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Pakistan’s Army of Overseas Workers Keeps Economy Afloat

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Pakistan’s Army of Overseas Workers Keeps Economy Afloat


By Khurrum Anis - Mar 26, 2013



Living in poverty in a mud shack in Pakistan, Mazhar Ali dropped out of school, sold the family’s two buffalo and bought a visa to work in Dubai. The money he sends home is paying for a new house.

“We’re going to build three rooms with bricks and cement, plus a courtyard and a washroom,” said his younger brother Azhar in Larkana, hometown of the ruling People’s Party about 300 kilometers north of Karachi. “We will then start marrying one by one, starting with Mazhar sometime this year.”

Almost 10 million Pakistanis work overseas and the sum they’ve sent home has doubled in the four years ended June to a record $13 billion.

The family’s change in fortunes reflects a rising trend of rich nations with aging workers tapping poorer ones for labor -- total remittances to developing economies will rise 7.9 percent this year, and reach $534 billion by 2015, the World Bank says. For Pakistan, the income offers a source of stability, with the country poised for its first civilian handover of government in May even amid power shortages, bombings and a Taliban insurgency.

“This is our savior for keeping Pakistan out of the oxygen tent,” Farooq Sattar, former Minister for Overseas Pakistanis said in an interview in Karachi last month before his party quit the government alliance. “It has kept us from a complete economic collapse.”

Almost 10 million Pakistanis work overseas and the sum they’ve sent home has doubled in the four years through June, to a record $13 billion.

Revenue Shortage
The rising tide of funds from overseas contrasts with a struggle by President Asif Ali Zardari’s administration to raise enough revenue to fund programs that would boost domestic growth.

Pakistan had to pay about $7.5 billion to the IMF between 2012 and 2015, Moody’s Investors Service said in July. The government repaid $3.2 billion as of Feb. 26, the central bank said.

The government is evaluating a possible further loan from the fund as a buffer against shocks, Saleem H. Mandviwalla said in December as Finance Minister.

The local currency has fallen on concern loan repayments will erode foreign-exchange reserves, which fell to $7.5 billion in January from $11.8 billion a year earlier, according to the central bank. The rupee traded at 98.35 per dollar at 9:30 in Pakistan, near a record low.

Rising Deficit
Pakistan was among the 15 lowest revenue-gathering nations in the world as a percentage of GDP, according to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency’s World Fact Book 2012. The South Asian nation recorded the highest budget deficit in two decades in the fiscal year through June as it missed its tax target.

The nation’s fiscal deficit may be 7.5 percent of gross domestic product this year, wider than the government’s target of 4.7 percent, the IMF said in January.

Among the biggest challenges for the government is the need to add almost 4,000 megawatts of power generation to end a shortage that’s causing blackouts for as long as 18 hours a day, idling factories and swelling unemployment. The government said energy shortages cut economic growth last year by as much as 4 percentage points.

“Extreme poverty has not risen as much as it would have without remittances,” Rashid Amjad, a professor at the Lahore School of Economics said in an e-mail. “Most of the remittances are flowing into consumption, real estate, housing and the stock market, and have played a critical role in keeping Pakistan’s economy afloat.”

Coming Election
Pakistan will hold parliamentary elections on May 11, after the outgoing government, led by Zardari’s Pakistan Peoples Party, became the first democratically elected administration in 65 years of independence to complete its term.

The Peoples Party, dogged by the energy crisis, security concerns and inflation above 7 percent, garnered half the support of its leading rival, the Pakistan Muslim League of former premier Nawaz Sharif, in a March 4 opinion poll published by Gallup Pakistan.

Remittances that fuel a thriving underground economy may rise further in the next few years as more Pakistanis seek employment overseas, said G.M. Arif, an economist at the Pakistan Institute of Development Economics in Islamabad.

Pakistan was among the world’s top 10 recipients of recorded remittances in 2012, according to the World Bank. Sattar estimates billions of rupees from abroad are unreported, transferred with the help of illegal money operators known as hawala or hundi. Pakistan’s recorded remittances would double if the illegal channels were closed, he said.

Tax Evaders
Some Pakistanis also use the system to avoid paying tax, said Nuzhat Ahmad, director of the Applied Economics Research Center at the University of Karachi.

“If I get a remittance and I buy a house from it, I can say my brother has sent me the money from abroad, and I don’t have to pay income tax,” she said from her office. “That’s a big downside” for the government.

Only 856,000 of the country’s 183 million people pay tax, according to the Federal Board of Revenue. Each taxpayer contributes on average 13,673 rupees.

