Hmmm..can you tell us what happened in 1998..
Mr sharif did defaulted Pakistan
That default led to lowest growth oeriod in Pakistan history from 1998-2001 projects lile ghazi brotha were stopped, higjways left in the dust in middle and exist of all companies
Than musharraf came renegotiated all the loans , wrote off Much with help of USA. Stabilized the country and reignited foreign investments
We saw more foreign investment in his era tha the two great democracy
All Paris clubs loans were renegotiated and USA wrote off all of its portion of loans in excess of 2b$
Not sure what you are talking about.
On May 28, 1998 “Pakistan put national pride ahead of economic prudence by testing its nukes" Nawaz Sharif administration conducted nuclear tests. The United States and Japan had warned Pakistan against the nuclear tests, and threatened the nation with sanctions. Foreseeing international reprisal Nawaz Sharif established the National Self-Reliance fund to receive donations from resident and non-resident Pakistanis, emphasizing in a statement made on June 2, 1998 that it is time to “live as a proud nation rather than live in fear.”
The international community condemned the nuclear tests and the “IMF, Asian Development Bank and Export-Import Bank of Japan stopped all aid to Islamabad.
the day after the nuclear tests – the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) placed an indefinite freeze on foreign-exchange deposits, bank swaps and profit repatriation. This froze $13bn of resident and non-resident foreign currency deposits, which made up 1/3rd of total external debt.
In June, 1998 attempting to defend its currency, and to increase foreign exchange reserves, Pakistan allowed foreign currency holders to convert foreign deposits at the special rate of PKR 46/$1 as long as they acted before September 1, 1998. In addition to providing the special exchange rate, converted rupee deposits would benefit from full confidentiality and become exempt from wealth and income tax for a defined period of time.
On July 22, 1998 Pakistan introduced a “two-tier exchange rate mechanism comprising the official rate” of PKR 46/$1 “and the floating interbank rate” which was PKR 52/$1. At the same time Pakistan removed the SBP band that was previously fixed at PKR 46/$1 for spot buying and PKR 46/$1 for spot selling.
Averting Sovereign Default
Given the multi-billion dollar balance of payments gap (estimated to be $7.2bn in 98/99) and the dangerously low level of reserves (dropped to $541m in late-July), Pakistan was on the path to imminent sovereign default, all things held constant.Thankfully, things weren’t held constant and negotiations with the Paris and London clubs of creditors proved to be the nation’s saving grace. In August 1998, Pakistan was able to reschedule $4bn in debt payments – this stopped the rapid drain on foreign exchange reserves and marked the crisis’ turnaround.
Pakistan did not default on her debt, So, please for the love of GOD stop spreading false news