Highlight of Economy 2009-10-2
Highlight of Economy 2009-10-2
Highlight of Economy 2009-10-2
ECONOMIC DIVISION
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE
ECONOMY
Fiscal Year 2009-10
July 1, 2010
Under reform of the power sector, electricity tariffs have been raised
between 65% since March 2008, in an effort to reduce the level of
subsidies absorbed in the budget, while simultaneously moving to a full
cost‐recovery tariff for the power utilities. Under a new Act of
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parliament, adjustment in tariff for changes in fuel prices for power
generation has been made automatic
The government successfully concluded the Seventh National Finance
Commission (NFC) Award – only the fourth in Pakistan’s entire history,
and the first for the last 19 years. This Award greatly augments the
quantum of resource transfer from the Centre to the Provinces
I. GROWTH
World Outlook for FY2010 reflects an expansion in growth as
compared to last year for China (10%), India (8.25%), Russia (4%),
Pakistan (4%), MENA (4.5%), South America ($.1%), Central America
(2.7%), Emerging Europe (2.9%), Advanced Europe (1%), ASEAN-5
(5.4%), Advanced Asia (3.1%), NIAE (5..2%), Commonwealth of
Independent States (4%), Sub-Saharan Africa (4.7%), Developing Asia
(8.7%), Japan (1.9%), and global growth (4.25%)---Source: World
Economic Outlook, April 2010
Real GDP grew by 4.1 percent in FY2010 as against revised growth rate
of 1.2 percent last year
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Contribution by expenditure---consumption expenditure
accounted for 96% of GDP growth in FY2010 with private consumption
expenditure of 81% and government consumption expenditure
accounting for the balance 15%
Share of the total investment was a nominal 1% in
GDP growth. Adjusting for the assumed
contribution of Changes in stocks
category, the contribution of gross fixed
capital formation (GFCF) was ‐1%.
II. INVESTMENT
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Foreign direct investment stood at $ 2.031 billion during the first
eleven months (July-May) of FY2010 as against $ 3.331 billion in the
same period last year thereby showing a decline of 39 percent. US
remained the single largest investor with 21.75% of total
investment followed by UK (13.75%) and Netherland (13.4%)
Private portfolio investment witnessed inflow of $ 539 million
during July-May of FY 2010 as against an outflow of $ 561 million
during the comparable period of last year.
A large part of the decline in FDI for the period was recorded
under Telecommunications (a net decline of US$ 349 million), and
Financial Services (a fall of US$ 535 million).
Investment levels in some sectors remained healthy, including in
Oil and Gas exploration (FDI of US$ 654 million), Transport (US$ 115
million), Construction (US$ 95.5 million), and Paper and Pulp (US$ 81
million).
Per capita real GDP has risen at a faster pace in real terms during the
2002-03 to 2007-08 (4.5% per annum on average in rupee terms)
because of acceleration in real GDP growth and four fold increase in
remittances leading to a rise in average income of the people. Such
increases in real per capita income have led to a sharp increase in
consumer spending during 2005-06 to 2007-08
Per capita income in dollar term has grown from $ 586 in 2002-03 to
$ 1095 in FY2010
SECTORAL PERFORMANCE
I. AGRICULTURE
Historical growth performance of Agriculture has been as
under:
Years Percent
1960s 5.1
1970s 2.4
1980s 5.4
1990s 4.4
2000s 3.2
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Agriculture sector accounts for over 21 percent of GDP, and remains
by far the largest employer, absorbing 45 percent of the country’s total
labor force. Nearly 62 percent of the country’s population resides in
rural areas.
