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Has PTI got lost 'Punjab' back after Budget announcement? or it Risk loosing forever in next election 2023

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We all know how Imran Khan, PTI and PTI Punjab with CM Usman Buzdar Khan has performed badly in Punjab in almost last 3+ years. Only 2 years remain for PTI to rule over Punjab and this government. Will PTI turn around this time seriously? Will PTI take back Punjab in next election after the budget? Will as we all know PTI Punjab make annoucements but never implement them properly, only stories are heard from PTI Imran Khan government for Punjab but nothing concrete ever happened.

Punjabis 110 million now know, they have been living in extreme high prices, only one Province who pays full gs prices, full electricity prices, full petrol and full water prices despite shortage and ever rising daily item prices. Those who live in Lahore city know every road in Lahore is fully dark without street lights, proper road management, lack of new projects, no new recreational parks and activities and lack of a proper Lahore Master Plan to make life easy. Out of Lahore big cities of Punjab and less road connection, no new big projects to sustain the ever growing population of Punjab with 110 million touching now. Lack of Governance, law and order, police are some of the problems plaging Punjab. Although CM PTI Usman Buzdar has worked tremendously but still very long way to go.

Punjab Budget for Road Bridges & Education , Health
• Roads =Rs 146,403 M
• Education = Rs 33,924 M
• Health = 18,602 M


Punjab budget

PUNJAB is where the battle for power will be fought in 2023. Punjab is also where PTI parliamentarians are perhaps most discontented with the ‘austere’ policies of their government and looking towards their leadership to give them something to sell to their constituents burdened by inflation, eroding incomes, job losses and development infrastructure gaps. PTI allies in the province are also not happy with the way the government has treated them. It is, therefore, natural for the ruling party to focus on Punjab in the run-up to the elections and execute public works schemes that are important for voters and can improve its candidates’ prospects. The Punjab budget 2021-22 is a major policy step in that direction. Apart from announcing a three-year district development package of Rs360bn to engage its legislators and complete schemes proposed by them, the government has enhanced development funds by more than 66pc to stimulate growth in line with federal strategy. Among other major initiatives, it seeks to launch the Universal Health Insurance project to cover the entire province by the end of 2021 and speed up investment in social and economic infrastructure. Additionally, it has decided to continue hefty tax concessions to protect businesses and provide relief to urban middle-class households during Covid-19.

With just two years left to create a positive impression, the Buzdar dispensation, which has earned flak for what its critics refer to as incompetence, is all set to go full throttle on its planned spending spree from the start of the new fiscal. Political motivation notwithstanding, the province is in dire need of public investment to repair deteriorating infrastructure, as well as qualitative and quantitative improvement in public service delivery. The infrastructure gap has expanded and service delivery depreciated since the PTI’s ascent to power, a major reason why the government hasn’t succeeded in diminishing popular political support for the PML-N, especially in the central and northern districts of Punjab. Indeed, the incumbent administration has made a few ‘soft interventions’ over time to shift investment focus to human development by spending more money on public health and education, and digitisation of the provincial economy in contrast to its predecessor’s penchant for large infrastructure schemes. But the experience of the last few years shows that ‘wholesome’ improvement in human development indicators is not possible without building the economic infrastructure to create jobs and alleviate poverty. Political compulsions seem to have taught the rulers of Punjab the same — albeit belatedly.

Published in Dawn, June 16th, 2021


Follow PTI Punjab Twitter handle:

 
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We all know how Imran Khan, PTI and PTI Punjab with CM Usman Buzdar Khan has performed badly in Punjab in almost last 3+ years. Only 2 years remain for PTI to rule over Punjab and this government. Will PTI turn around this time seriously? Will PTI take back Punjab in next election after the budget? Will as we all know PTI Punjab make annoucements but never implement them properly, only stories are heard from PTI Imran Khan government for Punjab but nothing concrete ever happened.

