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Economy’s four ticking bombs

nahtanbob

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Pakistan’s economy literally rests on four simmering volcanoes. We have been criminally oblivious of those even as we assumed that the visible economy was trundling along satisfactorily, even if barely. Of those, the energy bomb has just begun to fizz. What we see on our roads and in our homes and markets are the first sign of the discontent and the unrest resulting from disabling inflation and people’s inability to pay what is charged to them. We know how we got here — capacity charges, deceptively corrupt contractual obligations et al — except that the chicken is now home to roost. Exaggerated bills borne out of ill-conception, stealing, ineptness and freeloading have begun to bite.

The circular debt in the power sector alone is in the region of 2600 billion annually of which around 2000 billion is capacity charges in free handouts if you will. We steal and freeload around 500 billion worth of power every year. Incompetence, inefficiency and corruption in the system writ large as we wrestle with what to do with the increasing frustration among those who must pay for these inadequacies — human, systemic and technical. The bomb is yet to fully explode, and we are already out of ideas. Around 1500 billion of the Gas Sector remains to be added to this bill and that already makes for some 40 per cent of the annual budget. Even more interestingly we have never shown this liability in the annual statement letting sleeping dogs lie kicking the can down the road as the most convenient escape from responsibility.

Discounting any and all plans bordering on superficial — spreading the payment, seeking relaxation from the IMF to subsidise life-line users, which the IMF has not unexpectedly balked at — there are three options that can perhaps still save the day:

First — declare a country-wide energy emergency which we are in already and considering how tenuous the stability of the republic has become invoke a force majeure in the agreements signed with the IPPs. If that threatens our future credibility and sovereign trust, we must choose from keeping a false face and risk losing the republic or save the republic to rebuild the trust when we have things under better control. It will give us the opportunity to renegotiate what has been insidiously and foolishly contracted in favour of Independent Power Plants mostly owned by political players, big business, or their frontmen. Chinese power plants under CPEC have piggybacked on what was already an existing convention; though they should be the ones to lead renegotiations to save Pakistan from unbridled plunder of state and public resource.

Second — if under this revised protocol of an emergency, power producers refuse to go along with revision of the terms and in working a way out for the state and ease the pain to its people, our only recourse should be to take over all power plants. Yes, nationalise those and bring those under state control. Don’t cringe. We will not be the first ones to do so even if times have changed — Mexico did that when it found itself embroiled in a manipulated and a crafted environment of costly and inefficient power supply crisis. We may then rationalise the sector making it feasible minus its debilitating and generous clauses returning those to private hands in due course. The IPPs can make their choice from among the three options to save people undeserved privation.

Third — and this is the second ticking bomb and a primal threat to economy which if resolved can also offer a solution to the energy conundrum: Pakistan may choose to dispense of its baggage of Public Sector Enterprises. Together, these bleed around 1100 billion from the exchequer every year in operational and debt costs. Most are used to park party personnel by political parties which are loathe to let go of this bleeding sore. These enterprises — well over 200 of them; loss making and eating up precious resource — carry assets that value over thousands of billions. These include the Railway, the Steel Mill and WAPDA. An unexplained legacy romance and crass opportunism defies the logic of not dispensing these haemorrhaging behemoths in the name of strategic assets. Pray, what is more strategic than the health of the republic and its people. And, when the choice is between saving the republic or these legacy dinosauric structures the choice should be straight forward.

From the proceeds of these sales a wealth fund can be created to sustain a rationalised power structure which will serve its users than bedevil them perpetually. A combination of these factors can work to alleviate the yoke of disability imposed on the people in a sector most poorly managed and perceived. When push comes to shove this alone will make the obstinate and the recalcitrant comply. It is time for the state to assert itself. We will rebuild our credibility later. Unplugged diplomacy should help explain the need for such drastic steps to our external partners. IPP owners either understand the dilemma and rework the contracts or stare into the possibility of a declared Energy Emergency leading to invocation of force majeure and nationalisation of the power and energy infrastructure in the short to medium term. The choice is theirs to make.

