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Floods to hit economic growth: Finance Ministry

ISLAMABAD: Floods in Pakistan have destroyed or extensively damaged crops over 4.25 million acres (1.72 million hectares) of land, Food Minister Nazar Muhammad Gondal said on Monday.

The total area under cultivation is about 23 million hectares, food ministry officials say.

"The floods have destroyed or extensively damaged crops, including cotton, rice, sugarcane, maize and others over an area of 4.25 million acres," he said.

According to an estimated breakdown of losses prepared by the food ministry, rice was the worst hit with an area of 1.51 million acres (614,157 hectares) destroyed by the floods.

Industry officials say that translates into a loss of 1.5 million tonnes of rice.

Less output means Pakistan will have a smaller surplus for exports.

Pakistan had a bumper crop of 6.7 million tonnes of milled rice in 2009/10 and exported about 4.5 million tonnes, traders say.

But a US Department of Agriculture attache in Pakistan said in a report this month that the country exported 3.75 million tonnes of rice in 2009/10.
 
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3.2m hectares of crops destroyed in floods

Over 1,600 people have died while 15.4 million have been affected by the floods in Pakistan, said chief of United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), Daniele Donati on Wednesday.

Addressing a press conference along with the country representative FAO Luigi Damiani and Dr Faizul Bari, the project director of Food Facility Pakistan, Donati said millions of livestock have been affected by the floods. Hundreds of thousands of them need emergency assistance, and if immediate action is not taken then tens of thousands of them will die.

According to Donati, over 200,000 cattle have been killed in Sindh and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa alone. Approximately 80 per cent of the population in the affected areas depends on agriculture and 3.2 million hectares of standing crops have been destroyed.

Rice, maize, cotton, sugar, tobacco and vegetables have also been damaged. Seeds saved by households for the coming seasons have been ruined or lost, he said, adding that livestock is “the poor people’s mobile ATM”.

“Every animal we save is a productive asset that poor families can use to rebuild their lives after the floods,” said Donati.

Sindh and Punjab provinces are part of the country’s breadbasket and if the fields are still flooded in the next few months, there is a serious risk that the wheat-planting season in October will be affected.

An estimated 500,000 to 600,000 tons of wheat seed stored by households have been destroyed, he said, adding that if support does not reach farmers in time for the Rabi season, which runs from mid-September to November, they will be unable to plant wheat for 12 months, signifying the loss of two staple harvests.
 
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Pak loses Rs240 bln worth of water due to lack of dams Updated at: 1820 PST, Wednesday, August 25, 2010
KARACHI: Pakistan lost water worth Rs240 billion due to lack of dams and water reservoirs in the country.

Chairman Fauji Fertilizer Company talking to media men said a quantity of water needed for irrigating 40 million acres land has been wasted. He said Rs6 billion worth of water is required for irrigating 1 million acres land.

According to economic experts, due to absence of political harmony the country not only faced worst ever floods but also failed to store water worth Rs240 billion.

http://www.geo.tv/8-25-2010/70495.htm
 
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Floods Hit Pakistan Economy

SINGAPORE—The flooding in Pakistan will inflict serious damage on its economy, posing another challenge for a cash-strapped government struggling to keep a recovery on track amid high inflation and a relentless Islamist insurgency.

Assistance from the International Monetary Fund and Western countries will likely help Pakistan avoid another brush with bankruptcy as it tries to cope with the damage, which by some estimates may reach $43 billion. But the floods will weigh heavily on economic growth this year and leave a long-term mark on the economy.

"The hit on the growth rate is going to be very severe," said Philip Wyatt, a senior economist at UBS. "We can see a loss of one or two points of economic growth, depending on the damage." In the fiscal year ended June 30, Pakistan's economy grew 4.1%.

Moody's Investors Service, which had expected Pakistan's economic growth to expand to 4.5% this fiscal year, may lower its estimate to 3% to 3.5%, analyst Aninda Mitra said.



The flood began in July and at one point covered one-fifth of the South Asian nation, or land roughly equivalent to the size of Uruguay. It has damaged crops sown over 1.93 million acres, or 776,996 hectares. Cotton output will shrink to 11.76 million bales from the 14 million bales estimated at the start of the season by Pakistan's food and agriculture ministry. Cotton is an important raw material for the key textile export sector, one of Pakistan's few sources of export income.

According to the United Nations, the disaster has affected close to 20 million people, killing 1,500 and leaving 1.2 million homes damaged or destroyed.

