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Beyond Keyboard Warriors: What Economic Indicators Tell of PML-N and PTI Regimes

Political arguments often leave their essence, and fallacies take hold.

Drafting this piece occurred before the Supreme Court's verdict.

The ongoing political turmoil in Pakistan is unfolding new surprises almost every day. The alleged intervention of foreign powers in domestic politics has stirred the Parliament, judiciary, and the military. The Imran Khan-led-Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) has called for early elections after the dissolution of the lower house, aka the National Assembly, followed by the joint opposition's failure to pass the No-Confidence Motion against the PTI-led government. It remains a matter of uncertainty whether elections will face preponement or not. However, this uncertainty did not abstain supporters (or accurately, keyboard warriors) of the traditional rivals (PTI and PML-N) from engaging in social media arguments, generally ridden with misinformation.

This misinformation also finds its way to misquoting the economic performance of both political parties in their regime. Numbers do not lie but misquoting them or completely neglecting them does the damage. With that said, governmental sites are cluttered, and their publications contain ambiguity. Hence, it becomes essential to communicate economic figures concretely and clearly. Ironically, “ambiguous” governmental sources are cited to establish concreteness in this piece.

Please note that the author will not assess each economic indicator nor issue a verdict in anyone's favor. The reader can best decide for themselves. The beauty of data is that it can speak for itself. We will precisely cover four indicators, namely:

  1. Current account deficit (CAD)
  2. Forex reserves
  3. Tax revenues
  4. Foreign remittances.
Current Account Deficit (CAD)

The current account deficit (CAD) closely relates to the balance of payments. In the previous blog on The Lankan Economic Crisis Explained, we learned that the balance of payments comprises two kinds of accounts: capital account and current account.

A current account deficit implies that the import value exceeds the export value. Greenback (US Dollars) appreciation inflates the current account deficit. In short, the less the CAD, the better the economy.

The CAD, in 2018, stood at $17.994 billion. As Salman Siddiqui in the Express Tribune writes:

"The current account deficit, which remains the single largest challenge for economic managers, shot to a record high of $17.994 billion (5.7% of GDP) at the end of [the] fiscal year ended June 30, 2018, mainly due to exorbitant imports and less-than-projected inflows."
Contrary to that, in 2021, the deficit recorded a sharp 89.3 percent fall to $1.916 billion. Shahid Iqbal in Dawn writes:

"However, the rising deficit has put the country once again in trouble as it was in 2018 when the CAD was around $20bn. The PTI government succeeded to bring it down to $1.916bn in FY21, but the surging imports and higher external payments again pushed it up since the start of the current fiscal year."
Moreover, Siddiqui (Express Tribune) and Iqbal (Dawn) reported that the CAD recorded a monthly low of $545 million in Feb-2022. However, the CAD for 8MFY22 stood at $12.009 billion, as penned by Iqbal in the Dawn article.

Add a little bit of body text (15).png


Forex Reserves

Foreign exchange (Forex) reserves are not a conclusive economic indicator. A drastic increase in the reserves can hint toward a worsening economy, piling up loans. However, a sharp slash in reserves is evident of a feeble economy.

The dollar value of forex reserves in 2018 stood at 10.03 billion. An Express Tribune headline says:

"With the end of PML-N's term, SBP's reserves stand at just $10.03b."
As of March 25, 2022, a 20.1 percent increase in forex reserves to $12.047 billion occurred, as reported by Andaleeb Rizvi in The News International.

Add a little bit of body text (16).png


Tax Revenues

During the PML-N regime, from 2013 to 2018, tax revenues stood at Rs. 17.4 trillion. An annual breakdown of tax collection in the five years is as follows:

Add a little bit of body text (17).png


(Un)surprisingly, in the PTI regime of approximately four years, the tax revenues stood the same, i.e., Rs. 17.4 trillion.

Add a little bit of body text (22).png


Data Sources:

Ministry of Finance - GoP


https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2013_14.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2015.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2015_16.pdf

http://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2016_17.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2017_18.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2019_20.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/budget/Budget_in_Brief_2020_21_English.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/budget/EM_of_Federal_Receipts_Foreign_2020_21.pdf

Other Sources

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2336591/fbr-exceeds-first-half-tax-collection-target

https://www.geo.tv/latest/357856-fbr-meets-tax-collection-target-for-current-fiscal-year-2020-21

Add a little bit of body text (20).png


Foreign Remittances

As far as foreign remittances are concerned, in 7MFY2018, $11.383 billion were remitted as per the Pakistan Remittance Initiative (PRI).