Agriculture sector has depicted a growth of 2.0 percent as compared
to 4.0 percent last year
Major crops accounting for 33.4 percent of agricultural value added
registered a negative growth of 0.2 percent against a growth of 7.3
percent last year
Livestock sector grew by 4.1 percent in FY2010 as against 3.5 percent
last year
Agriculture credit during July-March of FY2010 was Rs 166.344
billion, 9.5 percent higher than the comparable period last year
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Value added in the wholesale and retail trade sector grew at 5.1
percent as compared to – 1.4 percent in last year
Finance and insurance sector registered negative growth of 3.6
percent in FY2010 as compared to – 7.0 last year. The performance of
this sector shows that Pakistan’s financial sector is integrated in the
world economy and feeling the heat of the international financial crisis
Transport, Storage and Communication sub-sector depicted a
sharp deceleration in growth to 4.5 percent in FY2010 as compared to
2.7 percent of last year
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Weighted average lending rate have witnessed decline from 15.5
percent in October 2008 to 13.25 percent in May 2010
Weighted average deposit rate on the other hand has decreased
from 9.5 percent in October 2008 to 7.37 percent in May 2010
II. INFLATION
Consumer Price Index (CPI) stood at 11.6 percent during July-May
of FY2010 as against 21.6 percent in the comparable period of last year
Year-on-Year inflation has decelerated from 25.3 percent in August
2008 to 13.1 percent in May 2010
Food inflation is estimated at 12.1 percent and non-food 11.4 percent
against 25.6 percent and 18.4 percent in the corresponding period of last
year
Core inflation which represents the rate of increase in cost of goods
and services excluding food and energy prices declined from 17.4 percent
to 11.4 percent
On current trends and barring any adverse shocks, it is expected that the
average inflation for FY2010 as measured by CPI will be close to 11.5 (12)
percent
Wholesale Price Index (WPI) increased by 11.5 percent
Sensitive Price Indicator (SPI) has recorded an increase of 13.12
percent during July-June (24), FY2010
CAPITAL MARKETS
650 companies were listed on the Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) as of
end‐March 2010, with Paid up capital of Rs. 894.2 billion.
Aggregate market capitalization as at end March, stood at Rs.
2,890 billion (US$ 35 billion). Market capitalization to GDP is currently
just under 20%, which is low by comparison with many countries in
Pakistan’s peer reference group.
Measures taken at the Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) during
2009 include
Introduction of corporate Bonds Automated Trading System
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Data Vending and Launch of Mobile KSE Automated Trading
System (mKats)
Implementation of internationally accepted industry classification
Benchmark a jointly developed
Classification system launched by FTSE Group and Dow Jones
Index
Risk Management
Introduction of Client Level Margining Regime.
Restructuring of Net Capital Balance requirement
Pre‐settlement mechanism in Ready & Deliverable Future
Contract Market
Introduction of Exposure Dropout Facility during Trading Hours
Introduction of Client wise cash deposits allocation against
exposure margin and losses
Change in Penalty requirement on Net Capital Balance Certificate.
KSE saw a growth of 36% (29% in dollar terms)during FY2010
KSE-100 Index closed at 9721.91 on June 30, 2010 compared to
7162.18 points on June 30, 2009
Aggregate Market Capitalization expanded to Rs 2,739.664
billion from Rs 2,120 billion on June 30, 2009
Foreign portfolio investment showed a net outflow of US$ 556
million during FY2010
EXTERNAL SECTOR
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Imports registered a negative growth of 3.51 percent in July-May 2010.
The imports stood at $ 27.937 billion as against $ 28.954 billion in the
comparable period of last year
Trade Balance-The merchandise trade deficit improved by 13.4
percent and declined from $11.642 billion in July-May 2008-09 to $
10.082 billion in July-May FY2010.
Workers Remittances Workers’ remittances totaled $ 8.064 billion
in July-May 2009-10 as against $ 7.076 billion in the comparable period
of last year, depicting an increase of 19.87 percent
Current Account Balance (including official transfer) Pakistan’s
current account deficit shrank by 65.65 percent during July-May 2009-
10. Current account deficit shrank to $ 2.981 billion as against $ 8.679
billion last year. The FY2010 is likely to end with 2.8 percent of GDP in
2008-09
Foreign Exchange Reserves on June 18, 2010 amounted to over $
15.777 billion. Of which, reserves held by State Bank of Pakistan stood at
over $ 12 billion and by banks stood at $ 3.768 billion
Exchange rate is around at Rs.85.80 per dollar (FY-end)
Foreign direct investment (private) stood at $2030.7 million
during the first eleven months (July-May) of FY2010 as against $3331.2