Punjabis 110 million now know, they have been living in extreme high prices, only one Province who pays full gs prices, full electricity prices, full petrol and full water prices despite shortage and ever rising daily item prices. Those who live in Lahore city know every road in Lahore is fully dark without street lights, proper road management, lack of new projects, no new recreational parks and activities and lack of a proper Lahore Master Plan to make life easy. Out of Lahore big cities of Punjab and less road connection, no new big projects to sustain the ever growing population of Punjab with 110 million touching now. Lack of Governance, law and order, police are some of the problems plaging Punjab. Although CM PTI Usman Buzdar has worked tremendously but still very long way to go.

Punjab Budget for Road Bridges & Education , Health
• Roads =Rs 146,403 M
• Education = Rs 33,924 M
• Health = 18,602 M


Punjab budget

PUNJAB is where the battle for power will be fought in 2023. Punjab is also where PTI parliamentarians are perhaps most discontented with the ‘austere’ policies of their government and looking towards their leadership to give them something to sell to their constituents burdened by inflation, eroding incomes, job losses and development infrastructure gaps. PTI allies in the province are also not happy with the way the government has treated them. It is, therefore, natural for the ruling party to focus on Punjab in the run-up to the elections and execute public works schemes that are important for voters and can improve its candidates’ prospects. The Punjab budget 2021-22 is a major policy step in that direction. Apart from announcing a three-year district development package of Rs360bn to engage its legislators and complete schemes proposed by them, the government has enhanced development funds by more than 66pc to stimulate growth in line with federal strategy. Among other major initiatives, it seeks to launch the Universal Health Insurance project to cover the entire province by the end of 2021 and speed up investment in social and economic infrastructure. Additionally, it has decided to continue hefty tax concessions to protect businesses and provide relief to urban middle-class households during Covid-19.

With just two years left to create a positive impression, the Buzdar dispensation, which has earned flak for what its critics refer to as incompetence, is all set to go full throttle on its planned spending spree from the start of the new fiscal. Political motivation notwithstanding, the province is in dire need of public investment to repair deteriorating infrastructure, as well as qualitative and quantitative improvement in public service delivery. The infrastructure gap has expanded and service delivery depreciated since the PTI’s ascent to power, a major reason why the government hasn’t succeeded in diminishing popular political support for the PML-N, especially in the central and northern districts of Punjab. Indeed, the incumbent administration has made a few ‘soft interventions’ over time to shift investment focus to human development by spending more money on public health and education, and digitisation of the provincial economy in contrast to its predecessor’s penchant for large infrastructure schemes. But the experience of the last few years shows that ‘wholesome’ improvement in human development indicators is not possible without building the economic infrastructure to create jobs and alleviate poverty. Political compulsions seem to have taught the rulers of Punjab the same — albeit belatedly.

Published in Dawn, June 16th, 2021

View attachment 753926

Yes. Sindh risks losing next election to PMLN due to PPPs pathetic 13 year performance
 
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BUDGET 2021-22: Punjab doles out massive uplift funds for PTI legislators

Nasir Jamal Published June 15, 2021 - Updated a day ago

LAHORE: Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar talking to reporters outside the Punjab Assembly after the budget session on Monday. (Right) PML-N MPA Hina Butt holds a placard on the assembly premises against the budget.—Murtaza Ali / White Star

• 10pc raise in pay, pension of public servants
• Rs50bn tax relief to continue for businesses, consumers affected by Covid-19
• Tractor trade brought under tax net


LAHORE: The Usman Buzdar government on Monday rolled out its Rs2,232.7 billion fiscally expansionary, growth budget for the next financial year that doles out massive funds for the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf legislators for execution of development projects in their constituencies under the district development package, proposes launching of a universal health insurance scheme and implementation of infrastructure projects across Punjab.

The provincial government has increased the size of its development spending for the next fiscal by more than 66 per cent to Rs560bn from the outgoing year’s Rs337bn to fund the three-year generous Rs360bn district development package that will be spent mostly on the schemes recommended by the PTI legislators to give their voters something to feel good about the economy before the next elections. Besides, the government has allocated Rs80bn for its health insurance scheme, covering the entire population of the province, which will be rolled out by the end of December, and Rs189bn for south Punjab development portfolio.


