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Roads to nowhere: Pakistan’s misguided obsession with infrastructure

S.Y.A

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The government is building more airports, roads and railways, even though the existing ones are underused

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From the print edition | Asia
Jan 19th 2017, 15:42
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NEARLY 20 years after it opened, Pakistan’s first motorway still has a desolate feel. There is scant traffic along the 375km link between Islamabad and Lahore (pictured). Motorists can drive for miles without seeing another vehicle, save perhaps for traffic cops manning speed traps. As the two cities are already connected by the Grand Trunk Road, which is 90km shorter and toll-free, there is simply not much demand for a motorway.

Yet this $1.2bn white elephant is one of the proudest achievements of Nawaz Sharif, who was prime minister when it opened in 1997 and is once again running Pakistan. Mr Sharif, who enjoys comparisons to Sher Shah Suri, a 16th-century ruler who renovated the Grand Trunk Road, never tires of talking about it. He regained power in 2013 with a campaign which both harked back to his famous road and promised more infrastructure to come. He even pledged bullet trains that would enable pious passengers to leave Karachi after dawn prayers and arrive in Peshawar, more than 1,000km to the north, in time for evening worship.

It is an article of faith for Mr Sharif and his party, the Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N), that investment in infrastructure is a foolproof way of boosting the economy. His government is racing to finish umpteen projects before the next election, due by mid-2018, including a metro line in Lahore and a new airport for Islamabad. The likelihood is that the new airport (which has been plagued with problems, including runways that have been built too close together) will be as underused as most of the country’s other airports, many of which are modern and spacious.

Pakistan’s infrastructure is underused because the economic boom it was meant to trigger has never arrived. Over the past three years the government has successfully staved off a balance-of-payments crisis, achieving some measure of macroeconomic stability. It has trimmed the budget deficit, partly by broadening the tax take and partly by cutting energy subsidies. That, along with lower oil prices, has narrowed Pakistan’s trade deficit and allowed it to begin rebuilding its foreign-exchange reserves. The stockmarket has risen by 50% since the end of 2015.

But terrorism and insurgency have put off investors, both foreign and domestic. The country is also held back by inefficient and often cartelised industries, which have fallen behind rivals in India and Bangladesh. Exports, 60% of which are textiles, have been shrinking for years. Much more needs to be done to create an educated workforce. Almost half of all those aged five to 16 are out of school—25m children. Health, like education, is woefully underfunded, in part because successive governments shy away from taxing the wealthy. Only 0.6% of the population pays income tax. As the World Bank puts it, Pakistan’s long-term development depends on “better nutrition, health and education”.

But Mr Sharif’s government is pinning its hopes on yet more infrastructure to fix the country’s economic problems, in the form of a $46bn investment scheme known as the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Much of it is being financed on commercial terms, including several power plants. Pakistan undoubtedly needs to relieve a chronic shortage of electricity. But critics fear the country will struggle to pay back the debt, especially if foreign-exchange earnings from exports continue to dwindle. At the very least, the government will need to continue chasing deadbeat customers to pay their bills and cutting expensive subsidies—steps that are deeply unpopular.

In addition to boosting Pakistan’s power supply, CPEC is supposed to link China by land to Gwadar, a deep-water port on the Arabian Sea, in the hope of creating a lucrative new trade route. New or upgraded roads will stretch the length of the country. The Karakoram Highway between the two countries, which was built in the 1960s at vast expense over a high and crumbly mountain range, is being upgraded as part of the trade corridor. But it forever needs patching up and is little used. Sceptics say Xinjiang, China’s westernmost region, is still too poor for better transport links to make much difference to Pakistan’s economy. Securing isolated stretches of road from separatist rebels in Balochistan is also gobbling up large amounts of cash.

Lijian Zhao, a Chinese diplomat, says China is all too aware that Pakistan needs more than just big-ticket infrastructure if it is to flourish. Disarmingly, he praises the efforts of Britain and other countries to improve Pakistan’s “software”, such as education and the rule of law. “But China’s expertise is hardware,” says Mr Zhao.

