ECONOMY
ECONOMY
ECONOMY
The data issued by the State Bank of Pakistan on Monday showed that
the CAD declined by 46.8pc in July-October FY23 compared to $2.821
billion against $5.305bn in the corresponding period last year. The
imports of goods and services fell to $23.688bn in 4MFY23 against
$26.808bn in 4MFY22. However, exports of goods and services rose
slightly to $9.825bn compared to $9.576bn in the same period last year.
According to SBP data, the trade deficit also narrowed by almost 23pc
to $11.604bn in the first four months of 2022-23 against $15.059bn in
the corresponding period last year. The sharp contraction in CAD seems
to have eased pressure on the government which has been struggling to
build the country’s exchange reserves not enough to cover eight weeks’
imports. However, the situation regarding the inflows from friendly
countries looks static, particularly after a delay in talks with the IMF.The
SBP’s foreign exchange reserves stood at $8bn and will further decline
with the payment of $1bn against the maturity of Sukuk (Islamic bonds)
on Dec 5.
EXAMPLES WORLDWIDE:
MIDDLE EAST EYE: How has Lebanon avoided total collapse? Farah
Choucair 12 January 2023 12:45 UTC | Last update: 1 week 5 days ago
SRI LANKA says it will cutarmy personnel to 135000 by next year and
100000 by 2030 it slashes military by a third to cut costs( al jazeera 13
jan 2023)
The risk is that this leaves Britain’s businesses in a funk. The challenge
of boosting investment highlights a circularity noted by Giles Wilkes of
the Institute for Government, another think-tank: investment is both a
cause and a consequence of a healthy economy. It is both a product of
robust demand and a driver of stronger supply. That means even the
best-intentioned policies can be derailed bY external shocks. Another
awkward truth is that investing more for tomorrow means consuming
less today—a particularly tough trade-o when other costs are biting
sharply. , India is now the world’s fth biggest economy, taking Britain’s
spot. The gap between the two will only widen in 2023, reckons the imf
The un now thinks that China’s working-age population could decline by
10% by 2035 and by almost 30% by 2050, relative to its current level.
Between 2010 and 2020 no less than 40% of all the natural gas
discovered worldwide was found in Africa. As a result, the continent
now holds 13% of the world’s natural-gas reserves.
ARTICLE BY MIFTAH ISMAIL
Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Sri Lanka in South Asia. India and
Sri Lanka currently belong
to a group of lower middle-income economies, while
Bangladesh and Nepal belong to that
of low-income economies.1
For comparison, the study will also cover Asian economies
with different levels of development, including three lower
middle-income economies:
Indonesia, the Philippines, and Viet Nam; two upper middle-
income economies: Malaysia
and the PRC; and a high-income economy, the Republic of
Korea, which will serve mainly as
a reference point
while the four South Asian countries
started with comparable income levels in the 1960s, their
income levels started to diverge
between 1960 and 1990 as their growth rates varied (Figure 1).
Experiencing a much faster
economic growth during 1960–1990, India and Sri Lanka
achieved an income level that
is two to three times higher than that in Bangladesh and Nepal
by 1990
Table 1: Per Capita Gross Domestic Product
Region and Country
Level
(in 2005 $ constant prices) Annual Growth (%)
1960 1990 2013 1960–2013 1960–1990 1990–2013
South Asia
Bangladesh 253 270 621 1.7 0.2 3.6
India 228 403 1,165 3.1 1.9 4.6
Nepal 178 233 409 1.6 0.9 2.4
Sri Lanka 337 710 2,004 3.4 2.5 4.5
Other Asian countries
widening the gap of inequality between the rich and the poor. The poor
taxation system, a slowed
GDP growth rate, and lack of export-led growth further aggravated the
dwindling economy of
Pakistan. Depleting water resources continue to undermine the
potential of agriculture sector
by 1.9 percent in 2019 and contracted by 0.4 percent in 2020. This year
government claims the
commodities and the percentage of the public living below the poverty
line shrunk from 75 to
➢ As per the Fiscal Responsibility and Debt Limitation Act, the debt
ratio of our government
should not be above 60% or, in other words, 60% of our GDP. But we
have reached 80% now.
Because our GDP base is not expanding rapidly, and the budget loss has
reached 8-9% of GDP,
including Nepal, which is one of the least developed states in the world.
Debt servicing is eating away more than 40% of the budget.