Halfway through 2022, the remittances for 7MFY22, with a 58.1 percent rise, stood at $18 billion, as Profit reports, "remittances at [a] record high for [the] current fiscal year."

Add a little bit of body text (21).png



Originally published on Substack. If you liked this or learned something new, please consider subscribing to Finesse for more financial literacy posts.
 
.
If one were to look at world condition i.e. pandemic, high oil prices, russia-ukriane war. PTI govt did good.
if one were to compare the given data w.r.t the conditions of PML-N PTI did good even then.
Pakistan is the only 3rd world country that heavily subsidize imports, resulting in the manufacturers making products and selling to local Pakistanis instead of exporting it. PTI govt did the hard thing of slashing those subsidies, Pakistani awam has to pass through a tough time in order to become export base econony which is the only economy that can survive.
 
.
Unfortunately our pakistani awam ain't that literate to understand that even we'll versed educated bafoons still don't seem to understand that during pti time thighs we're going better but no they want their lovely looters plunderes to come back heavy shaft their back side again bunch in incompetent people we have unfortunately I won't name them every one knows those esteemed people
 
.
Political arguments often leave their essence, and fallacies take hold.

Drafting this piece occurred before the Supreme Court's verdict.

The ongoing political turmoil in Pakistan is unfolding new surprises almost every day. The alleged intervention of foreign powers in domestic politics has stirred the Parliament, judiciary, and the military. The Imran Khan-led-Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) has called for early elections after the dissolution of the lower house, aka the National Assembly, followed by the joint opposition's failure to pass the No-Confidence Motion against the PTI-led government. It remains a matter of uncertainty whether elections will face preponement or not. However, this uncertainty did not abstain supporters (or accurately, keyboard warriors) of the traditional rivals (PTI and PML-N) from engaging in social media arguments, generally ridden with misinformation.

This misinformation also finds its way to misquoting the economic performance of both political parties in their regime. Numbers do not lie but misquoting them or completely neglecting them does the damage. With that said, governmental sites are cluttered, and their publications contain ambiguity. Hence, it becomes essential to communicate economic figures concretely and clearly. Ironically, “ambiguous” governmental sources are cited to establish concreteness in this piece.

Please note that the author will not assess each economic indicator nor issue a verdict in anyone's favor. The reader can best decide for themselves. The beauty of data is that it can speak for itself. We will precisely cover four indicators, namely:

  1. Current account deficit (CAD)
  2. Forex reserves
  3. Tax revenues
  4. Foreign remittances.
Current Account Deficit (CAD)

The current account deficit (CAD) closely relates to the balance of payments. In the previous blog on The Lankan Economic Crisis Explained, we learned that the balance of payments comprises two kinds of accounts: capital account and current account.

A current account deficit implies that the import value exceeds the export value. Greenback (US Dollars) appreciation inflates the current account deficit. In short, the less the CAD, the better the economy.

The CAD, in 2018, stood at $17.994 billion. As Salman Siddiqui in the Express Tribune writes:


Contrary to that, in 2021, the deficit recorded a sharp 89.3 percent fall to $1.916 billion. Shahid Iqbal in Dawn writes:


Moreover, Siddiqui (Express Tribune) and Iqbal (Dawn) reported that the CAD recorded a monthly low of $545 million in Feb-2022. However, the CAD for 8MFY22 stood at $12.009 billion, as penned by Iqbal in the Dawn article.

View attachment 831782

Forex Reserves

Foreign exchange (Forex) reserves are not a conclusive economic indicator. A drastic increase in the reserves can hint toward a worsening economy, piling up loans. However, a sharp slash in reserves is evident of a feeble economy.

The dollar value of forex reserves in 2018 stood at 10.03 billion. An Express Tribune headline says:


As of March 25, 2022, a 20.1 percent increase in forex reserves to $12.047 billion occurred, as reported by Andaleeb Rizvi in The News International.

View attachment 831783

Tax Revenues

During the PML-N regime, from 2013 to 2018, tax revenues stood at Rs. 17.4 trillion. An annual breakdown of tax collection in the five years is as follows:

View attachment 831784

(Un)surprisingly, in the PTI regime of approximately four years, the tax revenues stood the same, i.e., Rs. 17.4 trillion.