It may not concern Mr Sharif unduly if the next generation of roads is as deserted as the last. Civilian governments have often struggled to get much done in between military coups, but voters are impressed by gleaming new projects, even if they never use them. It’s an approach that has worked for Mr Sharif’s brother, Shehbaz, the popular chief minister of Punjab province. He has lavished resources on endless sequences of over- and underpasses to create “signal-free” traffic corridors in Lahore, the provincial capital, that are of most benefit to the rich minority who can afford cars.

There are limits, however. Khawaja Saad Rafique, the railways minister, recently admitted to parliament that the country would not be getting a bullet train after all. “When we asked the Chinese about it, they laughed at us,” he said.

http://www.economist.com/news/asia/...tan_s_misguided_obsession_with_infrastructure
 
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Ha, ha... a hindutva inspired article.

Misinformation and blatant lies... pak is lacking in infrastructure and not the reverse. Roads are built not only to address current needs but also on future forecast capacity requirements.

Just because a road here or a road there seems currently under used does not mean it's unnecessary. Wait till CPEC fully kicks in... you would be wishing we had built even wider and more extensive network.
 
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I feel sorry about the author who tried to write an artcile about infrastructure development and lacks basic knowledge of the benefits of infrastructure development
 
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NEARLY 20 years after it opened, Pakistan’s first motorway still has a desolate feel. There is scant traffic along the 375km link between Islamabad and Lahore (pictured). Motorists can drive for miles without seeing another vehicle, save perhaps for traffic cops manning speed traps. As the two cities are already connected by the Grand Trunk Road, which is 90km shorter and toll-free, there is simply not much demand for a motorway.

:wacko: And he post single random picture as proof.
 
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Though GT road is shorter route but it take longer to get from Lahore to Islamabad then on motorwary. I wish goverment extend Sialkot-Lahore motorway in to Gujrat, Jhelum and Pindi.
 
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Though GT road is shorter route but it take longer to get from Lahore to Islamabad then on motorwary. I wish goverment extend Sialkot-Lahore motorway in to Gujrat, Jhelum and Pindi.

Not needed.. those cities are a stone throw away from eachother... it takes what 2 hours from sialkot to gujrat? and rwp to jhelum is like 2.5 hours?

GT road is toll free o_O? Im sure there is a toll plaza just when you cross the Ravi.
:lol:

One pays like 400-500rs on gt road tolls.
 
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Not needed.. those cities are a stone throw away from eachother... it takes what 2 hours from sialkot to gujrat? and rwp to jhelum is like 2.5 hours?

Around about 2.5-3 hours from Kharian to Islamabad because of speed limit and traffic on gt road. With motorway it will take less then 1.5 hours. Some will say this will make current ISB-Lahore motorway kind of useless. But remember current ISB-Lahore motorway will still be used for people coming from south to Islamabad, Peshawr and Northen areas.

China-Pakistan-Economic-Corridor-2.jpg


After Sialkot-Lahore motorway they should extend it to Gujrat, Jhelum, Pindi and Islamabad. This will also reduce Isb-Lahore distance by 1 hour. They can build it on BOT basis like Sialkot-Lahore motorway, I'm sure many investors will come forward because of traffic.
 
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:lol:

One pays like 400-500rs on gt road tolls.

"As the two cities are already connected by the Grand Trunk Road, which is 90km shorter and toll-free, there is simply not much demand for a motorway."

Then wtf is this all about! Seriously, economist just lost a lot of respect in my eyes. This has to be one of the most amateurish articles I have read in a long time.
 
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"As the two cities are already connected by the Grand Trunk Road, which is 90km shorter and toll-free, there is simply not much demand for a motorway."

Then wtf is this all about! Seriously, economist just lost a lot of respect in my eyes. This has to be when of the most amateurish article I have read in a long time.

Also many motorways are being build on BOT basis, meaning federal goverment isn't spending much from their own development budget or taking loan for them.

BOT becoming popular mode of road construction

National Highway Authority (NHA) has been focusing on Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) projects to involve private sector in highway building projects as the present government wants to upgrade road infrastructure in the next five to seven years.

The government wants to double the road density till 2025 and this mammoth development goal can only be achieved with the support of private sector, an official of National Highway Authority ( NHA) told on Saturday. He said that public private partnership is becoming an essential component of NHA development strategy. The objectives set by NHA, he said, include development, off-budget financing, efficiency, Investment, sustainability and revenues generation.
Re-carpeting and renovation work of Islamabad-Lahore Motorway (M2) completed recently is one of the big achievements of NHA on BOT basis, he added.