million in the same period last year thereby showing a decline of 39
percent
Terms of Trade aggregated to 54.9 during July‐March 2009‐10 as
compared to 56.3 of July‐March 2008‐09 thereby witnessed a
deterioration of 2.5 percent during the period under review
Balance of Payments (overall balance) moved from a negative $
3,871 million during July-May 2008-09 to a positive $ 781 million by
end May-2010
FISCAL OPERATION
I. FISCAL DEVELOPMENT
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Overall FBR tax collection deteriorate to around 9.8 percent of GDP
Tax Revenue collected by the FBR amounted to Rs.1,026 billion
during July-April 2009-10, net of refunds, 14% higher than the
corresponding period of last year
Net Direct tax collection was estimated at Rs. 389.5 billion registering
an increase of 17 percent over the last year
Net indirect taxes grew by 12 percent and stood at Rs 636.1 billion
Net Sales tax collections grew by 16 percent and stood at Rs.416
billion as against Rs.359.2 billion in comparable period last year
Net customs duty collection increased from Rs.117.2 billion in
2008-09 to Rs.125.7 billion in 2009-10, thereby showing a growth of 7.3
percent
Net collection of federal excise stood at Rs 94.3 billion as against
Rs. 91.6 billion in the corresponding period of last year, thereby,
showing an increase of 2.9 percent
Direct tax revenue has risen from 18% in 1990-91 to 38% of total tax
revenue in FY2010
Indirect tax-to-total tax revenue is 62% in FY2010 down from 82%
in 1990-91
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External Debt and Liabilities rose from US $ 37,918 billion in 1999-
2000 to $ 54.235 billion
External Debt is 25 percent of GDP and EDL is 31.1 percent of GDP
Domestic Debt is 31 percent of GDP
External Debt and Liabilities as percentage of foreign exchange
earnings increased to 150 percent
Debt servicing on public debt aggregated Rs. 814.5 billion
Public debt servicing now stands at 5.4 percent of GDP
Debt servicing consumed 46% of government revenues
Interest payments of Rs. 428.5 billion have been incurred on
domestic debt, whereas Rs. 45 billion of the payment was on account of
foreign debt
Dynamics of Public Debt (FY2005-FY2010)
(In Percent)
Year GDP Fiscal Primary Real Real Debt
Deflator Balance Balance Growth of Growth Burden
Debt of
Revenue
FY05 7.7 - 3.3 - 1.3 - 1.7 5.7 - 7.3
FY06 7.0 - 4.3 - 2.3 - 0.1 12.6 - 12.8
FY07 10.5 - 4.3 - 1.5 - 0.3 10.1 - 10.4
FY08 16.2 - 7.6 - 2.8 9.7 - 0.7 10.4
FY09 20.3 - 5.2 - 0.3 1.4 3.1 - 1.8
FY10 10.1 - 5.1 - 0.5 2.1 6.3 - 4.3
Economic Survey of Pakistan
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Sharp reduction in non‐debt creating inflows, such as FDI, in
the wake of the global financial crisis
Augmented access to IMF resources provided to Pakistan in
the form of the Stand By Arrangement (SBA) signed in November
2008, amounting to a total of US$ 11.3 billion, of which
approximately US$ 7.3 billion has been disbursed
Lower inflow of external assistance, which forced the
government to higher‐cost domestic borrowing
Lumpy repayment of maturing Defence Savings Certificates
(DSCs) since 2007, that had not been budgeted for
Inability of the government to take advantage of the historically
low interest rate environment in the 2003 to 2007 period, by
locking into longer tenure debt such as the five‐ and ten‐year
Pakistan Investment Bonds (PIBs)
External Debt Sustainability Indicators (FY2005-FY2010)
(In Percent)
FY FY FY FY FY FY
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010*
EDL/GDP 32.3 29.2 28.2 28.1 32.0 31.1
EDL/FER 2.8 2.8 2.7 4.0 4.1 3.6
EDL/FEE 1.3 1.2 1.2 1.3 1.5 1.5
EDL Service/FEE 15.3 13.5 12.8 11.7 17.3 11.8
Non-Interest Current Account - 2.9 0.5 2.9 3.8 7.1 4.4
Deficit
STD/EDL 0.8 0.5 0.1 1.5 1.3 1.1
Growth in EDL 1.8 5.1 8.3 14.6 14.3 2.3
Growth in FEE 21.1 16.3 5.3 13.0 - 4.2 3.2
* : Debt Stock as of end‐March 2010, FEE end of year projection
FEE=Foreign Exchange Earnings, STD= Short‐Term Debt, FER=Foreign Exchange Reserves
Economic Survey of Pakistan
III. EXPENDITURE
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Current expenditure stood at Rs 2017.255 billion in FY2010
compared to Rs 2041.6 billion in FY2009
Share of current expenditure declined from 88 percent in 1999-
2000 to 79 percent in FY2010
Development expenditures stood at 21 percent of the budget or
4.1% of GDP
Defense expenditure stood at Rs 378.135 billion or 2.3% of GDP in
FY2010 compared to Rs 330 billion in FY2009 0r 2.6 percent of GDP,
declining from a peak level of 6.9 percent of GDP in 1989-90
Interest expenditure is budgeted at Rs 814.5 billion in FY2010
compared to Rs 656.3 billion in FY2009
SOCIAL SECTORS
I. EDUCATION
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Since 2008, international development partners have extended foreign
assistance for the development of education sector in Pakistan as given
below:
Funded by DFID at a cost of £3.5 million, Gender in Education
Policy Support Project (GEPSP) is being implemented by
Government of Pakistan with the technical assistance of UNICEF.