In December, the government approved a plan to offer 3 million of Pakistan’s richest tax evaders a chance to pay a one- time 40,000-rupee penalty on undeclared income and assets of as much as 5 million rupees, in an effort to widen the tax net.

Meanwhile, many Pakistanis continue to abandon roles in the domestic economy for the promise of greater wealth overseas.

Dubai Hotel
Qamar-uz-Zaman, 33, works as a security supervisor at the Sofitel Palm Jumeirah resort in Dubai. He left his home in Kotli in Pakistan-administered Kashmir in 2011 after he realized his teaching job wouldn’t pay enough to feed his family. In two years he’s sent enough money home for his brother to set up a small cosmetics shop.

“Things have totally changed for us and now we’re very excited to plan Qamar’s wedding for which we definitely have enough money,” Zaheer Abbas, the family’s youngest brother, said by phone.

The rise in fortunes for families such as Qamar’s show why workers are tempted to take jobs in countries that often have harsh conditions for migrants.

A 2011 report in the Health and Human Rights journal cited cases of construction workers suffering heatstroke during 12- hour shifts in temperatures as high as 55 degrees Celsius (131 Fahrenheit) and female domestic staff working 100 hours a week.

For Mazhar, the gamble with the family’s cows has paid off. The 935 dirhams ($255) a month he earns has allowed him to repay an uncle who loaned him part of the cost of his visa, and the new house is almost finished.

“Then we will try to replace the cattle,” his brother Azhar said. “Before, we couldn’t think of buying anything. Just food.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Khurrum Anis in Karachi at kkhan14@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Merritt at dmerritt1@bloomberg.net


in the end its always the common folk of pakistan
 
Pakistanisss Zindabad :pakistan::pakistan::pakistan: to all Pakistanis all over the world and work hard and send more :pdf::partay::D
 
to all pakistanis in pakistan, how about getting off ur moribund butt and work hard and pay your taxes.

well said.

Those who always portray overseas pakistanis as not being "true" pakistanis should take a note of how we are helping the motherland.
 
well said.

Those who always portray overseas pakistanis as not being "true" pakistanis should take a note of how we are helping the motherland.

no man you are equal Pakistani as long as you love Pakistan from the bottom of heart my friend :pakistan::pakistan::pakistan:
 
no man you are equal Pakistani as long as you love Pakistan from the bottom of heart my friend :pakistan::pakistan::pakistan:

It does not matter what you tell.. Pakistani constitution do not allow dual nationals, to talk about Pakistan's internal matters.
In recent judgment CJ asked the dr. TuQ to reproduce his oath of alligience... and humiliated dr. TuQ for his foreign nationality.

to all pakistanis in pakistan, how about getting off ur moribund butt and work hard and pay your taxes.

Pakistan is not running without taxes.. and most of the forex is earned from Saudi Arabia.
In reality there is more money sent to UK and US from Pakistan rather than coming in.
Pakistani politicians and beurocrates have bought their passports and condominiums while earning from Pakistan.
 
good to know this.
i hope you reading this @somebozo
 
Last edited by a moderator:
It does not matter what you tell.. Pakistani constitution do not allow dual nationals, to talk about Pakistan's internal matters.
In recent judgment CJ asked the dr. TuQ to reproduce his oath of alligience... and humiliated dr. TuQ for his foreign nationality.
so you are saying overseas pakistanis are not Pakistani :rofl::rofl:
 
It does not matter what you tell.. Pakistani constitution do not allow dual nationals, to talk about Pakistan's internal matters.
In recent judgment CJ asked the dr. TuQ to reproduce his oath of alligience... and humiliated dr. TuQ for his foreign nationality.



Pakistan is not running without taxes.. and most of the forex is earned from Saudi Arabia.
In reality there is more money sent to UK and US from Pakistan rather than coming in.
Pakistani politicians and beurocrates have bought their passports and condominiums while earning from Pakistan.

Pakistani constitution doesn't allow dual nationalists to run for NA, which makes immense sense. Please don't pull the 'baicharay ex-patriot' card for hitting on CJ (which has its roots in CJ outmaneuvering Musharraf).

TuQ is a charlatan, any humilation which comes his way is well-deserved :P
 
The blessings of global banking slavery that we are forced to export out vital resources and raw materials while unable to exploit them for the betterment of our own people. Our economic confidence is dependent on Forex reserves of the very same colonial cronies which exploited us for two centuries and left their grip on our economies.
 
this is actually nothing they are holding back because of corruption, hopefully with the arrival of Ik this will double by his first term in office
 

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