The other two time-bombs that tick with equal ferocity are the Population and the Pensions bombs. Population continues to grow much faster than any other developing economy excepting a few in Africa. An over2.5 per cent growth rate is incomprehensible in this day and age when the GDP growth also hovers at 2-3 per cent. At these rates of population growth, net GDP is negative. This slide must be stemmed. Other than direct intervention which needs to be intensified — just as Bangladesh has done — systemic accompaniments like female empowerment through literacy and preferential employment are key to arresting this downslide in any effort on economy and remove the roadblock to sustained growth.

Pensions are inching up to 800 billion annually. Soon these will cost as much as the PSEs to keep those afloat. This will only get worse and soon gnaw at the fundamentals of any economic option. A Pensions Fund created from within the Budgetary allocations is desperately needed to make it self-sustaining — an investable pool which can build over time and pay for those retired as is the case in most modern economies. Policy intervention in terms of gratuity payments as well as reviewing the terms of service and reducing the size of the government employees in pensionable positions is what must find priority in our consideration.

Unless we deal with these ticking bombs in urgency, we will soon be enveloped by a self-debilitating structure of the economy which stands seriously distorted, deformed, corroded and leaky. Each other step else is only a band-aid in the presence of persisting disabilities.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 8th, 2023.
 
.
Pakistan’s economy literally rests on four simmering volcanoes. We have been criminally oblivious of those even as we assumed that the visible economy was trundling along satisfactorily, even if barely. Of those, the energy bomb has just begun to fizz. What we see on our roads and in our homes and markets are the first sign of the discontent and the unrest resulting from disabling inflation and people’s inability to pay what is charged to them. We know how we got here — capacity charges, deceptively corrupt contractual obligations et al — except that the chicken is now home to roost. Exaggerated bills borne out of ill-conception, stealing, ineptness and freeloading have begun to bite.

The circular debt in the power sector alone is in the region of 2600 billion annually of which around 2000 billion is capacity charges in free handouts if you will. We steal and freeload around 500 billion worth of power every year. Incompetence, inefficiency and corruption in the system writ large as we wrestle with what to do with the increasing frustration among those who must pay for these inadequacies — human, systemic and technical. The bomb is yet to fully explode, and we are already out of ideas. Around 1500 billion of the Gas Sector remains to be added to this bill and that already makes for some 40 per cent of the annual budget. Even more interestingly we have never shown this liability in the annual statement letting sleeping dogs lie kicking the can down the road as the most convenient escape from responsibility.

Discounting any and all plans bordering on superficial — spreading the payment, seeking relaxation from the IMF to subsidise life-line users, which the IMF has not unexpectedly balked at — there are three options that can perhaps still save the day:

First — declare a country-wide energy emergency which we are in already and considering how tenuous the stability of the republic has become invoke a force majeure in the agreements signed with the IPPs. If that threatens our future credibility and sovereign trust, we must choose from keeping a false face and risk losing the republic or save the republic to rebuild the trust when we have things under better control. It will give us the opportunity to renegotiate what has been insidiously and foolishly contracted in favour of Independent Power Plants mostly owned by political players, big business, or their frontmen. Chinese power plants under CPEC have piggybacked on what was already an existing convention; though they should be the ones to lead renegotiations to save Pakistan from unbridled plunder of state and public resource.

Second — if under this revised protocol of an emergency, power producers refuse to go along with revision of the terms and in working a way out for the state and ease the pain to its people, our only recourse should be to take over all power plants. Yes, nationalise those and bring those under state control. Don’t cringe. We will not be the first ones to do so even if times have changed — Mexico did that when it found itself embroiled in a manipulated and a crafted environment of costly and inefficient power supply crisis. We may then rationalise the sector making it feasible minus its debilitating and generous clauses returning those to private hands in due course. The IPPs can make their choice from among the three options to save people undeserved privation.

Third — and this is the second ticking bomb and a primal threat to economy which if resolved can also offer a solution to the energy conundrum: Pakistan may choose to dispense of its baggage of Public Sector Enterprises. Together, these bleed around 1100 billion from the exchequer every year in operational and debt costs. Most are used to park party personnel by political parties which are loathe to let go of this bleeding sore. These enterprises — well over 200 of them; loss making and eating up precious resource — carry assets that value over thousands of billions. These include the Railway, the Steel Mill and WAPDA. An unexplained legacy romance and crass opportunism defies the logic of not dispensing these haemorrhaging behemoths in the name of strategic assets. Pray, what is more strategic than the health of the republic and its people. And, when the choice is between saving the republic or these legacy dinosauric structures the choice should be straight forward.