View attachment 831785

Data Sources:

Ministry of Finance - GoP


https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2013_14.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2015.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2015_16.pdf

http://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2016_17.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2017_18.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2019_20.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/budget/Budget_in_Brief_2020_21_English.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/budget/EM_of_Federal_Receipts_Foreign_2020_21.pdf

Other Sources

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2336591/fbr-exceeds-first-half-tax-collection-target

https://www.geo.tv/latest/357856-fbr-meets-tax-collection-target-for-current-fiscal-year-2020-21

View attachment 831786

Foreign Remittances

As far as foreign remittances are concerned, in 7MFY2018, $11.383 billion were remitted as per the Pakistan Remittance Initiative (PRI).

Halfway through 2022, the remittances for 7MFY22, with a 58.1 percent rise, stood at $18 billion, as Profit reports, "remittances at [a] record high for [the] current fiscal year."

View attachment 831787



Originally published on Substack. If you liked this or learned something new, please consider subscribing to Finesse for more financial literacy posts.

The fact that PTI's information strategy simply included an army of uncoordinated aids, ministers, special assistants, and advisors who would mostly use social and mainstream media in a haphazard fashion is one of IK's biggest failures.

Simple charts. Comparison tables in papers. Constant comparisons to world averages, etc. Context. We got none of it.

Thank you for sharing this now.
 
.
If one were to look at world condition i.e. pandemic, high oil prices, russia-ukriane war. PTI govt did good.
if one were to compare the given data w.r.t the conditions of PML-N PTI did good even then.
Pakistan is the only 3rd world country that heavily subsidize imports, resulting in the manufacturers making products and selling to local Pakistanis instead of exporting it. PTI govt did the hard thing of slashing those subsidies, Pakistani awam has to pass through a tough time in order to become export base econony which is the only economy that can survive.
True, Rome wasn't built in a day.

The fact that PTI's information strategy simply included an army of uncoordinated aids, ministers, special assistants, and advisors who would mostly use social and mainstream media in a haphazard fashion is one of IK's biggest failures.

Simple charts. Comparison tables in papers. Constant comparisons to world averages, etc. Context. We got none of it.

Thank you for sharing this now.
You are right. Their public communications strategy has been the worst. Their social media team seems less than amateurs.
 
.
True, Rome wasn't built in a day.


You are right. Their public communications strategy has been the worst. Their social media team seems less than amateurs.

No, but Rome also didn’t have retards as a population.
 
.
Unfortunately our pakistani awam ain't that literate to understand that even we'll versed educated bafoons still don't seem to understand that during pti time thighs we're going better but no they want their lovely looters plunderes to come back heavy shaft their back side again bunch in incompetent people we have unfortunately I won't name them every one knows those esteemed people
A lie told many times becomes a truth. The strategy of opposition regarding PTI's economic performance has always been based on lies. But people still believed them to a large extent expect when the political fiasco unveiled their ulterior motives.
 
. .
No, but Rome also didn’t have retards as a population.
Now, the public has started regaining their senses to a certain extent owing to the current political turmoil. This is the information era and you cannot conceal information from the masses. The unfortunate state of affairs is largely due to the biased media busy minting money and some other forces as well. Also, I don't think the public would leave the comfort of their homes and take to the streets to save true democracy and its mandate.

New Govt coming will Give Up Nukes !!
watch seriously
Also, a Sri Lanka-like crisis can be around the corner. Let's pray for the well-being of Pakistan. Pakistan ka Khuda hi Hafiz!
 
.
Now, the public has started regaining their senses to a certain extent owing to the current political turmoil. This is the information era and you cannot conceal information from the masses. The unfortunate state of affairs is largely due to the biased media busy minting money and some other forces as well. Also, I don't think the public would leave the comfort of their homes and take to the streets to save true democracy and its mandate.


Also, a Sri Lanka-like crisis can be around the corner. Let's pray for the well-being of Pakistan. Pakistan ka Khuda hi Hafiz!

Brother remember one thing we have a short memory that's easily disrupted give it 30 days and this will be water under the bridge.
 
.
Political arguments often leave their essence, and fallacies take hold.

Drafting this piece occurred before the Supreme Court's verdict.

The ongoing political turmoil in Pakistan is unfolding new surprises almost every day. The alleged intervention of foreign powers in domestic politics has stirred the Parliament, judiciary, and the military. The Imran Khan-led-Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) has called for early elections after the dissolution of the lower house, aka the National Assembly, followed by the joint opposition's failure to pass the No-Confidence Motion against the PTI-led government. It remains a matter of uncertainty whether elections will face preponement or not. However, this uncertainty did not abstain supporters (or accurately, keyboard warriors) of the traditional rivals (PTI and PML-N) from engaging in social media arguments, generally ridden with misinformation.

