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Debate / Ideas for solutions to Pakistan's economic problems

You guys have easy access to a market of a billion plus people right next to you not to mention cheaper alternatives to many products, how many countries have that?
Just give peace a chance and see the effects, that alone can have a big impact.
If higher ups and the common people see the economic growth even they will think twice before escalating tensions or demanding it as trade will be impacted, south asia will be more prosperous and peaceful.
The current ceasefire is the right step.

We're not desperate. Not going to sell our values for money. We'd love to have a peaceful fruitful relationship with India but not at the cost of the Kashmiri people.
 
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I'm surprised we negotiated such massive loans from China for CPEC but failed to get a $30-40b package to build dams.


If we just dam up the Indus and produce 40GW of power from its stated potential of 60GW then we can drastically reduce our import bill and electricity cost making local manufacturing super competitive. That itself will go a long way in super charging our economy.
 
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Divide economic policies in two forms rural n urban base.for example in rural areas promote agri culture n livestock technicians like Argentina and export value added products like cheese.meat.etc n encourage community base model (like Amul India)in live stock n agriculture. In urban areas make construction industry,IT hubs,develop car mobile industries infact develop every industrial , At government level do reforms in health,police n judiciary and in every sectors. At armed forces level try to invest in engine technologies ,make armed forces independent finically , Police should be in army like rangers. Make a Hybrid mechanism in which armed forces civilians both have 50/50 % power sharing n At last make so many small admistration unit which have ability to collect at least 50 %tax n spent on them like Canada
 
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Investor confidence and stability are prerequisite for economic growth. Tell me any country experiencing economic growth that also has terrorist groups who challenge the state regularly. If terrorist groups like TLP ASWJ LeJ are not disbanded people will hesitate to invest in a country with none state actors and weak law enforcing institutions.
We don't have raRe natural resources to sell nor can we produce Einsteins who can create innovative products, we specialise in producing footballs. We do have a unique geographical location as a trade hub, and we can thank God for this. Pakistan itself has to take the initiative to connect the states around it while domestically creating a welcoming environment. Which is only possible if every mullah is put on a leash by the state. We can thank the mullahs for creating Zombies also who are discouraged to think freely so having any sort of knowledge economy is out of question as it requires continuous scientific Innovation and investment in R&D.
 
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Karachi is the only Tax paying city of Pakistan. Every other city is tax usurping city therefore, we must support Karachi's special status in economy of Pakistan and must suuport to enhance its role.
After all Karachi chalta hai to Pakistan palta hai.
 
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Dear friends, from quite some time I wanted to initiate a debate on economic development of Pakistan but due to personal and professional commitments never got time to actually write something. Leveraging on eid holidays I am initiating the topic where I would like you guys to share your ideas.

Those interested in politics are already well aware of key economic problems of Pakistan. Thanks to consistent budget deficits Pakistan has a mounting public debt as a result most of the budget get utilized in debt servicing rather than for any development project.

On the other hand consistent and huge trade deficit keeps on pushing for currency devaluation and need for borrowing from abroad; putting Pakistan under influence of its creditors.

The twin deficit coupled with low economic growth resulted in vicious circle where Pakistan’s per capita GDP growth is getting lower and lower in comparison to other comparative economies.

However, most of these are only the symptoms of poor economic management rather than problem itself. Our problems are structural in nature and requires a lot of economic restructuring before any benefits can be seen. Short term decision making of the ruling elites for the personal benefits has made our business uncompetitive. Our resources and money is being used for hoarding and speculating mostly in non-productive sectors. Most safe and profitable investment is to buy a property and wait for prices to increase which is a total wastage of resources. Similarly in commodity sector most of the profit earned by the middle man (arti) rather than the producer or risk taker.

Although government and establishment has realized that without a strong economy survival of Pakistan as a nuclear nation is impossible and is focusing her efforts for increasing export and import substitution but till to date the improvement in external trade account is still small in comparison to required target.

Despite putting a lot of efforts bringing economic experts from around the world and having support from establishment; the results are still far from encouraging, so what the real reason behind such a slow progress?

In my opinion Pakistan structural issues are not even touched till to date. The remedies suggested by the government is again addressing the symptoms without touching the core structural issues of the economy.

