Saturday, October 11, 2008
ISLAMABAD: Pakistans economic managers are making desperate endeavours to get dollar inflows from all possible avenues including the Islamic Development Bank (IDB). In this regard, it is striving to achieve a $500 million loan under Trade Finance Facility to purchase oil products.
In another relevant development, the Economic Cooperation Organisations ECO Bank has recently approved a $50 million loan facility for Pakistan, which will be used to obtain petroleum products in the coming weeks.
After attending annual meeting of Bretton Woods Institutions (BWI), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB), at Washington from October 10 to 13, Finance Secretary Dr Waqar Masood would go to Turkey to attend a Board of Governors meeting of the IDB in order to pursue the bank to extend $500 million loan facility.
The Board of Governors of the IDB is scheduled to hold a two-day meeting on October 17 and 18 in which the secretary finance would represent Pakistan, an official source told The News here on Friday.
Pakistani authorities, sources said, are hoping that Saudi Arabia would announce the much-awaited oil facility worth $5 billion on deferred payments during the upcoming Friends of Pakistan (FOP) forum, which will be held by next month in the UAE. Although the US Undersecretary of State, Richard Boucher had made it clear that the Friends of Pakistan was not meant for providing financial assistance and Washington was asking the IMF to support Pakistan.
Pakistan may face problems after the second quarter of the current financial year as it will have to pay $500 million Eurobond installment by January 2009. When a high-level official in the finance ministry was contacted for comments, he said that Pakistan is asking IDB to come forward for rescuing the ailing economy. The IDB has so far approved $100 million Trade Finance Facility during the current fiscal year and Islamabad is asking them to approve the remaining amount of $400 million in the near future, said the official.
The ongoing second quarter (October-Dec) is quite crucial for Pakistan as it will determine future course of action for tackling complex economic issues, said the official and added that either Pakistan will go for a bailout package from the IMF, or bilateral friendly countries will come forward to give dollar inflows for rescuing Pakistans economy.
According to estimates done by the multilateral creditors including the IMF, WB and ADB, Pakistan requires $7 billion to bridge its financing gap on external front in the wake of yawning current account deficit. Although, the government had taken measures to curtail imports by slapping regulatory duty as well as imposing 100 per cent L/C margins on luxury items, but these measures failed to achieve the desired results.
The creditors are asking the government to take some more stringent measures to curtail its growing trade deficit, which was well above $2 billion in September 2008.