This misinformation also finds its way to misquoting the economic performance of both political parties in their regime. Numbers do not lie but misquoting them or completely neglecting them does the damage. With that said, governmental sites are cluttered, and their publications contain ambiguity. Hence, it becomes essential to communicate economic figures concretely and clearly. Ironically, “ambiguous” governmental sources are cited to establish concreteness in this piece.

Please note that the author will not assess each economic indicator nor issue a verdict in anyone's favor. The reader can best decide for themselves. The beauty of data is that it can speak for itself. We will precisely cover four indicators, namely:

  1. Current account deficit (CAD)
  2. Forex reserves
  3. Tax revenues
  4. Foreign remittances.
Current Account Deficit (CAD)

The current account deficit (CAD) closely relates to the balance of payments. In the previous blog on The Lankan Economic Crisis Explained, we learned that the balance of payments comprises two kinds of accounts: capital account and current account.

A current account deficit implies that the import value exceeds the export value. Greenback (US Dollars) appreciation inflates the current account deficit. In short, the less the CAD, the better the economy.

The CAD, in 2018, stood at $17.994 billion. As Salman Siddiqui in the Express Tribune writes:


Contrary to that, in 2021, the deficit recorded a sharp 89.3 percent fall to $1.916 billion. Shahid Iqbal in Dawn writes:


Moreover, Siddiqui (Express Tribune) and Iqbal (Dawn) reported that the CAD recorded a monthly low of $545 million in Feb-2022. However, the CAD for 8MFY22 stood at $12.009 billion, as penned by Iqbal in the Dawn article.

View attachment 831782

Forex Reserves

Foreign exchange (Forex) reserves are not a conclusive economic indicator. A drastic increase in the reserves can hint toward a worsening economy, piling up loans. However, a sharp slash in reserves is evident of a feeble economy.

The dollar value of forex reserves in 2018 stood at 10.03 billion. An Express Tribune headline says:


As of March 25, 2022, a 20.1 percent increase in forex reserves to $12.047 billion occurred, as reported by Andaleeb Rizvi in The News International.

View attachment 831783

Tax Revenues

During the PML-N regime, from 2013 to 2018, tax revenues stood at Rs. 17.4 trillion. An annual breakdown of tax collection in the five years is as follows:

View attachment 831784

(Un)surprisingly, in the PTI regime of approximately four years, the tax revenues stood the same, i.e., Rs. 17.4 trillion.

View attachment 831785

Data Sources:

Ministry of Finance - GoP


https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2013_14.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2015.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2015_16.pdf

http://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2016_17.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2017_18.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/fiscal/July_June_2019_20.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/budget/Budget_in_Brief_2020_21_English.pdf

https://www.finance.gov.pk/budget/EM_of_Federal_Receipts_Foreign_2020_21.pdf

Other Sources

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2336591/fbr-exceeds-first-half-tax-collection-target

https://www.geo.tv/latest/357856-fbr-meets-tax-collection-target-for-current-fiscal-year-2020-21

View attachment 831786

Foreign Remittances

As far as foreign remittances are concerned, in 7MFY2018, $11.383 billion were remitted as per the Pakistan Remittance Initiative (PRI).

Halfway through 2022, the remittances for 7MFY22, with a 58.1 percent rise, stood at $18 billion, as Profit reports, "remittances at [a] record high for [the] current fiscal year."

View attachment 831787



Originally published on Substack. If you liked this or learned something new, please consider subscribing to Finesse for more financial literacy posts.
Good post. You may find my post in another thread useful for the analysis as well:

Post in thread 'Imran Khan's Islamabad Rally - امربالمعروف - Updates & Discussion'
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/imra...myruf-updates-discussion.738391/post-13657894
 
.
New Govt coming will Give Up Nukes !!
watch seriously
Also, a Sri Lanka-like crisis can be around the corner. Let's pray for the well-being of Pakistan. Pakistan ka Khuda hi Hafiz!
Brother remember one thing we have a short memory that's easily disrupted give it 30 days and this will be water under the bridge.
We do have a short memory. It now depends on IK and PTI on how far they can take the struggle.

Good post. You may find my post in another thread useful for the analysis as well:

Post in thread 'Imran Khan's Islamabad Rally - امربالمعروف - Updates & Discussion'
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/imra...myruf-updates-discussion.738391/post-13657894
Thanks! Yours is an amazing read too.
 
.

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