Economic Liberalization in Nepal
Economic Liberalization in Nepal
Economic Liberalization in Nepal
The meaning of liberalization is to liberate the economy form the clutch of the government and
provide the platform for the enhance role of the private sector in economic activities. Liberalization
seeks to see the transformed role of the government from ruler to facilitator in order to strengthen
the market forces in resource allocation. It refers to the opposite of economic regulation by the state
and includes deregulation of markets, deregulation of prices, privatization of PEs, delicensing and
removal of quota system in foreign trade.
According to World Bank, “Economic liberalization means freeing of prices, trade and entry to
markets from state control while stabilizing the economy”. It is the tool for non-interventionist
approach to development. And it is pursued through reducing public expenditures, privatizing
government owned-enterprises, deregulation and delicensing and curtailing grant and subsidy
provided by the government to different sectors of the economy.
The rapid process of liberalization began in Nepal when for the first time she faced the problem of
BOP deficit in 1982/83 due to the excessive liquidity pumped into the economy by the then
government in order to win the referendum. It devalued the Nepalese currency vis-à-vis to US dollar
by 14.7 percentage point in 1985 in order to overcome to BOP deficit problem. But it could not
solved the problem, therefore, the government approached to the IMF and World Bank for their
assistance in order to absorb the excess liquidity and for that matter 18th month stand-by
arrangement program was implemented as a tool of stabilization. From 1987, Nepal entered into the
W/B and IMF initiated reform programs named under Structural Adjustment Facility – SAF and
Structural Adjustment Program – SAP in order to break the supply side bottlenecks.
The W/B defines SAF as non-project lending to support programs of policy and institutional change
to modify the structure of the economy so that it can maintain both its growth rate and viability of its
balance of payment in the medium term. The loans are geared to seven main areas:
1.supply side reforms: Improving the efficiency with which market operates
2.price reforms
3.changing the price of tradable goods relative to the non-traders
4.getting the correct terms of trade between agriculture goods and industrial goods
5.reducing the size of the public sector
6.financial reforms
7.tax reforms
Types of liberalization
•internal liberalization: Real/fiscal and Financial sector liberalization
•External Liberalization: Trade and Exchange rate liberalization
External Liberalization:
The external liberalization encompasses the liberalization of current and capital account. The current
account liberalization works particularly through trade liberalization, which is advocated for
accelerating growth through specialization. The external trade, as it is argued, pierces the problem of
narrow domestic market and thereby leads to generation of larger employment and higher income
than it would otherwise be. The external trade, then, is envisaged as the outlet to break the vicious
circle of low income, low demand, low production, low employment and low income.
Reforms in Export
•In the past Nepal has followed export promotion strategy such as export subsidy, dual exchange
rate, bonus system etc. Though these measures are beet effective to diversify Nepalese trade, they
are discriminatory and proved beneficial to business house rather than common mass.
•Thus with implementation of adjustment programs bonus and subsidy facilities were replaced by
Bonded Warehouse, and duty draw back system. Exports are tax exempted except 0.5 percent.
•Sales tax is replaced by VAT which does not tax export.
•Introduced new Trade Policy 1992.