From the proceeds of these sales a wealth fund can be created to sustain a rationalised power structure which will serve its users than bedevil them perpetually. A combination of these factors can work to alleviate the yoke of disability imposed on the people in a sector most poorly managed and perceived. When push comes to shove this alone will make the obstinate and the recalcitrant comply. It is time for the state to assert itself. We will rebuild our credibility later. Unplugged diplomacy should help explain the need for such drastic steps to our external partners. IPP owners either understand the dilemma and rework the contracts or stare into the possibility of a declared Energy Emergency leading to invocation of force majeure and nationalisation of the power and energy infrastructure in the short to medium term. The choice is theirs to make.

The other two time-bombs that tick with equal ferocity are the Population and the Pensions bombs. Population continues to grow much faster than any other developing economy excepting a few in Africa. An over2.5 per cent growth rate is incomprehensible in this day and age when the GDP growth also hovers at 2-3 per cent. At these rates of population growth, net GDP is negative. This slide must be stemmed. Other than direct intervention which needs to be intensified — just as Bangladesh has done — systemic accompaniments like female empowerment through literacy and preferential employment are key to arresting this downslide in any effort on economy and remove the roadblock to sustained growth.

Pensions are inching up to 800 billion annually. Soon these will cost as much as the PSEs to keep those afloat. This will only get worse and soon gnaw at the fundamentals of any economic option. A Pensions Fund created from within the Budgetary allocations is desperately needed to make it self-sustaining — an investable pool which can build over time and pay for those retired as is the case in most modern economies. Policy intervention in terms of gratuity payments as well as reviewing the terms of service and reducing the size of the government employees in pensionable positions is what must find priority in our consideration.

Unless we deal with these ticking bombs in urgency, we will soon be enveloped by a self-debilitating structure of the economy which stands seriously distorted, deformed, corroded and leaky. Each other step else is only a band-aid in the presence of persisting disabilities.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 8th, 2023.

Lol... The best thing to happen for the common Pakistanian in the street is for all these bombs to explode... Hopefully they kill off the corrupt Pakistani Military Establishment and elites... Common Pakistani man is already in ICU!
 
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Lol... The best thing to happen for the common Pakistanian in the street is for all these bombs to explode... Hopefully they kill off the corrupt Pakistani Military Establishment and elites... Common Pakistani man is already in ICU!
Pakistani army is best in the world, they will eliminate all the dissidents and maintain peace in the country.
 
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Pakistan’s economy literally rests on four simmering volcanoes. We have been criminally oblivious of those even as we assumed that the visible economy was trundling along satisfactorily, even if barely. Of those, the energy bomb has just begun to fizz. What we see on our roads and in our homes and markets are the first sign of the discontent and the unrest resulting from disabling inflation and people’s inability to pay what is charged to them. We know how we got here — capacity charges, deceptively corrupt contractual obligations et al — except that the chicken is now home to roost. Exaggerated bills borne out of ill-conception, stealing, ineptness and freeloading have begun to bite.

The circular debt in the power sector alone is in the region of 2600 billion annually of which around 2000 billion is capacity charges in free handouts if you will. We steal and freeload around 500 billion worth of power every year. Incompetence, inefficiency and corruption in the system writ large as we wrestle with what to do with the increasing frustration among those who must pay for these inadequacies — human, systemic and technical. The bomb is yet to fully explode, and we are already out of ideas. Around 1500 billion of the Gas Sector remains to be added to this bill and that already makes for some 40 per cent of the annual budget. Even more interestingly we have never shown this liability in the annual statement letting sleeping dogs lie kicking the can down the road as the most convenient escape from responsibility.

