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Beating the system to get IMF’s blessings?

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Beating the system to get IMF’s blessings?

LAHORE: In Pakistan, polarisation in political views is normal; however, a new normal is emerging in the shape of a growing divergence over the status of economy as for the government every economic indicator is blinking green, but for the opposition it’s flashing red.

Even the accolades by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are disputed by the opposition and with some justification. The government achieved the primary surplus in the first quarter of this fiscal against all odds. Pundits were predicting much higher primary deficit than the IMF target of 0.7 percent of the GDP in the first quarter.

The economic planners did not improve this target because of any prudent economic policy. They in fact engineered it by going for very heavy borrowing from the State Bank of Pakistan in the 4th quarter of last fiscal. That huge amount was not needed for that fiscal but was reserved to cover fiscal lapses in the first quarter of this fiscal.

The IMF has forbidden the government of Pakistan from borrowing from the central bank during its programme period. But while this was being agreed at the time of negotiations there was no such restriction to borrow before the start of the extended fund facility. So the government borrowed enough to carry it to the next fiscal, enabling itself to post a primary balance of Rs200 billion. The target for the next quarter is Rs350 billion. The government could achieve this or come close to it from this surplus. Despite this engineered planning as pointed out by the opponents of the government it has surpassed the IMF target. However this technical victory cannot be termed as an improvement in the economic outlook.

Engineering accounts books is nothing new in Pakistan. The past government that took power in June 2013 increased the fiscal deficit to a new height by arranging around Rs500 billion from SBP on June 30, 2013 and clearing the dues of independent power producers. The budget deficit was technically blamed on Pakistan People’s Party government that was in power for most of that fiscal year. This time around most of the period in power belonged to the PTI and it did the same thing but along with the discredit of highest ever fiscal deficit in our history.

What puzzles most is the gradual but slow increase in foreign exchange reserves although there is still a wide gap between exports and imports. The hot money pursued by the central bank has played the trick. Ironically the IMF seems to have no objection on the selling of treasury bonds to the foreign funds. If a foreign fund manager remits $1 million to invest in Treasury bill of any duration it will earn 13.25 percent interest on the maturity of that bill. Ten million dollar means an investment of Rs155 billion. If the maturity period is one year the investor would get on average Rs155 billion plus Rs20 billion in interest.

So after a year it would be able to repatriate this Rs175 billion in dollars. The investor would continue investing as long as the dollar is relatively stable. The treasury bonds are to be cashed after maturity so there is no harm on earning over 13 percent on dollars invested in Pakistan’s treasury. The fund managers are unable to get even half this interest rate from anywhere in the world. In developed economies this rate is either in minus or 1-2 percent. The question is that for how long we would be able to pay such high interest in foreign currency. If they invest $1 billion in one year they will take back $1.13 billion after the maturity of treasury bill. So in fact we have set a mechanism of ensuring net outflow of 13 percent additional foreign exchange for every dollar invested in treasury bills.

This would bleed Pakistan and IMF would not mind it. In fact they would be able to control Pakistan’s economy with more vigor.

The efforts that the economic planners are making in pursuit of hot money should have been used in devising policies to increase our exports. We are at the same place in export at which we were when the dollar was valued Rs105 about 2 years back.

There is definitely something wrong with our exports if we are unable to increase them despite a massive devaluation. The next step is to sell the profit-making public sector enterprises that would help meet targets agreed with the IMF.

It is another matter that after a one-time cash injection there will be no regular income for the government and it will be saddled with loss making entities only.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/554777-beating-the-system-to-get-imf-s-blessings
 
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Can moderators please take notice and stop this Indian troll from starting so many useless threads. It’s really lowering the quality of this forum. This moron posts every news against IK as facts and propagate gloom and doom scenarios unnecessarily ...
 
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Can moderators please take notice and stop this Indian troll from starting so many useless threads. It’s really lowering the quality of this forum. This moron posts every news against IK as facts and propagate gloom and doom scenarios unnecessarily ...
Ignorance is bliss...

