bhangra12345
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2007
- Messages
- 591
- Reaction score
- 0
Much of this growth was not real growth but the effects of inflation/currency fluctuation.
The economist PM of Pakistan failed to mention this while claiming to double the economy in 5-6 years flat.
Actually, it is a result of "number management" + inflation.
Sometime around 2002, Pakistan changed its way of measuring GDP, so these two numbers are not comparable.
I questioned the sagacity behind the repeated comments by the senior leaders claiming that the economy had doubled in size in the six year period since 2001 implying that it had grown by 12 per cent a year. It was again repeated at the Lahore seminar by the senior officials that the GDP had increased from $70 billion to $140 billion in half a dozen years.This rate of increase would be plausible only if it was in nominal terms and factored in also the large (20 per cent or so) increase produced by the rebasing of the national income accounts to 2000-01.
In other words, a 12 per cent rate of increase was partly the result of inflation and partly the consequence of the accounting change in the estimation of national income accounts. No serious economic analyst uses nominal increases in GDP or GNP as a measure of the growth of the economy. If the rate of inflation jumped, say, to 100 per cent a year would the economic managers celebrate the fact that the size of the economy had more than doubled in one year?
DAWN - Opinion; May 08, 2007