Dispensation of salaries and
reminiscent of a bottomless pit for money because they cost the federal
government more than
950 billion rupees a year. All these developments going out of control
can mark a bleak
➢ The government’s claim that it is all set to lower the budget deficit to
6.7% appears unrealistic
deserve appreciation.
➢ The tax concession given to the elite costs more than 2400 billion
rupees to the national
➢ The government does not lack money, but it lacks the competence to
make the work done. It
➢ A fiscal policy that dares tinker with the established status quo is
sidelined. The political side
fails to manage it. The absolute reluctance on the part of the legislators
further reinforces the
therefore, did not have the right incentives. India and Bangladesh ran
cash incentive schemes.
We could not even fix the tax refunds under which the exporters could
be timely reimbursed
long are we going to rely on textiles that make up 58% of our exports?
On the other hand, we
input to export is virtually dying and the price of cotton has become
hopelessly uncompetitive
➢ Our biggest failure is that we have not gone to the third level i.e.,
local government
The Food and Agriculture Organisation’s (FAO) food price index, which
tracks international prices of the most globally traded food
commodities, averaged 143.7 points in 2022, up 14.3 per cent from
2021, and the highest since records started in 1990, the agency said on
Friday. The index had already gained 28pc in 2021 from the previous
year as the world economy recovered from the impact of the pandemic
In December the benchmark index fell for the ninth consecutive month
to 132.4 points, compared with a revised 135.00 points for November.
The November figure was previously given as 135.7 points
At the same time, the massive decline in machinery imports has slowed
down economic activities creating a serious problem of joblessness.
Over 20pc textile units are believed to have been closed down across
the country but no official data is available except that exporters said
they are sitting without orders.
It said that global growth was slowing sharply in the face of elevated
inflation, higher interest rates, reduced investment, and disruptions
caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Pakistan, with low foreign exchange reserves and rising sovereign risk,
saw its currency depreciate by 14pc between June and December and
its country risk premium rise by 15 percentage points over the same
period.
.In the region excluding India, growth in 2023 and 2024 — at 3.6pc and
4.6pc, respectively — is expected to underperform its average pre-
pandemic rate. This is mainly due to weak growth in Pakistan, which is
projected at 2pc in FY2022-23, half the pace that was anticipated in
June last year.Pakistan faces challenging economic conditions, including
the repercussions of the recent flooding and continued policy and
political uncertainty. As the country implements policy measures to
stabilise macroeconomic conditions, inflationary pressures dissipate,
and rebuilding begins following the floods, and growth is expected to
pick up to 3.2pc in FY2023-24 — still below previous projections.Food
prices have risen rapidly in South Asia, especially in Pakistan and Sri
Lanka, increasing the incidence of food insecurity in the region.Export
bans on food, also increasingly prevalent, could have unintended
consequences and exacerbate increases in global food prices.
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan implemented export
restrictions on food in 2022, including rice, wheat and sugar.The recent
floods in Pakistan are estimated to have caused damage equivalent to
about 4.8pc of GDP. Extreme weather events can exacerbate food
deprivation, cut the region off essential supplies, destroy infrastructure,
and directly impede agricultural production.In some economies, the
World Bank report noted, the deterioration in economic conditions has
led to a substantial rise in poverty (Afghanistan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka).
Many households are consuming less nutritious food, and rolling
electricity blackouts have become common as fuel has been rationed.
The combination of limited foreign exchange buffers and widening
external current account deficits encouraged several countries
(including Bangladesh and Pakistan) to approach the International
Monetary Fund to help bolster foreign exchange reserves and mitigate
external financing pressures. In parallel, governments have tightened
fiscal policies and, in some cases, imposed import controls and food
export bans.(Published in Dawn, January 11th, 2023)
Since June 2022, Pakistan has been suffering from strong monsoon
rains, resulting in catastrophic and unprecedented flooding. Almost 15%
of the country is submerged, affecting more than 33 million people.
According to preliminary projections, the flood will directly increase the
national poverty rate by up to 4.0 percentage points. Due to increasing
energy prices, a weaker rupee, and flood-related delays to agricultural
production, growth is now estimated to be about 2% in FY23. The
budget deficit, including grants, is forecast to fall to roughly 6.9% of
GDP
ISLAMABAD: The ship agents have forewarned the government that all
export cargoes could come to a halt as foreign shipping lines are
considering stopping their services for Pakistan after banks stopped
remitting freight charges to them for lack of dollar availability.
“We can always have innovative ideas to get out of difficult times, one
of them is hedging of dollars and set installments for the payments to
the shipping companies,” Mr Rajpar said.Published in Dawn, January
21st, 2023
The UNHCR, the UN’s Refugee Agency, signed two agreements with the
United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and Unicef at the time when
swathes of Pakistan remain under water.