Coping with the social and economic costs of the catastrophe will strain the government's finances. The budget deficit was already on track to reach 4.5% of gross domestic product before the crisis but now could widen to as much as 6% to 7% of GDP, said Mr. Mitra of Moody's. That is a grim prospect for a country that had external debt totaling $55.63 billion as of June 30.

President Asif Ali Zardari's government has been reaching out to other countries for help. A delegation met with IMF officials Monday in Washington. Donors including the U.K. and the European Union have so far pledged almost $500 million in additional help.

Moody's is unlikely to upgrade Pakistan's credit rating in coming months due to the devastation from the floods and other challenges, but the country's current B3 rating "adequately captures the risk" of the likely economic slowdown and is unlikely to be downgraded further, said Mr. Mitra. A B3 rating is just one notch above the C level, which applies to countries in effective sovereign default, and makes it hard for a country to issue bonds in the international market.
[PAKECON]

The natural disaster is the latest setback for the Pakistan economy, which after several years of strong growth almost ground to a halt in 2008, hurt by budget overruns, a loss in export competitiveness due to high inflation, and an insurgency that continues unabated. On Monday, while emergency workers worked to shore up levees in two southern cities, at least 36 people were killed in three separate bomb attacks across the country, and 12 suspected militants were killed in U.S. drone attacks near the Afghan border.

Concerns about the economic fallout have kept pressure on Pakistan's financial markets, though the impact has been moderate.

The cost of insuring against a default or restructuring of Pakistan's bonds remains at very elevated levels, but has been relatively steady in recent weeks, a sign that investors anticipate IMF and U.S. support to prevent any fiscal crisis. The spread on Pakistan five-year credit default swaps was quoted at 1,099 basis points Tuesday, roughly on par with those of other high-risk sovereign bond issuers like Venezuela, but well below early-2009 highs of over 2,100 basis points during the global financial crisis.

Pakistan's benchmark stock index, KSE-100, has fallen 7% so far in August, but is up 4% so far this year, roughly in line with other emerging market indexes.

The Pakistan rupee, one of Asia's weakest currencies in recent years, has fallen in recent days, but has found support above its record low against the dollar of 85.84 rupees hit on Aug. 2, helped by expectations that remittances from overseas Pakistanis, which have averaged around 10% of GDP in recent years, may rise to help families at home cope with the floods.

But analysts expect the rupee to remain under pressure in coming months due to Pakistan's current account deficit and high inflation rate, which ran at 12.3% in July. The floods are likely to push up food prices and transportation costs for other goods, likely eliminating any chance that inflation might fall below 10% this year, said Mr. Wyatt at UBS.
—Dow Jones Newswires in Islamabad contributed to this report.

Floods Hit Pakistan Economy - WSJ.com
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Pakistan flood-hit economy may see 0 to 2 pct growth
By Sahar Ahmed

KARACHI, Aug 23 (Reuters) - The worst floods in decades could knock down Pakistan's economic growth for fiscal 2010/11 to between zero and two percent, Pakistani officials said on Monday, fuelling concern about the country's stability.

The Asian Development Bank, assessing flood damage and Pakistan's needs along with the World Bank, said last week economic growth could be three percent [nSGE67J028]. The finance ministry said the country would miss this year's 4.5 gross domestic product growth target, but did not give another figure.

Sakib Sherani, a senior adviser to the finance ministry, said there was a whole range of growth estimates which would be revised once the actual impact of the floods became clear.

"We think zero percent is the lower bound of these estimates," Sherani told Reuters, adding that this was his own estimate, and not an official figure from the finance ministry.

The economy grew 4.1 percent last year.

He said the zero growth estimate was based on the economic impact of the damage caused to key crops and livestock, adding an estimated 25 percent of the cotton crop has been affected.

The textile industry, which accounts for more than 50 percent of total exports, depends on the cotton crop.

Drastically lower economic growth would be a major cause of concern for the Pakistani government and the United States, which wants its ally as stable as possible because it is a frontline state in Washington's war against militancy.

Pakistan's president and foreign minister have expressed concern that Islamic militant groups would exploit the widespread suffering to gain recruits.

Islamist charities, some with suspected links to militant groups, have been more effective than the government in providing relief to floods victims.

INFLATION COULD SOAR

The International Monetary Fund will review Pakistan's budget and macroeconomic prospects following catastrophic flooding during talks with senior Pakistani officials in Washington starting on Monday.