The expansionary budget presented by Punjab Finance Minister Makhdum Hashim Jawan Bakht amid loud shouts and hoots against the government by the combined opposition in the provincial assembly is in line with the federal strategy to give up its IMF-mandated, austere economic policies that have inflicted huge pain on the low-middle-income segments of the population over the past three years and push growth through public investments before the ruling PTI goes into the 2023 elections. The government hopes to support the poor, generate new jobs and put a bit of disposable income in the pockets of people through its development stimulus.

The fiscal stimulus will focus on social sector (education Rs54.22bn, health Rs98.01bn, water supply and sanitation Rs18.76bn, local government/community development Rs26.63bn), infrastructure development (roads Rs58.29bn, irrigation Rs30.78bn, urban development Rs30bn, public buildings Rs19.28bn), and production sectors (agriculture Rs31.49bn, livestock and dairy development Rs5bn, forestry Rs4bn; industry 12.2bn).

The government has also announced a 10pc raise in pay and pension of all public servants and a 25pc special allowance for the financially distressed employees. It has also decided to continue the provincial tax relief of above Rs50bn announced in the budget for the current year to help businesses and consumers affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.

The ‘flagship’ initiatives announced by the finance minister include five mother & child healthcare hospitals, upgrade of 8,500 schools in the first phase and establishment of 19 universities in the province. Besides, a sum of Rs86bn will be spent on rural water supply and sanitation schemes and Rs14.5bn put aside for emergencies and to combat the effects of the pandemic.

The province is expecting Rs1,683.70bn from the federal divisible pool as its share under the National Finance Commission (NFC) award based on the assumptions that the Federal Board of Revenue will successfully collect the targeted tax revenues of Rs5.83tn next year.

Additionally, the province is hoping to collect provincial tax revenue of Rs272.57bn, up by 23.39pc from outgoing year’s estimates of Rs220.89bn. It is targeting non-tax income of Rs132bn compared to this year’s estimates of Rs96.18bn, including net hydel profits of Rs25bn. The foreign project assistance flows next year are expected to rise to Rs65.20bn. Further, the capital receipts (loans and loan recoveries), including private investment of Rs25bn in P3 provincial infrastructure schemes, are estimated to be Rs79.2bn.

The size of the total provincial consolidated fund, which includes Rs420.34bn on account of loans purchased by the government for the state trading in wheat in addition to the current revenues and current capital account income, jumps to Rs2,653.01bn from Rs2,240.63 this year.0

Major provincial spending consists of current expenditures of Rs1427.90bn on general public service (Rs835.10bn), law and order (Rs189.70bn), economic affairs (Rs123.40bn), health (Rs175.70bn), education (Rs77.20bn), debt repayments (Rs54.20bn), investments that include financing of the provincial pension fund (Rs40bn), repayment of wheat trading loans (Rs147.20bn) and development budget of Rs560bn.

The Buzdar government has estimated the provincial surplus next year to be around Rs125bn, up from the outgoing fiscal’s savings of Rs39bn, to finance the federal fiscal deficit to keep it from expanding beyond the target of 6.3pc.

Major new tax initiatives include withdrawal of the proposed motor vehicle tax relief on old vehicles and reduction in its rate by 75pc for electric vehicles to promote a cleaner environment. It, nevertheless, brought tractor trade under the tax net, triggering fears that this essential machine for agriculture will become dearer.

The finance minister said the Punjab government had decided to rope in all professionals (doctors, lawyers, services) who are assessed for the purpose of assessing income tax into a professional tax net. The entertainment services like cinema, theatres, concerts, circus, sports events, races, films, fashion and mobile stage shows are proposed to be brought under the purview of the Punjab Revenue Authority with introductory zero tax without input tax adjustment.

Makhdum Hashim began his speech by recounting the measures taken by the Imran Khan government to revitalise the broken economy it had inherited on coming into power in 2018 and successfully protected people and national economy from the adverse impacts of the pandemic. He said Punjab’s economic performance in spite of the pandemic was commendable. “We have grown our provincial tax and non-tax receipts by more than 13pc this year in spite of tax relief of over Rs50bn given to people to combat the negative effects of the pandemic,” he said.

