent.

Moreover, penalties for traffic violations are low, and corruption within the police force enables offenders to escape punishment. Many cities lack a proper traffic signal system, and where signals exist, they are often ignored by drivers and pedestrians alike.

Without strict enforcement and a culture of compliance, even the best road infrastructure cannot function safely or efficiently.

7. Lack of Data and Research

Accurate data is essential for managing any road network. Bangladesh lacks a comprehensive and reliable database on road conditions, accidents, and traffic patterns.

Agencies collect data in isolation and often fail to share it with others. This lack of coordination prevents evidence-based policymaking and makes it difficult to identify accident-prone areas or evaluate the effectiveness of safety measures.

Without accurate data, resource allocation and maintenance planning become arbitrary and inefficient.

8. Rapid Urbanization and Unplanned Growth

Uncontrolled urban expansion has placed enormous pressure on road infrastructure, especially in Dhaka and Chattogram. Population growth and rising vehicle ownership have outpaced the capacity of existing roads.

Unplanned development, roadside markets, illegal parking, and encroachments have narrowed roadways, reducing traffic flow efficiency. Urban roads often serve multiple conflicting purposes — transport, vending, parking, and pedestrian movement — without clear zoning or management.

The absence of coordinated urban transport planning contributes heavily to poor road conditions and persistent traffic congestion.

Consequences of Weak Road Management

The consequences of poor road management are visible in daily life and national development indicators:

  • High rate of road accidents: Bangladesh records over 5,000 official deaths annually due to road crashes; unofficial estimates are much higher.
  • Economic loss: Road traffic crashes cost an estimated 2–3% of GDP each year.
  • Reduced productivity: Traffic congestion and transport delays hinder economic efficiency.
  • Public suffering: Citizens face long travel times, high transport costs, and safety risks.
  • Environmental impact: Poorly managed traffic increases fuel consumption and emissions.

 

Recommendations for Improvement

To improve road management in Bangladesh, reforms must focus on governance, coordination, and capacity building. Key recommendations include:

  1. Establish a Unified Road Management Authority: Create a single national agency to coordinate all aspects of road construction, maintenance, safety, and enforcement.
  2. Enhance Transparency and Accountability: Introduce digital systems for licensing, vehicle registration, and road maintenance tracking to reduce corruption.
  3. Strengthen Law Enforcement: Equip traffic police with modern technology, cameras, and electronic fine systems.
  4. Ensure Proper Planning and Design: Conduct feasibility and safety studies before road construction.
  5. Increase Maintenance Funding: Allocate adequate budgets and ensure transparent use of maintenance funds.
  6. Promote Professional Training: Build capacity through specialized education and certification for engineers, planners, and enforcement officers.
  7. Encourage Public Awareness: Educate citizens on road discipline, pedestrian safety, and traffic laws.
  8. Use Data-Driven Decision Making: Develop a centralized database for road conditions and accident reporting.
  9. Ensure more Training on driving, Safe Driving, Defensive driving and behavior both driver and their staff and also some training program for the passenger through media, web channel, Social Media daily awareness, signage and poster.
  10. Implement some special law on fine, Penalties and disciplinary action both road user, driver and their staff or owner and the penalties and punishment should be as high as possible, because to something authentic and best for the society and country Intimidation is necessary.    

 We are living in a society where we are innovative, accountable and responsible both all these, We can make our country, society and civilization beautiful and led a better life for present and future. To ensure this Intimidation is one of the keys, as fear and Intimidation make us responsible, accountable to play the roles effectively with care.

 


Conclusion

In conclusion, the poor road management system in Bangladesh is primarily a consequence of weak institutional coordination and governance failures. The fragmentation of authority among multiple agencies, combined with corruption, lack of planning, inadequate expertise, and poor enforcement, has created a dysfunctional transport environment.

To build a safer and more efficient road network, Bangladesh must reform its institutional framework, ensure accountability, and embrace professional management and data-driven planning. Road management should not merely focus on building more roads but on managing them intelligently, transparently, and sustainably.

Only through strong governance, coordination, and public commitment can Bangladesh transform its road system into a safe, efficient, and reliable backbone for national development.


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The Road Management System in Bangladesh.

  The Road Management System in Bangladesh. Introduction The road transport system is the lifeline of Bangladesh’s economy and social stru...