The meetings are set to focus on the future of Pakistan's $10.66 billion IMF programme agreed upon in 2008. If the IMF agrees to ease the programme's targets, or extends the repayment period that would ease the government's financial burdens.

Reconstruction is likely to cost billions of dollars, burdening an economy that was already fragile before the waters raged from the northwest to the south, destroying villages and key infrastructure and making more than 4 million homeless.

Sherani said inflation could reach as high as 25 percent, compared with the 2010/11 target of 9.5 percent.

Higher costs and food shortages could enrage people who had lost everything in the floods and who are already angry at their government for its slow response to the disaster.

The U.N. said the floods have left millions of people hungry, raising the prospect of popular unrest unless immediate and reconstruction aid reach the victims swiftly.

Sherani said lower commodity prices could prevent prices from spiking up. "We will have to import essential items and if international commodity prices go down, then inflation at 25 percent will be less probable," he said.

The Pakistan Planning Commission's forecast was not as grim. "I agree the growth will come down but at the same time, the zero percent is cruel, it will be one to two percent," said Nadeem ul Haque, deputy chairman of the commission, which formulates and monitors implementation of development projects.

"There will be a negative impact but when reconstruction starts in November or December and people go back to their lands and restart farming, there will be a positive impact."
Pakistan flood-hit economy may see 0 to 2 pct growth | Reuters
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0-2% growth is very low indeed.
Good luck to them.
:cheers:
 
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This is bad i dont know how we're going to recover from this.

Pakistan suffering its worst days ever in history. Pakistan will surely get out of this situation very soon with the aid from international community.

Previously, in the year 2008 Pakistan seek more than $100 billion in aid in order to avoid possible bankruptcy. This was never given to Pakistan and it had to depend on a more aggressive fiscal policy, backed by the IMF. A year later, Asian Development Bank reported that the Pakistan economic crisis was easing. Furthermore it is projected that in 2010 Pakistan economy would grow at least 4 percent and could grow more with strong international economic recovery.

The IMF is also planning to ease the debt for Pakistan citing present situation in the coming days.
 
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The end of what may be the worst flooding in Pakistan’s history could soon be in sight, according to government officials. Now officials will be preoccupied with providing relief to some 17 million people – and reviving the country’s devastated economy.As part of that effort, In Pakistan’s major cities, a movement to cancel Pakistan’s external debt, which is set to reach some $74 billion by 2014, is now under way.

“Our annual debt servicing is on average $3 billion. That is almost three times the amount the government of Pakistan pays on health care,” says Abdul Khaliq Shah, the country’s spokesman for Committee for Abolition of Third World Debt. Mr. Shah organized a gathering of leading Pakistani intellectuals and rights activists in the eastern city of Lahore on Sunday to discuss the protesting of foreign debt. They are hoping to persuade international officials to cancel Pakistan's debt to help flood affectees. A protest is planned to take place in front of Pakistan’s parliament house on Sept. 2.

Shah says the prevailing conditions in Pakistan after the flooding justifies the repudiation of debt under a UN Human Rights Commission resolution titled "State of Necessity," adding that up to 70 percent of Pakistan’s external debt was accrued under the rule of dictators and should therefore be waived, just as the US refused to pay most of the external debt accrued by Saddam Hussein’s government.

The other argument for debt cancellation among participants was the precedent that countries facing similar tragedies to Pakistan’s catastrophic flooding set. As they recover, countries are often forced by international financial institutions and donor countries to mortgage their future as they borrow for relief and recovery efforts, magnifying problems for years.

Though Pakistan’s Geo News on Tuesday reported that eight more villages in the province of Sindh were inundated by the raging waters, residents were evacuated beforehand, according to Pakistan disaster management official Hadi Baksh. The worst of the flooding that originated in the country’s northwest and swept southward is over Bakhsh, according to the Associated Press. “The floodwaters are now heading to the Arabian Sea,” he said.

The flooding began some four weeks ago and has so far claimed about 1,600 lives, left more than 4 million homeless, and damaged more than 7.9 million acres of farmland, according to the UN’s food agency. Recovery is slated to take months, if not years. Agriculture accounts for almost one-quarter of Pakistan’s economy.

International aid was slow to trickle in, though as of last week, it stood at more than $800 million.