Discounting any and all plans bordering on superficial — spreading the payment, seeking relaxation from the IMF to subsidise life-line users, which the IMF has not unexpectedly balked at — there are three options that can perhaps still save the day:

First — declare a country-wide energy emergency which we are in already and considering how tenuous the stability of the republic has become invoke a force majeure in the agreements signed with the IPPs. If that threatens our future credibility and sovereign trust, we must choose from keeping a false face and risk losing the republic or save the republic to rebuild the trust when we have things under better control. It will give us the opportunity to renegotiate what has been insidiously and foolishly contracted in favour of Independent Power Plants mostly owned by political players, big business, or their frontmen. Chinese power plants under CPEC have piggybacked on what was already an existing convention; though they should be the ones to lead renegotiations to save Pakistan from unbridled plunder of state and public resource.

Second — if under this revised protocol of an emergency, power producers refuse to go along with revision of the terms and in working a way out for the state and ease the pain to its people, our only recourse should be to take over all power plants. Yes, nationalise those and bring those under state control. Don’t cringe. We will not be the first ones to do so even if times have changed — Mexico did that when it found itself embroiled in a manipulated and a crafted environment of costly and inefficient power supply crisis. We may then rationalise the sector making it feasible minus its debilitating and generous clauses returning those to private hands in due course. The IPPs can make their choice from among the three options to save people undeserved privation.

Third — and this is the second ticking bomb and a primal threat to economy which if resolved can also offer a solution to the energy conundrum: Pakistan may choose to dispense of its baggage of Public Sector Enterprises. Together, these bleed around 1100 billion from the exchequer every year in operational and debt costs. Most are used to park party personnel by political parties which are loathe to let go of this bleeding sore. These enterprises — well over 200 of them; loss making and eating up precious resource — carry assets that value over thousands of billions. These include the Railway, the Steel Mill and WAPDA. An unexplained legacy romance and crass opportunism defies the logic of not dispensing these haemorrhaging behemoths in the name of strategic assets. Pray, what is more strategic than the health of the republic and its people. And, when the choice is between saving the republic or these legacy dinosauric structures the choice should be straight forward.

From the proceeds of these sales a wealth fund can be created to sustain a rationalised power structure which will serve its users than bedevil them perpetually. A combination of these factors can work to alleviate the yoke of disability imposed on the people in a sector most poorly managed and perceived. When push comes to shove this alone will make the obstinate and the recalcitrant comply. It is time for the state to assert itself. We will rebuild our credibility later. Unplugged diplomacy should help explain the need for such drastic steps to our external partners. IPP owners either understand the dilemma and rework the contracts or stare into the possibility of a declared Energy Emergency leading to invocation of force majeure and nationalisation of the power and energy infrastructure in the short to medium term. The choice is theirs to make.

The other two time-bombs that tick with equal ferocity are the Population and the Pensions bombs. Population continues to grow much faster than any other developing economy excepting a few in Africa. An over2.5 per cent growth rate is incomprehensible in this day and age when the GDP growth also hovers at 2-3 per cent. At these rates of population growth, net GDP is negative. This slide must be stemmed. Other than direct intervention which needs to be intensified — just as Bangladesh has done — systemic accompaniments like female empowerment through literacy and preferential employment are key to arresting this downslide in any effort on economy and remove the roadblock to sustained growth.

Pensions are inching up to 800 billion annually. Soon these will cost as much as the PSEs to keep those afloat. This will only get worse and soon gnaw at the fundamentals of any economic option. A Pensions Fund created from within the Budgetary allocations is desperately needed to make it self-sustaining — an investable pool which can build over time and pay for those retired as is the case in most modern economies. Policy intervention in terms of gratuity payments as well as reviewing the terms of service and reducing the size of the government employees in pensionable positions is what must find priority in our consideration.

Unless we deal with these ticking bombs in urgency, we will soon be enveloped by a self-debilitating structure of the economy which stands seriously distorted, deformed, corroded and leaky. Each other step else is only a band-aid in the presence of persisting disabilities.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 8th, 2023.
So, the author thinks he will wrap the country's problems into 'bombs' and people will get scared and solve them?