He said the new budget had been designed with the ambition to sustain and accelerate the current economic growth. He said the provincial government had enforced a strict monitoring regime on expenditure with prudent spending. He said the government’s development priorities and its annual development programme are guided by the Punjab Growth Strategy 2023 and Punjab Spatial Strategy 2047.

“The government aims to accelerate growth momentum gained during the current year and, hence, its development investment is designed to push economic growth, create jobs and improve productivity. The guiding principles adopted for the next fiscal’s development programme include growth-led investment, inclusive and balanced regional development, transformation of agriculture sector, human development through skills development, enabling environment for the private sector resource mobilisation, and targeted investments in priority projects through the Economic Revival Programme. Focus on regional equalisation for the development of south Punjab will also support the development of the backward areas of the province. Some of the critical priorities for south Punjab include education and health, infrastructure linkages and connectivity, agriculture, industrial and urban development,” he added.

Published in Dawn, June 15th, 2021
 
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Lahore City lives in utter 'Darkness', most Street lights off. 90% streets, malls roads, highway lights are off in Lahore, thank to Local and Punjab govt.

Lahore city a mega grand city has started to wear down in following ways and the PTI Punjab government and local societies must pay critical attention to the uplift of the historic city:


  • Lahore now has gone dark, very dark during night, street lights are mostly off, canal bank road lighting is so low, historic buildings look dark haunted places with no lights, in streets and housing societies and the main roads of Lahore have low visibility LED lights of no good, too many accidents due to over traffic, Street lighting has become a major issue in the overall city.
  • Lahore now has a major water problem, water tables has gone low.
  • Lahore city waste management was one the best which made it the most cleanest city and now pollution levels are rising again very high as the city has become very large.
  • Roads in housing societies and local town blocks are mostly broken, unclean while main roads are better maintained. Road markings have mostly gone. Road signs and location marking boards are very less.
  • Due to too many long trees and branches have not been cut by LDA, Lahore PTI government and tree branches trimming is necessary as now all the trees are coming over all the roads, buildings and housing societies.
  • The beautification of the city has gone down, there used to be large projects for beautification which is not happening.
PTI lost Punjab after they appointed Usman Buzdar as a CM 🤣🤣
 
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Lahore City lives in utter 'Darkness', most Street lights off. 90% streets, malls roads, highway lights are off in Lahore, thank to Local and Punjab govt.

Lahore city a mega grand city has started to wear down in following ways and the PTI Punjab government and local societies must pay critical attention to the uplift of the historic city:


  • Lahore now has gone dark, very dark during night, street lights are mostly off, canal bank road lighting is so low, historic buildings look dark haunted places with no lights, in streets and housing societies and the main roads of Lahore have low visibility LED lights of no good, too many accidents due to over traffic, Street lighting has become a major issue in the overall city.
  • Lahore now has a major water problem, water tables has gone low.
  • Lahore city waste management was one the best which made it the most cleanest city and now pollution levels are rising again very high as the city has become very large.
  • Roads in housing societies and local town blocks are mostly broken, unclean while main roads are better maintained. Road markings have mostly gone. Road signs and location marking boards are very less.
  • Due to too many long trees and branches have not been cut by LDA, Lahore PTI government and tree branches trimming is necessary as now all the trees are coming over all the roads, buildings and housing societies.
  • The beautification of the city has gone down, there used to be large projects for beautification which is not happening.
Lahore is not Punjab, Patwari 😂
 
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We all know how Imran Khan, PTI and PTI Punjab with CM Usman Buzdar Khan has performed badly in Punjab in almost last 3+ years. Only 2 years remain for PTI to rule over Punjab and this government. Will PTI turn around this time seriously? Will PTI take back Punjab in next election after the budget? Will as we all know PTI Punjab make annoucements but never implement them properly, only stories are heard from PTI Imran Khan government for Punjab but nothing concrete ever happened.

