(August 22 2008): A senior Standard and Poor's executive has stated that while Musharraf's resignation has solved one dimension of the political crisis, the government has to grapple with an entire range of other issues - on the political and economic fronts.
There is sufficient evidence to conclude that Musharraf's departure led to the subsequent strengthening of the stock market as well as the external value of the rupee. However, analysts, political as well as economic, are reluctant to accept these corrections as long term for two major reasons.
First, the stock market in this country is manipulated by a few big players and it is significant that the former President Musharraf occasionally used the performance of the stock market in the aftermath of any rumour to dislodge him from his office as proof positive that the market supported him.
Musharraf's final departure led to a strengthening of the stock market which, therefore may only partly reflect the relevance of political uncertainty as a key determining factor in the stock market's behaviour; for it is fairly evident to all that after the President's departure political instability may have been reduced but not completely eradicated as issues between Coalition partners associated with the restoration of the November 2 judiciary appear to have resurfaced.
Second the rupee value has strengthened in the open market vis-a-vis the dollar at a time when the dollar is also strengthening in value against all major currencies of the world; however the interbank rupee-dollar parity being less than in the open market, indicates that speculation against the Pak currency is rampant and SBP will be well advised to counter the tendency to hoard forex currencies to hedge against inflation.
What is, however, significant for the people of this country is that the domestic value of the rupee, or in other words the inflationary spiral unleashed by flawed economic policies of the previous regime, has not yet been reversed.
There is also a growing consensus that the present government appears to be drifting with respect to its economic policies - a stance that stands many a government in good stead if the macroeconomic fundamentals are good. However, today Pakistan's macroeconomic performance is close to abysmal with high rates of government borrowing, both from the internal and the external marketplace, failure to raise revenue in line with a rise in expenditure, and a rising budget deficit.
Add these figures with the two indicators that directly impact on the people, the voting base of the government, namely, inflation and unemployment and there must be cause for serious concern at the highest level of government.
This concern unfortunately is not visible. In contrast the general perception is that the government is complacent on the economic front, a condition that fails to reflect the ominous fact that time is running out for the Coalition. And with Musharraf no longer in the picture as well as with the lapse of sufficient time since the newly elected government was installed - nearly six months - people are now likely to lay the blame for their economic woes on the present government.
In addition the coming month of Ramazan, a month where retailers make windfall profits, is going to increase pressure on the government to maintain the prices of essential food items. It is to be hoped that the government understands that it does not have the luxury of tackling one issue at a time but needs to deal with a multiplicity of issues simultaneously.