In my opinion to address the structural issues of Pakistan government need to work on following areas:

  • Development of human resources capable of dealing with modern day challenges in every field of life. Right from an engineer to a farmer, every individual person in the work force should be developed, trained and retrained to become competitive to one of the best among the world. Need to establish institutes, online courses, access to resources and internet to the work force teaching them the efficient ways of production.

  • Establishment of research and think tank institutes free from political influence comprising of one of the best brain in their respective fields. Those research centers and think tanks should be responsible for policy making and monitoring development progress in their relevant field.

  • Pakistan economy lacks the basic backbone industries without which industrialization is nothing but a wet dream. In order to industrialize Pakistan we need to invest heavily in steel industry, petrochemical industry, electronic industry, artificial intelligence industry, and electrical goods industry, heavy machinery manufacturing industry and bio sciences. Till to date the only investment being done is in energy sector and housing sector only.

  • All these industry will provide basic raw material to other manufacturing companies. However, these industries need some serious heavy investments which an individual investor is not capable to arrange. And hence we move to fourth area where we need to work on.

  • The fourth area where government needs to work is establishment of special purpose financing vehicles that can collect finance from individuals and then invest those finances into venture capital industry to establish new organizations to the likes of Pakistan steel mills, PICIC commercial bank, PECO and other such flagship organization. However, the key is here is to arrange finances only while keeping the operations to professionals only and exiting the organization after 2 years of profitable operations.
These are some of the ideas that I can think of right now. I am sure, some you might have even greater ideas or can add a lot to my opinion. Looking forward for further suggestion from respected members.



OK So If I Was The PM What SHould I Do????

1.Float ADRs and GDRs Of PTCL State Life Pakistan Steel and PIA As Well As OGDCL And PPL.This Will Trigger Interest of Global Investors in Pakistan

2.Imran Khan Has A Lot Going For Him During The Previous Regime The Lack of Power Supply Was The Main Bottleneck To Economic Growth.Now The Opposite Is The Problem Way More Electricity Than We Need Resulting In Massive Capacity Payments To The Tune of Rs1+ Trillion.Such Large Capacity Payments Mean We ARe Practically Paying For Electricity That We Don't Need.The Only Way To Get Out Of This Conundrum Is To Stimulate Growth In Order To Increase Consumption.So How Do We Do That Simple
Right Now There Are A Large Number of Industrial Parks/Estates In Pakistan Ready For Use With World Class Facilities e.g
a)Port Qasim Industrial Zone(I Have Personally Studied Feasibility Reports Suggesting That With The Right Policies Port Qasim Can Attract Upward of $10 billion FDI)
b)Industrial Estates of Punjab Run By PIEDMC(Sundar,Bhalwal,Vehari,Rahim Yar Khan, Bahawalpur etc.)
c)Industrial Estates of Faisalabad especially M3 Industrial City and Allama Iqbal Industrial City
d)SITE Industrial Areas in Larkana Nawabshah and Nooriabad

The Industrial Estates Mentioned Above Are Mostly Unused.Most Plots Are Empty.IK Should Try And Get Some of The Relocating Industries of China,Korea Or Japan.I Have Written About This Before



3.Also IK Should Utilized A Portion of The Chinese $1 Billion Grant To Start A Nationwide Technical Training Program So The Desired Human Resource Be Made Available.

Just The Above Steps Would Result In Killing Two Birds With One Stone.Increased Electrcity Consumption Would Result in Lowering of Capacity Payments Thus Lower Electricty Bills And Also Reduce Unemployment and Increase GDP.


I Will Write More On This Thread In The Coming Days.


To Be Continued..............
 
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if you had not visited the JamD thread on Charter of democracy, then I repeat some of the pints here too.

Development of human resources capable of dealing with modern day challenges in every field of life. Right from an engineer to a farmer, every individual person in the work force should be developed, trained and retrained to become competitive to one of the best among the world. Need to establish institutes, online courses, access to resources and internet to the work force teaching them the efficient ways of production.
Education reforms need billions of dollars. We can't do that. just prepare and export your college students to economical education countries. More details :
Establishment of research and think tank institutes free from political influence comprising of one of the best brain in their respective fields. Those research centers and think tanks should be responsible for policy making and monitoring development progress in their relevant field.
Having think tanks and debate is good. But we love to appoint ministers. We should encourage the system of natural growth and leaders from the institution and not appointing chairman from ministries. Be it NBP, PIA, State bank etc. More details:
Pakistan economy lacks the basic backbone industries without which industrialization is nothing but a wet dream. In order to industrialize Pakistan we need to invest heavily in steel industry, petrochemical industry, electronic industry, artificial intelligence industry, and electrical goods industry, heavy machinery manufacturing industry and bio sciences. Till to date the only investment being done is in energy sector and housing sector only.
We need SMEs unless we can capture huge market. For instance, making a huge steel plants with billions of dollars when the local consumption is low and we cannot compete in int market. So invest less but on all, which is SMEs.


