Bangladesh stands at the frontline of climate change. Cyclones, floods, droughts, erratic rainfall, and salinity intrusion are no longer rare events but recurring realities that erode livelihoods and threaten financial security.
For low-income households, climate shocks affect both livelihoods and the financial resources that support them. Each disaster disrupts the fragile balance of people’s daily lives as they save, borrow, and repay funds. The inclusive finance sector plays a vital role in this struggle. Microfinance institutions (MFIs) must now take up a dual role. They must extend credit to rural communities to support their livelihoods and help them withstand the climate stresses that erode them.
MicroSave Consulting (MSC) conducted research with BURO Bangladesh on its clients in four of the country’s most climate-exposed districts. The study reveals how households adjust their financial behaviors during crises, and how MFIs respond.
Our research highlights that households adopt distinct financial behaviors under climate stress:
- Savings as the first lifeline: Families withdraw deposits to cover food, health costs, or repairs. Households consume their savings or resort to distress selling of their assets to meet their basic needs during climate events.
- Loan demand collapses, then rebounds: During disasters, borrowing slows as incomes falter. Once the waters recede or markets reopen, the demand for loans surges. For instance, during April, households grapple with droughts and nor’westers that disrupt agricultural cycles, while in July and August, recurring heavy rainfall and floods frequently damage crops and homes, triggering a spike in loan requests for recovery and rebuilding.
- Informal credit fills gaps: With savings depleted and formal loans delayed, many households are forced to turn to informal lenders, often at punishing rates that prolong debt cycles.
- Women face higher barriers: Limited mobility, caution on the part of lenders, and caregiving duties restrict women’s access to credit when they need it most.

These behaviors align with the BRACED 3A framework, which defines resilience as people’s ability to anticipate, absorb, and adapt to climate shocks. Our study showed how households use a variety, and often a combination, of these strategies. See the figure below.

Yet, these strategies remain fragile without timely finance. Delayed liquidity undermines anticipation, weakens absorption, and postpones adaptation. If households’ coping strategies are weak without financial support, MFIs play a crucial role in shaping resilience. BURO Bangladesh’s practices illustrate a balance of caution and compassion:
- Repayment deferrals and paused disbursements protect liquidity and prevent defaults.
- Emergency “hand” loans, small and rapidly disbursed, are meant to cover essentials. However, the maximum loan amounts are often inadequate to meet the demand.
- Flexible savings withdrawals from both BURO’s open-access current accounts and, in the face of disaster, even from restricted contractual savings schemes, prioritize survival and recovery over rules.
- Operational shifts involve staff pivoting to relief activities and client support in disaster-hit areas.
These measures provide vital safety nets. Yet, they are often reactive and kick in after the damage has already been done. They enable survival, but rarely long-term adaptation. BURO’s approach reflects the typical reactive pattern across Bangladesh.
MFIs operate under immense constraints when disasters strike. BURO notes that after disasters, many households seek loans from multiple providers, which raises the risk of over indebtedness. BURO slows disbursements to prevent this and focuses on capacity-based lending, even as the demand for credit surges—not always for productive use but often for basic survival. Repayment deferrals offer clients breathing space, but delay cash flows, increase provisioning, and, in some cases, lead to loan losses.
Operational realities compound these financial strains. Flooded roads and damaged infrastructure limit access to branches and the mobility of field officers, while power cuts disrupt day to day branch operations and service delivery in drought-prone areas. The burden falls especially hard on women, who face health risks and must shoulder caregiving duties, which reduce their ability to engage financially during crises. These experiences underscore the delicate balance MFIs must navigate as they safeguard clients’ survival and protect their own sustainability. These barriers highlight a critical gap: While MFIs support households to absorb shocks, they are not yet adequately enabling them to anticipate or adapt effectively.
Global experience offers powerful lessons for Bangladesh on how inclusive finance can move from reactive relief to proactive resilience. One major gap is insurance. The Microinsurance Network’s 2023 report shows that while approximately 330 million people across 36 countries now have some form of inclusive insurance, nearly 88% of vulnerable households worldwide still lack coverage.
The InsuResilience Global Partnership reported that 319 million people benefitted from climate and disaster risk finance in 2024, with micro-level beneficiaries in low-income countries almost doubling year on year. This momentum could be harnessed more effectively in Bangladesh through MFIs and their agent networks to extend protection to those most exposed.
Global evidence also shows that anticipatory action is most effective when finance is pre-arranged and automatically triggered. The International Federation of Red Cross has shown how pre-agreed thresholds unlock funds before disasters strike. BRAC tested this approach in Bangladesh, where households pre-approved for emergency loans maintained 9% higher consumption levels after floods than those without access. New initiatives, such as Atram.ai, are further advancing this logic through AI-driven models that trigger financing for households and small businesses before climate shocks occur.
Finally, capital must be scaled to create systemic resilience. Small, fragmented loans need to be aggregated into investable pools. Regulators and supervisors are starting to recognize this: The Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) has urged the integration of climate adaptation into financial supervision to create structures that allow microloans to be bundled, de-risked, and financed at scale. Such approaches could help bridge the protection gap and simultaneously give MFIs the resources they need to serve clients in increasingly volatile conditions. The message is clear: Proactive finance reduces losses and strengthens resilience far more than reactive aid.
The experience of BURO Bangladesh and its clients shows both resilience and strain. Families often rely on savings, loans, and informal networks to make ends meet. Meanwhile, MFIs provide lifelines through repayment deferrals, emergency loans, and flexible withdrawals. Yet, these measures remain mostly reactive and help people survive, rather than preparing them for the future.
As climate shocks intensify, the current approaches will no longer be enough. Inclusive finance in Bangladesh must move beyond coping to strengthen households’ ability to anticipate, absorb, and adapt. The next blog ‘How Bangladesh can shift from reaction to resilience in climate finance for vulnerable communities’ in this series will ask what MFIs, regulators, and development partners must do to shift from reactive responses to systemic resilience, and what tools can help close the adaptation finance gap.