If you disagree with what's written in the top post then you can simply explain why it is wrong/misleading and everyone will be more knowledgeable as a result. But since you just want to shut it down I assume it is painfully accurate...
 
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Ignorance is bliss...

If you disagree with what's written in the top post then you can simply explain why it is wrong/misleading and everyone will be more knowledgeable as a result. But since you just want to shut it down I assume it is painfully accurate...


No I see all the morons and corruption lovers hang on to every straw they can find to show their hate for IK....
guess you like holding on to anything that floats
 
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No I see all the morons and corruption lovers hang on to every straw they can find to show their hate for IK....
guess you like holding on to anything that floats
I am British and have zero link to Pakistan (or India before someone accuses me of being Indian!), so I couldn't care less about Imran Khan or any of your politicians.

If you disagree with what is written in this article you should explain why and educate us instead of trying to censor things you don't agree with. But that's just my opinion. :)
 
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Heh. Not surprising.

A thook chat (spit licker) who broke his every promise is in power. The state of economy is evident if you bother to step your foot outside your house.

In Pakistan, that is. Not in UK or US where these experts defending IK are sitting in, heh
 
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I am British and have zero link to Pakistan (or India before someone accuses me of being Indian!), so I couldn't care less about Imran Khan or any of your politicians.

If you disagree with what is written in this article you should explain why and educate us instead of trying to censor things you don't agree with. But that's just my opinion. :)


Oh I get it ... every pandoo and Mir puri ( I am Kashmiri too) becomes British and claim they don’t care about Pakistan but poke their nose in everything related to Pakistan while claiming to be neutral. Buddy you smell of Patwari masala... no offence
 
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There is definitely something wrong with our exports if we are unable to increase them despite a massive devaluation.

This is actually something structural...it goes past whatever current admin is running Pakistan govt.

Let us look at Pakistan exports composition in 2017:

https://oec.world/en/profile/country/pak/

Essentially "Textiles" (green block) makes up 60% of Pakistan's exports by revenue.

The thing is the physical scale-ability issue given Pakistan already has low/zero tariff for this from Europe and US for many years....compared to the biggest exporter of this class of products (China).

To look at why countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh and India are not making any significant fast headway into Chinese market share of RMG exports (even with US trade war tariffs now imposed on China, though I am unsure how much was put on RMG specifically)....compared to say Vietnam...one has to look at the structural issues.

Lot of that also goes past pricing too, so simply devaluation wont help all that much.

Say if your T-shirts now cost 5 dollars per unit to a bulk-importer and before it cost 7 dollars..so he puts in a bigger order for them...you are now earning less per shirt (in forex USD terms) and you have to put in more relative input (on your end) per forex earned....and a local company has to factor this in if its profitable (given its PKR commitments on ground).

These relative inputs can also be seeing all kinds of local inflation in your home country...stuff like energy, transport, food and whatever else concerns the labour and capital...especially given capital import costs + sinks for lot of import industries. This is basically the counterforce when you simply have higher volume when currency gets devalued.

The more jarring immediate effect is from the import side by far. Demand compression....because what you can now buy (from limited providers/cartels, esp for energy and increasingly capital goods too) always is felt more immediately than your ability to sell more volume to a crowded competitive, saturated (and often inertia driven) market.

Simply put there are far more linkages in between on the export connection to devaluation compared to import connection. The number and correlation of such linkages depends on your reform drive internally to have better correlation and standards with those source references (say USD/world market) you also ultimately measure things by.

It is ultimately about being the best in tune you can be with the information flow and highway of these economic sectors....so you can best tap your own energy and momentum for it (and finally realize important sustianed gain in investment rate and capital formation) rather than be always caught and stuck in making painful amends for either missing the bus, or boarding the wrong one.

@Oscar @Chak Bamu @Signalian @VCheng @ps3linux @niaz @AgNoStiC MuSliM @farhan_9909 @waz @Arsalan @WAJsal @Joe Shearer @Jungibaaz
 
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Heh. Not surprising.