and why Karachi is important. And No @imrankhan7250 didn't play ethnic card.
@CriticalThought @Baibars_1260
 
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Continued From Last Time...


4.While The Construction Package Is No Doubt Admirable,A Similar No Question Asked On Source Policy Should Have Been Extended To Establishment of Export Industry and Purchase of Cars.This Would Have Created Further Stimulus For The Economy.FPCCI Had Already Proposed This



Also I Would Have Conditionalized The Incentives Given To Construction Industry By Imposing A Higher Than Average Minimum Daily Wage On Them.This Way Workers Also Get A Slice Of The Pie

5.The Construction Package and Housing Policy Mainly Relate to Housing.There Is Another Sector In The Construction Industry and That Is Infrastructure .Instead Of Spending Billions Of Dollars Of Tax Payers Money Why Not Get The Private Sector To Invest By Giving Them A Policy.An Idea Was ALready Floated In This Regard By The Name Of PSDP Plus



Some Sectors That Can Attract Massive FDI Are

a)Ports and Shipping:SEZ In Port Qasim,Industrial Park and Cargo Village in Karachi Port(Proposed Free Zone),Shipyards In Port Qasim and Gwadar,Gwadar Port Phase 2 3 And Beyond,Multiurpose and LNG Terminals in Port Qasim,Harbour Bridge and Elevated Expressway On Karachi Port and Most Important Of All Greenfield Ports On Virgin Locations From Jiwani To Badin(Hasil Bizenjo The Now Deceased Former Ports and Shipping Minister Already Pointed This Out)


b)Railways:Just Read This Link I Don't Need To Add Anything

http://www.railways.gov.pk/SiteImage/Misc/files/PSDP Plus presentation.pdf

c)Roads:There Is A Lot Mr Murad Saeed Can Do

https://www.dawn.com/news/1567511

https://www.brecorder.com/news/40075155

d)Civil Aviation:Mr Sarwar Khan Should Just Act Upon This

https://caapakistan.com.pk/upload/AT/NAP-2019.pdf

Especially The Part About Handing Over Airports To Private Sector On 30 Year BOT/PPP Concessions The Same Way India Has


To Be Continued..........
 
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Investor confidence and stability are prerequisite for economic growth. Tell me any country experiencing economic growth that also has terrorist groups who challenge the state regularly. If terrorist groups like TLP ASWJ LeJ are not disbanded people will hesitate to invest in a country with none state actors and weak law enforcing institutions.
We don't have raRe natural resources to sell nor can we produce Einsteins who can create innovative products, we specialise in producing footballs. We do have a unique geographical location as a trade hub, and we can thank God for this. Pakistan itself has to take the initiative to connect the states around it while domestically creating a welcoming environment. Which is only possible if every mullah is put on a leash by the state. We can thank the mullahs for creating Zombies also who are discouraged to think freely so having any sort of knowledge economy is out of question as it requires continuous scientific Innovation and investment in R&D.

Without state support these mullahs will not last long.
Continued From Last Time...


4.While The Construction Package Is No Doubt Admirable,A Similar No Question Asked On Source Policy Should Have Been Extended To Establishment of Export Industry and Purchase of Cars.This Would Have Created Further Stimulus For The Economy.FPCCI Had Already Proposed This



Also I Would Have Conditionalized The Incentives Given To Construction Industry By Imposing A Higher Than Average Minimum Daily Wage On Them.This Way Workers Also Get A Slice Of The Pie

5.The Construction Package and Housing Policy Mainly Relate to Housing.There Is Another Sector In The Construction Industry and That Is Infrastructure .Instead Of Spending Billions Of Dollars Of Tax Payers Money Why Not Get The Private Sector To Invest By Giving Them A Policy.An Idea Was ALready Floated In This Regard By The Name Of PSDP Plus