Pakistan’s talks with the International Monetary Fund in Washington continued on Monday, as IMF officials insisting Pakistan will need to continue to implement tax and energy sector reforms for an $11.3 billion loan negotiated in 2008, according to Dawn, a leading Pakistani daily.

Pakistan flood waters recede but country's debt rises - CSMonitor.com
 
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Pakistan flood-hit economy may see 0 to 2 % growth

* GDP growth could be as low as zero percent:woot::woot:

* Cotton crop loss about 25 percent

* Inflation could reach 25 percent

By Sahar Ahmed

KARACHI, Aug 23 (Reuters) - The worst floods in decades could knock down Pakistan's economic growth for fiscal 2010/11 to between zero and two percent, Pakistani officials said on Monday, fuelling concern about the country's stability.

The Asian Development Bank, assessing flood damage and Pakistan's needs along with the World Bank, said last week economic growth could be three percent [nSGE67J028]. The finance ministry said the country would miss this year's 4.5 gross domestic product growth target, but did not give another figure.

Sakib Sherani, a senior adviser to the finance ministry, said there was a whole range of growth estimates which would be revised once the actual impact of the floods became clear.

"We think zero percent is the lower bound of these estimates," Sherani told Reuters, adding that this was his own estimate, and not an official figure from the finance ministry.

He said the zero growth estimate was based on the economic impact of the damage caused to key crops and livestock, adding an estimated 25 percent of the cotton crop has been affected.

The textile industry, which accounts for more than 50 percent of total exports, depends on the cotton crop.

Drastically lower economic growth would be a major cause of concern for the Pakistani government and the United States, which wants its ally as stable as possible because it is a frontline state in Washington's war against militancy.

Pakistan's president and foreign minister have expressed concern that Islamic militant groups would exploit the widespread suffering to gain recruits.

Islamist charities, some with suspected links to militant groups, have been more effective than the government in providing relief to floods victims.

INFLATION COULD SOAR

The International Monetary Fund will review Pakistan's budget and macroeconomic prospects following catastrophic flooding during talks with senior Pakistani officials in Washington starting on Monday.

The meetings are set to focus on the future of Pakistan's $10.66 billion IMF programme agreed upon in 2008. If the IMF agrees to ease the programme's targets, or extends the repayment period that would ease the government's financial burdens.

Reconstruction is likely to cost billions of dollars, burdening an economy that was already fragile before the waters raged from the northwest to the south, destroying villages and key infrastructure and making more than 4 million homeless.

Sherani said inflation could reach as high as 25 percent, compared with the 2010/11 target of 9.5 percent.

Higher costs and food shortages could enrage people who had lost everything in the floods and who are already angry at their government for its slow response to the disaster.

The U.N. said the floods have left millions of people hungry, raising the prospect of popular unrest unless immediate and reconstruction aid reach the victims swiftly.

Sherani said lower commodity prices could prevent prices from spiking up. "We will have to import essential items and if international commodity prices go down, then inflation at 25 percent will be less probable," he said.

The Pakistan Planning Commission's forecast was not as grim. "I agree the growth will come down but at the same time, the zero percent is cruel, it will be one to two percent," said Nadeem ul Haque, deputy chairman of the commission, which formulates and monitors implementation of development projects.

"There will be a negative impact but when reconstruction starts in November or December and people go back to their lands and restart farming, there will be a positive impact." (Additional reporting by Kamran Haider in Islamabad; editing by Miral Fahmy) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Pakistan flood-hit economy may see 0 to 2 pct growth | Reuters
 
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They were targeting 4.5 % this year and it will come down to 1- 2 %. BUT WHAT WERE THE PAST GROWTH RATE (BEFORE FLOOD) ??
 
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^5-6%..Mogambo your use of smilies in this post is highly inappropriate but it sure does tell us lot about your personality you little turd.

Pardon him.. Some times it happens(though it is not good).it is a collition of intrusts. We are sympathitic about flood victims but at the times inside the corner of our mind some one may think ' it is a good news too because our enemys economy is going down '. I guess it happens with every body in different matters isn't it ?
 
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I'm afraid this is just the beginneing. The full impact of the floods will be assessed when the flood waters recede all the way back to normal and when people get back to their homes and crops.

That's when international agencies will get to damage assessment.

That's when exact picture in terms of no. of dead, crops destroyed and other economic damage will become clearer. Things are quite nebulous as of now.

It's sad but I'm afraid it will get much worse. :confused:
 
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