No, such 'poetry' won't do the trick. Pakistan's problems are fairly easy to understand. It suffers from two basic and interconnected problems. First one, everyone knows is the fiscal deficit, i.e., not having enough money to buy the essentials needed by the people and the government. Second one, not as well known, but more insidious and intractable, is the lack of human capital. There are simply not enough skilled and talented people to run a modern nation. Everyone can see that in the government. For the last three decades, there has only been three prime minister aspirants: the Bhuttos, the Sharifs and IK. Most Pakistanis can see that they are not exactly top tier talent. Fiscal capital may be borrowed, but where will intelligent people come from to lead the nation?
 
.
Pakistan’s economy literally rests on four simmering volcanoes. We have been criminally oblivious of those even as we assumed that the visible economy was trundling along satisfactorily, even if barely. Of those, the energy bomb has just begun to fizz. What we see on our roads and in our homes and markets are the first sign of the discontent and the unrest resulting from disabling inflation and people’s inability to pay what is charged to them. We know how we got here — capacity charges, deceptively corrupt contractual obligations et al — except that the chicken is now home to roost. Exaggerated bills borne out of ill-conception, stealing, ineptness and freeloading have begun to bite.

The circular debt in the power sector alone is in the region of 2600 billion annually of which around 2000 billion is capacity charges in free handouts if you will. We steal and freeload around 500 billion worth of power every year. Incompetence, inefficiency and corruption in the system writ large as we wrestle with what to do with the increasing frustration among those who must pay for these inadequacies — human, systemic and technical. The bomb is yet to fully explode, and we are already out of ideas. Around 1500 billion of the Gas Sector remains to be added to this bill and that already makes for some 40 per cent of the annual budget. Even more interestingly we have never shown this liability in the annual statement letting sleeping dogs lie kicking the can down the road as the most convenient escape from responsibility.

Discounting any and all plans bordering on superficial — spreading the payment, seeking relaxation from the IMF to subsidise life-line users, which the IMF has not unexpectedly balked at — there are three options that can perhaps still save the day:

First — declare a country-wide energy emergency which we are in already and considering how tenuous the stability of the republic has become invoke a force majeure in the agreements signed with the IPPs. If that threatens our future credibility and sovereign trust, we must choose from keeping a false face and risk losing the republic or save the republic to rebuild the trust when we have things under better control. It will give us the opportunity to renegotiate what has been insidiously and foolishly contracted in favour of Independent Power Plants mostly owned by political players, big business, or their frontmen. Chinese power plants under CPEC have piggybacked on what was already an existing convention; though they should be the ones to lead renegotiations to save Pakistan from unbridled plunder of state and public resource.

Second — if under this revised protocol of an emergency, power producers refuse to go along with revision of the terms and in working a way out for the state and ease the pain to its people, our only recourse should be to take over all power plants. Yes, nationalise those and bring those under state control. Don’t cringe. We will not be the first ones to do so even if times have changed — Mexico did that when it found itself embroiled in a manipulated and a crafted environment of costly and inefficient power supply crisis. We may then rationalise the sector making it feasible minus its debilitating and generous clauses returning those to private hands in due course. The IPPs can make their choice from among the three options to save people undeserved privation.

Third — and this is the second ticking bomb and a primal threat to economy which if resolved can also offer a solution to the energy conundrum: Pakistan may choose to dispense of its baggage of Public Sector Enterprises. Together, these bleed around 1100 billion from the exchequer every year in operational and debt costs. Most are used to park party personnel by political parties which are loathe to let go of this bleeding sore. These enterprises — well over 200 of them; loss making and eating up precious resource — carry assets that value over thousands of billions. These include the Railway, the Steel Mill and WAPDA. An unexplained legacy romance and crass opportunism defies the logic of not dispensing these haemorrhaging behemoths in the name of strategic assets. Pray, what is more strategic than the health of the republic and its people. And, when the choice is between saving the republic or these legacy dinosauric structures the choice should be straight forward.

From the proceeds of these sales a wealth fund can be created to sustain a rationalised power structure which will serve its users than bedevil them perpetually. A combination of these factors can work to alleviate the yoke of disability imposed on the people in a sector most poorly managed and perceived. When push comes to shove this alone will make the obstinate and the recalcitrant comply. It is time for the state to assert itself. We will rebuild our credibility later. Unplugged diplomacy should help explain the need for such drastic steps to our external partners. IPP owners either understand the dilemma and rework the contracts or stare into the possibility of a declared Energy Emergency leading to invocation of force majeure and nationalisation of the power and energy infrastructure in the short to medium term. The choice is theirs to make.

