24/05/2026
Why Feasibility Studies Fail in Bangladesh’s Manufacturing Sector
Lessons from Leather Goods & Footwear Industries
In Bangladesh, many manufacturing projects fail long before the first product reaches the market. Surprisingly, the problem is often not machinery, manpower, or even funding.
The real problem starts much earlier:
Weak Feasibility Studies.
Over the last decade, Bangladesh has experienced significant growth in export-oriented industries such as:
* Leather Goods
* Footwear
* Agro Processing
* Light Engineering
* Textile & Apparel Backward Linkage
Yet, despite the opportunity, many industrial projects struggle with:
* low capacity utilization,
* poor ROI,
* delayed breakeven,
* operational inefficiency,
* and export competitiveness issues.
After analyzing multiple industrial projects and market cases, I believe most feasibility studies in Bangladesh fail for five major reasons.
1. Feasibility Studies Are Prepared as “Documents,” Not Decision-Making Tools
Many feasibility reports are created only to:
* obtain bank loans,
* satisfy investor requirements,
* or fulfill project submission formalities.
As a result, the reports become highly theoretical and disconnected from operational reality.
In real industrial environments, feasibility studies should answer critical questions such as:
* Can this factory compete with China, Vietnam, or Indonesia?
* Is the planned production capacity commercially realistic?
* Can the market absorb the projected output?
* Is the machinery configuration aligned with target productivity?
* Is the labor structure sustainable?
Unfortunately, many reports simply copy industry averages without analyzing the actual business model.
2. Unrealistic Production & Sales Assumptions
This is one of the biggest failures in Bangladesh.
Example from the Footwear Industry:
A startup factory may assume:
* 5,000 pairs/day production,
* 85–90% capacity utilization within the first year,
* and aggressive export projections.
But field reality is very different.
In most new footwear factories:
* operator efficiency remains low initially,
* rejection rates are high,
* production balancing takes time,
* and buyer compliance requirements delay scaling.
As a result:
* projected cash flow collapses,
* operating cost increases,
* and breakeven gets delayed.
Many factories that looked profitable on paper become financially stressed within 12–24 months.
3. Machinery Selection Without Process Understanding
This is extremely common in both Leather Goods and Footwear sectors.
Many investors purchase machinery based on:
* supplier recommendation,
* exhibition demonstrations,
* or competitor imitation.
But they fail to analyze:
* process bottlenecks,
* line balancing,
* utility consumption,
* maintenance capability,
* spare parts availability,
* and actual production economics.
Example:
In leather goods manufacturing, some factories invest heavily in automated cutting systems without ensuring:
* stable production volume,
* skilled CAD operators,
* or sufficient order consistency.
The machine becomes underutilized while financing costs continue increasing.
A machine is not an investment if production economics do not support it.
4. No Real Market Validation
Another major weakness is assuming:
“Export market exists, so sales will happen automatically.”
This assumption is dangerous.
In the global footwear and leather market:
* buyers prioritize compliance,
* consistency,
* lead time,
* scalability,
* and supply chain reliability.
Many factories are technically capable of production but commercially unprepared for export competition.
Bangladesh still has strong advantages:
* competitive labor cost,
* growing industrial base,
* leather availability,
* and strategic export potential.
But without:
* branding,
* buyer development,
* product positioning,
* and export strategy,
manufacturing capacity alone cannot ensure profitability.
5. Ignoring Operational Reality
This is probably the most underestimated factor.
Many feasibility studies fail to properly analyze:
* power stability,
* gas availability,
* wastewater treatment cost,
* labor turnover,
* industrial compliance cost,
* logistics bottlenecks,
* and working capital pressure.
Example from Leather Sector:
Several leather manufacturers underestimated:
* environmental compliance cost,
* CETP dependency,
* and export certification requirements.
As global buyers increased ESG and compliance expectations, many factories faced reduced competitiveness despite having production capability.
What Bangladesh Needs Now
Bangladesh is entering a critical industrial transformation phase.
Global manufacturing shifts are creating opportunities in:
* Footwear
* Leather Goods
* Agro Processing
* Light Engineering
* Value-added Manufacturing
However, sustainable industrial growth will not come from simply building more factories.
It will come from building:
# financially engineered,
# operationally optimized,
# export-competitive manufacturing systems.
This requires feasibility studies that integrate:
* technical analysis,
* market intelligence,
* factory engineering,
* operational planning,
* and financial modeling together.
Because modern manufacturing success is no longer about installing machines.
It is about designing the right industrial system before capital is invested.
Final Thought
A factory can be built within months.
But a wrong industrial decision can destroy profitability for years.
That is why feasibility studies should not be treated as paperwork.
They should be treated as the foundation of industrial success.
We (Nexora ConsulTech Ltd.) help investors launch profitable manufacturing businesses through feasibility studies, factory planning, machinery advisory, and industrial business setup solutions.