A thook chat (spit licker) who broke his every promise is in power. The state of economy is evident if you bother to step your foot outside your house.

In Pakistan, that is. Not in UK or US where these experts defending IK are sitting in, heh



Look look who is back.... hey didn’t I just say Patwaris attract Patwaris like horse shit attract flies....

Look my friend dead stinkin sparrow is back!!!!

Khota biryani brings a lot out..

Pakistan under IK has to stop and look at everything Chinese are throwing at us. Pandoo Nawaz likes to live high on borrowed or credit. We need to look at how we will be able to pay back all the loans .
Classic example is rail tracks replacement for eight billion dollars. Yes IK is revising projects and it takes time. He will make decisions that are corruption free and good for Pakistan :
 
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Oh I get it ... every pandoo and Mir puri ( I am Kashmiri too) becomes British and claim they don’t care about Pakistan but poke their nose in everything related to Pakistan while claiming to be neutral. Buddy you smell of Patwari masala... no offence
I don't know what half of those words mean. I think you need to take your medication.
 
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Oh I get it ... every pandoo and Mir puri ( I am Kashmiri too) becomes British and claim they don’t care about Pakistan but poke their nose in everything related to Pakistan while claiming to be neutral. Buddy you smell of Patwari masala... no offence
irani
 
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Pakistan doesn't have zero tariff facility with US
This is actually something structural...it goes past whatever current admin is running Pakistan govt.

Let us look at Pakistan exports composition in 2017:

https://oec.world/en/profile/country/pak/

Essentially "Textiles" (green block) makes up 60% of Pakistan's exports by revenue.

The thing is the physical scale-ability issue given Pakistan already has low/zero tariff for this from Europe and US for many years....compared to the biggest exporter of this class of products (China).

To look at why countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh and India are not making any significant fast headway into Chinese market share of RMG exports (even with US trade war tariffs now imposed on China, though I am unsure how much was put on RMG specifically)....compared to say Vietnam...one has to look at the structural issues.

Lot of that also goes past pricing too, so simply devaluation wont help all that much.

Say if your T-shirts now cost 5 dollars per unit to a bulk-importer and before it cost 7 dollars..so he puts in a bigger order for them...you are now earning less per shirt (in forex USD terms) and you have to put in more relative input (on your end) per forex earned....and a local company has to factor this in if its profitable (given its PKR commitments on ground).

These relative inputs can also be seeing all kinds of local inflation in your home country...stuff like energy, transport, food and whatever else concerns the labour and capital...especially given capital import costs + sinks for lot of import industries. This is basically the counterforce when you simply have higher volume when currency gets devalued.

The more jarring immediate effect is from the import side by far. Demand compression....because what you can now buy (from limited providers/cartels, esp for energy and increasingly capital goods too) always is felt more immediately than your ability to sell more volume to a crowded competitive, saturated (and often inertia driven) market.

Simply put there are far more linkages in between on the export connection to devaluation compared to import connection. The number and correlation of such linkages depends on your reform drive internally to have better correlation and standards with those source references (say USD/world market) you also ultimately measure things by.

It is ultimately about being the best in tune you can be with the information flow and highway of these economic sectors....so you can best tap your own energy and momentum for it (and finally realize important sustianed gain in investment rate and capital formation) rather than be always caught and stuck in making painful amends for either missing the bus, or boarding the wrong one.

@Oscar @Chak Bamu @Signalian @VCheng @ps3linux @niaz @AgNoStiC MuSliM @farhan_9909 @waz @Arsalan @WAJsal @Joe Shearer @Jungibaaz
 
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I don't know what half of those words mean. I think you need to take your medication.


Basically I called you retard from hell equivalent to donkey’s ***.... but ofcourse it is meant only if you are Nawaz Sharif supporter ...
but if you are Iranian then buddy you made me laugh out loud..... what is the inflation rate in Iran ? Wasn’t it like 100 percent daily?
 
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