Some Sectors That Can Attract Massive FDI Are

a)Ports and Shipping:SEZ In Port Qasim,Industrial Park and Cargo Village in Karachi Port(Proposed Free Zone),Shipyards In Port Qasim and Gwadar,Gwadar Port Phase 2 3 And Beyond,Multiurpose and LNG Terminals in Port Qasim,Harbour Bridge and Elevated Expressway On Karachi Port and Most Important Of All Greenfield Ports On Virgin Locations From Jiwani To Badin(Hasil Bizenjo The Now Deceased Former Ports and Shipping Minister Already Pointed This Out)


b)Railways:Just Read This Link I Don't Need To Add Anything

http://www.railways.gov.pk/SiteImage/Misc/files/PSDP Plus presentation.pdf

c)Roads:There Is A Lot Mr Murad Saeed Can Do

https://www.dawn.com/news/1567511

https://www.brecorder.com/news/40075155

d)Civil Aviation:Mr Sarwar Khan Should Just Act Upon This

https://caapakistan.com.pk/upload/AT/NAP-2019.pdf

Especially The Part About Handing Over Airports To Private Sector On 30 Year BOT/PPP Concessions The Same Way India Has


To Be Continued..........

Pakistan had all the ingredients to attract FDI of $100-150b in last 10 years but we didnt. Because investors want stable environment politically and security wise. Pakistan isnt stable and only reason Pak state have not collapsed is remittances which kept increasing while FDI and exports tanked.
 
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Continued From Last Time......

6.The Roshan Apni Car Scheme Is No Doubt Admirable But It Should Also Be Extended To The Financing of Other Consumer Durables.A Group That Has $100 Billion In Overseas Assets and Sends $20 Billion Every Year Can Do Wonders To Stimulate Industry

7.Pakistan Has A Low Hanging Fruit In The Form Of A Large Youthful Population We Have Not Pursued Labour Export As A Policy.Even The Amount Of Labour That We Have Exported We Earn $40 Billion(Both Official and Unofficial Channels).Just Imagine How Big This WOuld Have Been Had We Pursued An Effective Manpower Export Strategy.Giving Them Short 6 Month To 1 Year Technical and Vocational Courses Doesn't Cost The Government Much But The Returns Are Generous

In The Next Post I Will Talk More About Job Creation and Agriculture


To Be Continued.....
 
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What Will it Take to Realize Pakistan’s Potential?
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August 4, 2015

Sri Mulyani Indrawati,

Higher Education Commission Islamabad, Pakistan


Good Afternoon. Assalam o Alaikum. Ladies and gentlemen, students and scholars. It is a great pleasure to be here today. This isn’t my first visit to Pakistan, but it is the first time that I have the opportunity to talk with educators and students. I am looking forward not only to share my views, but to hear from you as well, especially as you get ready to celebrate your country’s 69th independence day in less than two weeks.

Too often we frame Pakistan purely in form of challenges instead of opportunities. Today, I want to look at both. So the question I would like to pose to you is a simple one: What would it take for Pakistan to reach its full potential?

I hope you will agree with me that Pakistan can do much better, and should do much better.

For the past two decades, Pakistan’s growth rate has been only half that of India and China. If current trends continue, by 2050, India’s economy will be 40 times larger than Pakistan’s, and China’s economy a 100 times.

Pakistan has many assets, of which it can make better use – from its vast water and river endowment, to its coastline and cities, to its natural resources, including its mining potential. Pakistan’s growing middle class – an estimated 40 million people – represents a powerful engine for change, demanding both improved services and access to opportunities. They are also key to driving growth and creating jobs. The informal economy is also lively. Pakistan has made enormous progress in restoring macroeconomic stability, a key prerequisite for further economic success. The government deserves credit for it.

Last year, Pakistanis living and working abroad sent home $18 billion to support their families. This is the equivalent of 6.5 percent of the country’s GDP and the largest source of foreign income after exports. All of these factors can help Pakistan become economically resilient.

Pakistan should also be proud of its first peaceful transfer of power between two civilian governments, a truly encouraging sign of the country’s strengthening democracy. As a citizen of Indonesia, a country that once emerged from a dictatorship, I know that a peaceful change of government is a critical achievement. And Pakistan’s people have proved resilient in the face of extremist attacks, natural disasters like the 2005 earthquake, frequent floods, and extreme weather.