The other two time-bombs that tick with equal ferocity are the Population and the Pensions bombs. Population continues to grow much faster than any other developing economy excepting a few in Africa. An over2.5 per cent growth rate is incomprehensible in this day and age when the GDP growth also hovers at 2-3 per cent. At these rates of population growth, net GDP is negative. This slide must be stemmed. Other than direct intervention which needs to be intensified — just as Bangladesh has done — systemic accompaniments like female empowerment through literacy and preferential employment are key to arresting this downslide in any effort on economy and remove the roadblock to sustained growth.

Pensions are inching up to 800 billion annually. Soon these will cost as much as the PSEs to keep those afloat. This will only get worse and soon gnaw at the fundamentals of any economic option. A Pensions Fund created from within the Budgetary allocations is desperately needed to make it self-sustaining — an investable pool which can build over time and pay for those retired as is the case in most modern economies. Policy intervention in terms of gratuity payments as well as reviewing the terms of service and reducing the size of the government employees in pensionable positions is what must find priority in our consideration.

Unless we deal with these ticking bombs in urgency, we will soon be enveloped by a self-debilitating structure of the economy which stands seriously distorted, deformed, corroded and leaky. Each other step else is only a band-aid in the presence of persisting disabilities.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 8th, 2023.
Lol, sure, first you seize all IPPs and nationalize them and then create a sovereign wealth fund by selling off anaemic state enterprises. Do you expect the same people whose assets you seized to buy the state-owned crap.

Population growth in Pakistan is a cultural/religious issue since women are expected to stay at home. Good luck with changing cultural mores.

The size of the Pakistani state is too large relative to the economy to support every government job being a pensioned one. Even India got rid of Defined Benefit pensions for all government employees except armed forces in the early 2000s. Even in the armed forces, an increasing number of roles are now not pensionable and even for those that are, soldiers and officers who take early retirement after serving the minimum pension tenure have their pension benefits drastically cut.
 
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the biggest pensions drawers are the armed forces, and they are the ones who most advocate its abolition, as long as their pensions remains, all other departments can go to hell.
 
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So suggestions vary from Nationalization to Selling off assets from SOEs. Did he read his own article before publishing ? No editor to make him understand the farce ?
 
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1- Pakistan problem was basically political instability causing a bankrun on the country

Otherwise it's debt to GDP ratio of 34%(includes all other liabilities)is way better then it was in 1998(63%)

2- power sector needs injection of cheaper power. This can come from hydro projects that are due to next 4-5 yrs and Iran has pipeline (LNG plants can run on natural gas). As well as dam top solar.

It also needs de regulations i.e letting consumers sell solar back to wapada ..there is huge potential there. All the elite/upper class will jump on bandwagon and can provide cheap power if govt facilitates it.

Lastly it needs to privatize all distribution companies and budget 400-500b as subsidy untill the power prices come down with new hydro and thar coal

3-it need to get rid of PIA, airports, and decrease the size of th govt including the largest . military per capital in the world

Not sure what is 7lac troops doing. India can't commit that many troops to us anyway anymore

Not only that the number of generals is twice that of what it should be.

Need to sell property land in cities to developer so that can spin off growth

4- need to reengage overseas Pakistanis like they did in 2020 so remittances and investment pick up again..this will be very very tough

5- renegotiate with do to give some waiver with Chinese IPP. This would be almost impossible

6- wapada should float bonds for developing of hydro projects..this is not going to happen since a triple down grade has squeezed wapada ability to do so anymore

7- digitalize the economy like modi did. It's okay if the economy takes a hit in the interim

8- make a deal with IK by threatening his family so he can go outside and dissolve the 1973 consitution create a stable autocrat govt that runs under corps commanders with senate made up of 26 corps commanders

Or hand over to Ik/do an election

The middle gorund isn't working
 
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@ziaulislam

Sensible, doable steps!

India can't commit that many troops to us anyway anymore

Even if it could, it wont. It simply wants to maintain status quo

Regards
 
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