“Together our partnership with UNFPA and Unicef will strengthen the
collective response, as part of UN-wide efforts,” she said
So far, the government has not been able to attract investments from
Arab countries.
Similarly, Riyadh also made similar promises during Sharif's visit last
month that it would provide $4.2 billion in financing and a deferred oil
payment. Riyadh, however, recently announced a one-year rollover of
$3 billion in deposits for Pakistan
“Most recently, it has sought a $10 billion loan from China for a
major railway project, ignoring debt concerns. Such decisions
certainly push the country towards defaulting on its debt
sooner rather than later,” Madishetty saidAlam says that China’s
debt is actually “the least of Pakistan’s problems, given the
Chinese Pakistan alliance is primarily military and in that sense
different to African states or other Southeast Asian states.” The
two countries need each other for military and strategic
purposes, so debt to China may not be as urgent a liability yet
as the rest of the country’s issues (CNBC article PUBLISHED FRI,
FEB 3 20233:17 AM EST by Natasha Turak)
Pakistan’s dark age: The joke’s on us, and it’s no longer funny
REASONS:
Th e taxto- gross domestic product (GDP)
ratio rose from 9 percent in 1964–1965 to
14 percent in 1990 before returning to 8.9
percent in 2013.9
It further diminished to 7 percent in 2014,10
because, among other things, of the
doubling of
tax exemptions— Rs 477.1 billion (including
Rs 96.2 billion on income tax)—
which shows that the government continued
with its pro- rich policy.11
Th ese fi gures are also due to fraud (one
specialist estimated in the 1990s that
less than 1 percent of the people who are
supposed to pay income tax do so).12
Th ings have not improved considerably
since then. In 2013, the income taxto- GDP
ratio has fallen to 3.5 percent, with taxpayers
numbering about
1.5 million people.13 Th is state of things is
the refl ection of a robust convergence of
interests of the establishment elite groups—
including the politicians
and the army chiefs
1. Pakistan lacks both policy consistency and political stability for
achieving sustainable
KARACHI: The current account deficit (CAD) fell by 68 per cent to $567
million in October compared to $1,779m in the same month last year
on account of steep decline in the imports.
growth but left grave repercussions in the long run by widening the gap
of inequality.
11. Poor performance of health and education sectors takes a heavy toll
on the Human
13. The depleting water resources are exacerbating the crop crisis of
Pakistan. There is a sheer
economic growth.
The former SBP acting governor, Murtaza Syed said the IMF team’s
arrival offers a glimmer of hope that Pakistan will be able to stave off
default.
Former SBP governor Raza Baqir said global lenders like the IMF must
step up and improve the framework for sovereign debt financing to help
emerging economies out of debt distress.
Former FBR chairman Shabbar Zaidi said “the nervous system of the
Pakistani economy has become dysfunctional” as a result of the
insatiable “desire for status quo.”
He also called for abrogating free trade agreements with China, Turkiye,
Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Malaysia and other countries.
He suggested bringing retailers and wholesalers into the tax net and
identifying ownership of each house and plot.“Withdraw all leases of
agricultural land. No patta system in agriculture. Open trade with India.
Start work on the Turkmenistan-Afghan-Pakistan-India gas pipeline,” he
wrote in a series of tweets.Published in Dawn, January 31st, 2023
HOPES:
Goldman Sachs analysts Kevin Daly and Tadas Gedminas project
Pakistan's economy to grow to become the world's sixth largest by
2075. In a research paper titled "The Path to 2075", the authors forecast
Pakistan's GDP to rise to $12.7 trillion with per capita income of
$27,100
IPI REPORT:
A flexible market-determined exchange rate and an adequately tight
monetary policy will be key to correcting imbalances, rebuilding
reserves and keeping inflation low, he said, adding that an ambitious
agenda to strengthen institutions and remove impediments to growth
will allow Pakistan to reach its full economic potential
amendment, the sooner the better, for resolving the impending issues.
PSDP should enlarge the investment ratio to at least 50% to the power
sector to uplift the
economy.
. The tax concession given to the elite presents a gloom-ridden
environment for the future of
Pakistan
have increased to more than $2.5 billion. These sectors need to be paid
attention through
➢ SEZs should, moreover, be given a tax break for 10 years. The future
has to be export-led
growth
distribution of wealth.
our attention towards the fact that the contribution of services has
increased with shares of
wealthy investors but will play a little role to alleviate poverty at the
grassroots level. There is
conditions, the investment rates rarely touch the figure of 16-17% and
the saving rates hardly
reach 13-14%.
poverty. The growth of imports is 1.4 times more than the expansion of
exports in Pakistan.
