The microcredit program in Bangladesh is a unique initiative to distribute credit to increase the income-generation activities of the poor. One of the top priorities of development agencies and governments was women's empowerment. Around the world and it has been recognized that women continue to grow, even in developed countries. To experience different types of discrimination one way or another. In developing countries, Gender inequality or poor equality in women and Development. However, women's empowerment has been considered an important achievement. The process of women's development Ness with feedback about women's well-being. In addition to the borrowers, data were also collected to compare the effect of the borrower and control group from non-borrowers in the same village. The most important finding indicates that small group activities are effective in increasing the income, wealth and utilization of borrowers, but they are more pronounced toward high-income borrowers than low-income borrowers. It also discovered that microcredit programs are empowering women. On the one hand, women's empowerment and economic development are intimately involved; Alone can play a major role in developing inequality between women and men. On the other hand, women's empowerment can benefit from development. Development strategies and programs have not seen women as essential to the method of economic development. This is mainly speculated in the population program, where women invest more in generation than in fruitful roles. Yet women in the developing world are involved in economically productive work and earn income. They work primarily in the agricultural and non-agricultural sectors and continue to increase the employment of informal wages. Their earnings, however, are low. Since that time, development companies have responded to the need to earn poor women by making relatively small investments in income-generating projects. Often these national projects fail because they promote the welfare and provide temporary and partial employment opportunities to women without worrying about development, such as sewing and sewing in limited markets like women. In contrast, in the last twenty years, some non-governmental organizations, such as NGOs, have been instrumental in improving the economic status of women in Bangladesh because they have come to believe that women are significant to economic development.