The total cost of the project was Rs30.935 billion, which includes renovation of toll plazas, weigh stations workshops, as well and the total re-carpeted and renovated length is 714kms.
Renovation and overlay work on the M-2 had started in January 2015 by MORE (FWO), the build operate transfer (BOT) concessionaire of the project. M-2 was handed over to FWO on December 15, 2014 for operation and maintenance for the next 20 years.

He said another major under-construction BOT project of NHA was 136 km Karachi- Hyderabad Motorway (M-9) which connects Karachi to Hyderabad and would cost about Rs. 24 Billion. The project work started on March 16,2015 and will be completed by December 2017. Its 80 km portion would be opened for traffic within a week time.
Among the upcoming BOT projects, he said construction work of 296 km Hyderabad-Sukkur Motorway is likely to start soon. The project would be executed on BOT basis and its estimated cost is over Rs 160 billion.
The motorway project starting from Sukkur will touch Khairpur, Nowshehro Feroze,Nawab Shah, Mitiari, Hala and Jamshoro and terminate at Hyderabad.

About 90-kilometre Sialkot-Lahore Motorway would cost Rs 56 billion and will be built on BOT basis and it would be completed in three years. The proposed motorway project would help link remote areas with big cities and reduce the distance between Sialkot and Lahore.

Starting from Sahowala-Sambrial,the motorway will end at Kala Shah Kaku via Daska, Gujranwala and Kamonki. Moreover the NHA plans to undertake the up gradation and dualization of Multan-Muzaffargarh-D.G. Khan Section of Multan-Qilla Saifullah Highway (N-70) on BOT basis.

The NHA invited bids for undertaking upgradation and dualization of the section and a Concession Agreement has been finalized, the official informed. The Concession Agreement has been signed, and the construction work shall be commenced after achievement of Financial Close by the Concessionaire. He said that the project construction period will be 24 months from achievement of financial close.—APP
http://pakobserver.net/bot-becoming-popular-mode-of-road-construction-2/

Lahore-ISB renovation on BOT basis. Karachi-Hydrabad-Sukkur-Multan motorways again on BOT basis. SIalkot-Lahore motorway again on BOT basis. If these roads are useless then why investors are throwing away their money.
 
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the fastest way to development is connectivity by road, when a farmer in Pindi Ghaib can sell his daily fresh milk and produce to consumers in Islamabad
 
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whatever moron came up with this article..Pakistan is extremely resource deprived leading to small pockets of economic activity with no integration..roads tend to transform all this into a trade market...and spurr economic activity...twenty years ago Saudi built roads to no where and everyone laughed..today it is the same roads which give Saudi its speedy economic activity..goods sold in one corner can be sent to another over night...small enterprises have never felt the need to operate their own trucking fleets for remote deliveries..leading to more cost efficient last mile goods delivery...which benefits the consumer...
 
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The government is building more airports, roads and railways, even though the existing ones are underused

From the print edition | Asia
Jan 19th 2017, 15:42
more

NEARLY 20 years after it opened, Pakistan’s first motorway still has a desolate feel. There is scant traffic along the 375km link between Islamabad and Lahore (pictured). Motorists can drive for miles without seeing another vehicle, save perhaps for traffic cops manning speed traps. As the two cities are already connected by the Grand Trunk Road, which is 90km shorter and toll-free, there is simply not much demand for a motorway.

Stopped reading after this, i mean seriously??? The author should try taking the Lahore exit every day after 4 PM. There are 16 gates and at least half KM long line at each of them.

GT road is toll free? I usually travel from Lahore to Khurianwala, after exiting the motorway at Kot Abdul Malik, i have to pay PKR 160 toll tax one way till Kurianwala.

I have not taken GT road to Islamabad in a long time but i am sure Toll Tax is more or less the same.
 
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NEARLY 20 years after it opened, Pakistan’s first motorway still has a desolate feel. There is scant traffic along the 375km link between Islamabad and Lahore (pictured). Motorists can drive for miles without seeing another vehicle


there are half and hour to hour long queues on the exits.....
traffic is not scant infact might be becoming overcrowded in certain stretches like kala shah kaku (Gujranwala) to lahore
seriously which world those guys live in
 
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