But I want to focus on what, in my view, are the two most important challenges, both obvious and urgent: To reach its full potential Pakistan needs to make better use of its people and its position in the neighborhood and the world.

Pakistan needs to ensure that its people can participate in the economy and benefit from economic gains. And it needs to integrate itself more, globally and regionally.

To achieve both, Pakistan must take bold steps

The Demographic Challenge.
Let me turn first to the people of Pakistan, this country’s most important asset.

As a result of rapid population growth, Pakistan is now the 6th most populous country on Earth, with half the population younger than 24. At the present rate of growth, Pakistan’s population will exceed 300 million by 2050.

As a result of this population boom, 1.5 million young people reach working age each year. Will the private sector be able to provide the jobs they need and want? And will the youth have the skills to get good jobs?

Pakistan must do far better on education. Primary school net enrollment in Pakistan is about 57 percent and stagnant since 2009, well below other countries in the region. Enrollment drops by half in middle school, with much lower levels for girls and children from poor families. This is not a good foundation to build on.

It is not surprising, then, that Pakistan struggles to give all Pakistanis the opportunity to participate in building better lives for themselves. Only 25 percent of women work professionally, far below most developing countries where between 50 and 80 percent of women participate in the labor market.

The women and girls of Pakistan deserve better. Our research shows that girls with little or no education are far more likely to be married as children, suffer domestic violence, live in poverty, and have little say over household spending or their own health care compared to better-educated girls. This harms not only them, but also their children, their communities and their country’s economy.

You cannot expect a country to prosper when it is difficult for half of its citizens to work outside the home. Our groundbreaking World Development Report on Gender and Development shows that closing the gap between boys and girls and men and women is ultimately smart economics. Greater gender equality can enhance productivity, improve development outcomes for the next generation, and make institutions more representative.

Pakistan has moved forward to empower women. The Benazir Income Support Program, which is supported by the World Bank and which I had the privilege to visit yesterday, has provided millions of women with national ID cards and makes direct payments to them, strengthening their ability to take decisions on the use of money within households.

Reducing population growth while expanding opportunity can play an important economic role. Shifting from a family of six with one working adult to a family of four with two working adults triples income per person. And this enables young people to save and invest more, which increases productivity.

Other countries have made this transition. Just take my own country, Indonesia, the largest overwhelmingly Muslim democracy in the world. My own family is an example. I am the 7th of 10 children, which was not unusual for my parents’ generation – and I am sure it is not unusual for your parents’ generation either. My mother and father made sure that all of their children, boys and girls, were well educated. And as a result we all have fewer children – I have three – and we are better off today. Why not encourage the same trend across Pakistan?

Think of the dividends if more youths and more girls are better educated, if women can participate freely in the economy, and if households have fewer children and have the room to save and invest more.

There are many countries that have influenced their demographics to boost their development; Pakistan has a great opportunity to be one of them.

The Geographic Challenge
Let me turn now to Pakistan’s second biggest challenge and opportunity: regional integration.

My country, Indonesia, is part of ASEAN, which was founded to bring peace and stability to the region, but has morphed into an economic community pursuing open trade, economic growth, and global integration. Overcoming initial skepticism, ASEAN is today one of the most dynamic regions in the world.

Pakistan has the good fortune to be positioned between two of the largest and fastest growing countries in the world, China and India, yet its trade with them is negligible. And Pakistan is losing ground. While its world market share has declined over the past 20 years, those of Malaysia, Mexico and Thailand have doubled, and China’s has tripled.

Discussion on the China-Pakistan economic corridor is very encouraging, but now must be implemented. And a parallel priority should be to normalize trade relations with India.

Pakistan is also well situated between Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia, East Asia and South Asia. Improving logistics, transport and customs can position Pakistan to play a major role in both national trade and transit trade.

A key benefit of opening links with neighbors is energy. As we all know, Pakistan has a large energy deficit. Energy trade with Central Asia and other countries in the neighborhood can be an important piece of the puzzle. Indeed, Pakistan has shown great leadership in moving forward on the CASA-1000 transmission line, which when built will connect Pakistan with Afghanistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyz Republic. Of course, cross-border power trade requires a well-performing power sector domestically, with the incentives to boost energy production, minimize cost, and avoid losses.