Its objective is to strengthen MoE to accelerate progress towards
gender parity and equality at all levels of education by 2015
USAID has assisted a project “Strengthening Teacher Education in
Pakistan” (STEP), costing US$ 2.14 million to enhance
Government’s capacity to improve policy framework, coordination
and National Standards for Teacher Certification and
Accreditation
USAID assisted Ed‐Links program (focusing on Teachers
Professional Development; Student Learning & Achievement;
Governance) in Sindh, Balochistan, Islamabad & FATA) costing
US$ 90 million
USAID has funded “Pre‐Service Teachers Education Program
(Pre‐STEP)” launched at a cost of US$ 75 million
Under Strategic Objective Grant Agreement (SOGA), USAID
allocated additional $ 121 million for basic education during 2009
Department for International Development (DFID), UK entered
into agreement with Government of Pakistan for joint task Force
on Education and allocated £ 250 million
Under One‐UN Joint Program, Technical Working Group on
Education comprising officers of MoE prioritized JP Areas,
Outcomes, Outputs, Activities, Costs etc. before it is formal launch
in association with UN agencies
GTZ is assisting Ministry of Education in the areas of Education
policy review, curriculum reform and Textbook development,
through its € 2.5 million project titled “National Basic Education
Policy program”
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968 hospitals, 4813 dispensaries, 5345 basic health units & sub
health centers and 906 maternity and child health centers, 572 rural
health centers with 103, 708 beds in 2010 provide health care
139,555 doctors, 9822 dentists ,69,313 nurses, 26,225 mid-wives,
10,731 Lady Health Workers man these health care facilities
Population and health facilities ratio in 2010 turnout to be 1183
persons per doctor, 16,914 person per dentist, 2501 persons per nurse
and 1592 persons per bed
Various health programs with a special focus on major public
health problems include the national programs for the prevention and
control of tuberculosis, malaria, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, blindness and
program on maternal, neonatal and child health etc.
Prime Minister Program for Prevention and Control of
Hepatitis in Pakistan with a total cost of Rs 2.59 billion aims at
reduction in hepatitis prevalence by 2010 through establishment of
Hepatitis Surveillance System
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IV. Labor Force---(Survey 2008-09)
Total labor force is 53.72 million people with female labor force of
11.81 million
Total number of people employed was 50.79 million
2.93 million of the labor force is estimated as un-employed in and
unemployment rate is 5.5 percent with urban unemployment rate of 7.1
percent and Rural rate of 4.7 percent
Crude activity (participation) rate stands at 32.8 percent
Refined activity (participation) rate is 45.7 percent
Share of agriculture in employment is 45.1 percent declining from
48.4 percent in 1999-2000, with manufacturing (13%), trade(13%) &
services (11.1%) absorbing a growing share of the work force
26.6 percent of non-agriculture workers are in the formal sector
and 73.4 percent are in the informal sector
Policy focus of the government is creation of decent employment
and human resource development through (i) People’s Works Program
(ii) National Internship Program (ii) People’s Rozgar Program (iv) Ten
percent quota for women across the board in all government jobs has
been earmarked (v) Minimum wages has been increased from Rs. 4600
to Rs. 7000 per month
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Broadband subscribers has risen to 688,373 subscribers in Jan-
2010, up from 32,282 in March 2007
Broadband penetration has increased from 0.04 percent in
December 2007 to 0.42 percent in Jan-2010
ENERGY
II. Electricity
Installed generation capacity has increased to 19,754 MW with
33.7% hydel and 66.3% thermal
Villages electrified increased from 67,183 in 1998 to 147,038 by
March 2010
Consumers share includes 16.416 million domestic, 2.342 million
commercial, 0.260 million industrial, 0.269 agriculture, and 13,000
others with a total of 19.300 million
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