Business Bhutan is an English-language weekly financial newspaper based in Thimphu, founded in September 2009 as Bhutan's first dedicated business and finance publication. It has reported extensively on banking, monetary policy, hydropower finance, and the country's post-LDC economic transition.
Business Bhutan is an English-language weekly newspaper based in Thimphu that focuses on business, financial, and economic policy reporting. It was conceived on 1 June 2009 and officially launched on 26 September 2009 as Bhutan's first dedicated financial newspaper, providing more granular reporting on the corporate sector, the Royal Monetary Authority, banking, and macroeconomic policy than was available in the country's general-news outlets.[1]
The paper is published by Business Bhutan Private Limited and appears in print and as a PDF replica edition every Saturday. Alongside Kuensel, The Bhutanese, and Bhutan Times, it forms part of the small ecosystem of weekly newspapers serving the Bhutanese readership.[2]
Founding and Editorial Profile
Business Bhutan emerged in the period immediately after the 2008 elections, when the new democratic system, the entry of new commercial banks, and growing hydropower investment created demand for specialised business reporting. The paper covers monetary and fiscal policy, the banking sector, hydropower projects, agriculture and cardamom exports, mining, hospitality, telecommunications, and corporate governance at the major state-owned holdings, particularly Druk Holding and Investments.[3]
The paper has been a primary source for English-language reporting on financial-sector incidents, including the early reporting on the 2026 Bank of Bhutan core banking system failure and the National Pension and Provident Fund (NPPF) governance issues. It also covers the post-LDC graduation transition that took effect on 13 December 2023 and the implications for Bhutan's trade preferences and concessional finance.[3]
Operating Context
Business Bhutan operates in a print-media environment that has contracted sharply since 2010. According to reporting by the paper itself in 2024, the number of private newspapers in Bhutan has fallen from a peak of 11 to 5, with the closure of Gyalchi Sershog leaving Bhutan without a private Dzongkha-language newspaper. Senior managers at private papers have cited the 2010 cuts in government advertising and the shift to e-procurement systems as decisive in eroding revenue. A government printing subsidy of 50 per cent introduced in July 2018 was described as insufficient to sustain the sector.[4]
The Bhutan Centre for Media and Democracy has documented self-censorship rates above 80 per cent in surveys of Bhutanese journalists, attributed to commercial precarity, criminal defamation laws, and the dependence of all major outlets on government and state-enterprise advertising. Reporters Without Borders has placed Bhutan's overall press freedom ranking at 152 in 2025, down from 33 in 2022 — a decline that affects all private outlets including Business Bhutan.[5]
Comparison with Other Outlets
Business Bhutan differs from Kuensel in its commercial structure (private rather than state-affiliated) and from The Bhutanese in its editorial focus (business and economic reporting rather than investigative coverage of governance and corruption). Several Bhutanese journalists who later moved to The Bhutanese — including its founder Tenzing Lamsang — worked at Business Bhutan in its early years.[6]
See Also
- Kuensel
- Bhutan Times
- The Bhutanese
- Bhutan Broadcasting Service Television
- Information, Communications and Media Act 2018
References
See also
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