Punjabis 110 million now know, they have been living in extreme high prices, only one Province who pays full gs prices, full electricity prices, full petrol and full water prices despite shortage and ever rising daily item prices. Those who live in Lahore city know every road in Lahore is fully dark without street lights, proper road management, lack of new projects, no new recreational parks and activities and lack of a proper Lahore Master Plan to make life easy. Out of Lahore big cities of Punjab and less road connection, no new big projects to sustain the ever growing population of Punjab with 110 million touching now. Lack of Governance, law and order, police are some of the problems plaging Punjab. Although CM PTI Usman Buzdar has worked tremendously but still very long way to go.

Punjab Budget for Road Bridges & Education , Health
• Roads =Rs 146,403 M
• Education = Rs 33,924 M
• Health = 18,602 M


Punjab budget

PUNJAB is where the battle for power will be fought in 2023. Punjab is also where PTI parliamentarians are perhaps most discontented with the ‘austere’ policies of their government and looking towards their leadership to give them something to sell to their constituents burdened by inflation, eroding incomes, job losses and development infrastructure gaps. PTI allies in the province are also not happy with the way the government has treated them. It is, therefore, natural for the ruling party to focus on Punjab in the run-up to the elections and execute public works schemes that are important for voters and can improve its candidates’ prospects. The Punjab budget 2021-22 is a major policy step in that direction. Apart from announcing a three-year district development package of Rs360bn to engage its legislators and complete schemes proposed by them, the government has enhanced development funds by more than 66pc to stimulate growth in line with federal strategy. Among other major initiatives, it seeks to launch the Universal Health Insurance project to cover the entire province by the end of 2021 and speed up investment in social and economic infrastructure. Additionally, it has decided to continue hefty tax concessions to protect businesses and provide relief to urban middle-class households during Covid-19.

With just two years left to create a positive impression, the Buzdar dispensation, which has earned flak for what its critics refer to as incompetence, is all set to go full throttle on its planned spending spree from the start of the new fiscal. Political motivation notwithstanding, the province is in dire need of public investment to repair deteriorating infrastructure, as well as qualitative and quantitative improvement in public service delivery. The infrastructure gap has expanded and service delivery depreciated since the PTI’s ascent to power, a major reason why the government hasn’t succeeded in diminishing popular political support for the PML-N, especially in the central and northern districts of Punjab. Indeed, the incumbent administration has made a few ‘soft interventions’ over time to shift investment focus to human development by spending more money on public health and education, and digitisation of the provincial economy in contrast to its predecessor’s penchant for large infrastructure schemes. But the experience of the last few years shows that ‘wholesome’ improvement in human development indicators is not possible without building the economic infrastructure to create jobs and alleviate poverty. Political compulsions seem to have taught the rulers of Punjab the same — albeit belatedly.

Published in Dawn, June 16th, 2021


Follow PTI Punjab Twitter handle:

Buzdar is the worst thing that has happened to Punjab since independence. Corrupt incompetent. Good for nothing.
 
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Buzdar is the worst thing that has happened to Punjab since independence. Corrupt incompetent. Good for nothing.
Not since independence. Since independence Sharif family is the worst thing that happened to Punjab
 
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PTI not performed well because of funding and economy issue , now pubjab government is releasing billions of rupees for the MPAs , buzdar is good and honest man compared to a dugduggi shobazzz shooreeef , mark my words, khan will prefer buzdar CM of pubjab again after winning next election
 
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Buzdar is the worst thing that has happened to Punjab since independence. Corrupt incompetent. Good for nothing.

Worst than Hitler, worst than @Norwegian on Defence.pk, Usman Khan Buzdar has been the worst CM of Punjab ever, literally systematically destroyed Punjab economy, huge income and daily lives of 110 million strong Punjabis in the province. All thanks to Imran Khan our PM and his big Ego.
 
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Worst than Hitler, worst than @Norwegian on Defence.pk, Usman Khan Buzdar has been the worst CM of Punjab ever, literally systematically destroyed Punjab economy, huge income and daily lives of 110 million strong Punjabis in the province. All thanks to Imran Khan our PM and his big Ego.
Destroyed Lahoris economy
 
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This is assuming punjabis give votes based on performance. Ain't that the joke of the century 😁
 
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