One lesson of East Asia’s growing prosperity is that there can be strong benefits of increasing trade and investment links, but also that these gains can be uneven without a parallel internal effort to strengthen competitiveness. This is an urgent agenda for Pakistan. Pakistan currently ranks low on the World Bank’s 2015 Doing Business report at place 128. A better business environment, skills training, use of innovation, and cutting edge technology will be essential if Pakistan is to compete.

Attracting foreign investment and creating the conditions to transform the high savings rate of a young country into a high investment rate, will also require progress on governance. This includes ending special regimes and privileges, improving tax compliance, and reducing corruption.

As a former finance minister myself, I know that the logic of better policies often clashes with entrenched attitudes and real or perceived security concerns. Reform efforts can face the opposition of the elite who fear change threatens their own power and wealth. It takes tough decision making and staying power to succeed.

But change is possible. Pakistan has used innovative ways to tackle corruption and improve services that could be spread more widely. A “Citizen Feedback” model is being scaled up across Punjab, with support by the World Bank. Users of government services receive a phone call or text message asking them about their experience. So far, some 8 million citizens have been contacted, more than a million have provided feedback, and some 3,000 corrective actions have been taken. This approach is being replicated both within Pakistan and in other countries.

Closing: Be Bold, Be Focused
In closing, I want to acknowledge that the issues I have talked about are well known. So this forces the question - why hasn’t more been done? Major policy shifts require both boldness and staying power. They require building consensus across the political spectrum, and focusing on a few key items well over a long period.

There is no greater vulnerability than losing economic ground. People need hope and confidence that they can do as well as their neighbors. They need to feel that they can benefit from being part of this world. They need to own a stake in their own country’s economy and its social contract.

Now is the time for Pakistan to move forward. The ticking of the demographic time bomb is getting louder – the big question is whether it will lead to Pakistan becoming more or less productive and inclusive.

Every day the papers report new agreements by major powers in forging trade, energy and investment links –Pakistan can chose to participate and strengthen its partnerships or be left behind.

With determination Pakistan can take full advantage of its location, build dynamism into its economy, unleash the power of youth and women, and defuse the demographic time bomb.

As Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah said: “With faith, discipline, and selfless devotion to duty, there is nothing worthwhile that you cannot achieve.”

I think we can all still agree with him. Thank you.


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@Goenitz @JamD


Sri Mulyani Indrawati (born 26 August 1962) is an Indonesian economist who has been Minister of Finance of Indonesia since 2016; previously she served in the same post from 2005 to 2010. In June 2010 she was appointed as Managing Director of the World Bank Group and resigned as Minister of Finance. On July 27, 2016, Sri Mulyani was reappointed as Minister of Finance in a cabinet reshuffle by President Joko Widodo, replacing Bambang Brodjonegoro.[1]

As finance minister from 2005 to 2010, Sri Mulyani was known as a tough reformist[2][3] and was largely credited with strengthening Indonesia's economy, increasing investments and steering Southeast Asia's largest economy through the 2007–10 financial crisis.[4][5] In 2014, she was ranked as the 38th most powerful woman in the world by Forbes magazine.[6]
 
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Continued From Last Time.....

Pakistan Suffers From Massive Unemployment.In This Post I Am Going To Talk About Some Of The Things I Would Do If I Am PM IK

8.There Are Over A Million Vacant Posts In The Federal Government


Provincial Governments Face The Same Issues




On the Other Hand We Have PhDs and Graduates Unemployed and Looking For Jobs




.Now The First Thing That Comes To Mind Is That Won't This Put More Burden on The Exchequer???Well The Short Answer Is No Because No. 1 FBR Has Surpassed It's Targets and Is In Surplus To The Tune of Rs 143 Billion and If We Look At Our Budget,We Will Realize That We Don't Have To Spend Rs 500 Billion On Stupid Things Like "Save The Calf"


These Grade 1 To 16 Jobs Will Not Be A Great Burden on Exchequer But Will Go A Long Way In Giving Our Unemployed Youth Relief.


9.An Online Employment Exchange Should Be Setup That Will Bring Potential Employees and Emplyers Together

10.We Know That CPEC's Next Phase Will Require Skilled Manpower.For This We Need To Utilize Existing Mechanisms Like EDF PSDF etc. and Foreign Assistance To Create The Desired Skilled Workforce For Export Industry.The Chinese $1 Billion Grant Could Be Used For This

I Will Talk About Agriculture in The Next Thread
 
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