The rising imports are a result of the increasing wealth of the rich
instead of translating benefits
to the lower strata of society. Pakistan can come back on solid footing if
its exports are
increased by 2% at least
including Nepal, which is one of the least developed states in the world.
➢ More than 2% of Pakistan’s GDP goes down the drains due to lengthy
power outages. In the
50% of the public sector funds directed to it for its vigorous functioning.
The PSDP,
unfortunately, is again spending more than 50% on NHA, and the power
sector is being placed
AGRICULTRE SECTORE:
The project will help shift Pakistan and its Indus Basin agriculture from
the current situation of high vulnerability toward an alternative
paradigm in which better information, water management and farming
practices will significantly increase resilience to climate
change.Published in Dawn, January 11th, 2023\
Last week, the IMF approved the 13th bailout package for Pakistan
since the late 1980s.
Pakistan will pay for energy purchases from Russia — when they start in
late March — in “currencies of friendly countries”, a top Russian energy
ministry official said on Friday during a press briefing, according to
Reuters
2.improve governance
4.boost export
5.promote private setors
6.digitize
supply chains will gum up. However, its rebound is not an unalloyed
good for the rest of the world, which has an inflation problem, not a
shortage of spending. China’s extra imports will add more fuel to
overheated economies. Europe’s gas storage is so full in part because
China’s demand for liquefied natural gas in 2022 was 20% below its
usual level. Demand is now likely to bounce back, which could cause
prices to surge once again next winter. Only when the twin foes of
overheated labour markets and the energy crisis have been vanquished
will the world economy be out of the woods And so the funding model
for local governments remains unchanged. Local officials will keep
trying to pep up sales and prices. But who will live in all the new
homes? Morgan Stanley, a bank, estimates there will be 90m new urban
households in the next decade. But at its peak, China was adding about
15m homes a year. If supply is to match demand, construction will have
to slow dramatically, especially as China’s population shrinks. Today’s
bailout may be reviving Chinese property, but without real reforms the
sector will be doomed to boom and bust again There are times when
Britain will need to spend money to promote its nationalsecurity
interests or environmental priorities. But resources are finite and it is
especially unwise to bail out whichever industry is first to get into
trouble. Britain is the 18thbiggest carmaker in the world and has no
obvious competitive advantage in this area (unlike in life sciences and
clean energy). It is good news that the country’s industries would be a
lot more successful if the government did the basics well. Sweeteners
matter less when other things taste better. The drug trade was having a
huge impact on Pakistan, first in increase in drug use, addiction, and
crime, and second, much of the profit was going to legitimate
investments. It was said that Afghan drug lords controlled a large part of
trucking and other industries. It is clearly in the drug lords’ interest that
the Pakistani national government be weak.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1741959/the-cost-of-pakistans-shadow-
economy
https://www.dawn.com/news/1742086/delay-in-imf-deal-may-cause-
pakistan-to-pause-repayments-warns-report
https://www.dawn.com/news/1742303/delayed-imf-deal-with-
pakistan-blamed-on-political-instability
https://www.dawn.com/news/1742262/resilient-bitcoin-hits-9-month-
high-of-26533
https://www.dawn.com/news/1742851/pakistan-can-benefit-from-the-
saudi-iran-deal-if-it-puts-its-economic-house-in-order
https://www.dawn.com/news/1742806/textile-exports-plunge-almost-
30pc
https://www.dawn.com/news/1742807/petroleum-imports-fall-8pc
https://www.dawn.com/news/1743377/why-is-pakistan-facing-default
the reason why IMF or friendly nations are not coming forward to help
us in this dark hour is because of the growing political instability that is
tearing the country apartFahad Rauf, who is head of research at Ismail
Iqbal Securities in Karachi, says the economy has fallen victim to
political strife.You can’t expect economic stability without political
stability,” he says.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1743319/tyre-maker-suspends-
production-in-pakistan
https://www.dawn.com/news/1743322/current-account-deficit-
declines-68pc
https://www.dawn.com/news/1743232/govt-to-charge-the-rich-rs100-
more-for-fuel-to-finance-subsidy-for-the-poor-petroleum-minister
starting 1958 23 programs with IMF shows that how much pakistan is
addicted to laon's love
.