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The nature of aid dependence

ALOK31

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Pakistan’s debt servicing burden has once again reached unsustainable levels. As the exchange rate depreciates rapidly under balance of payments pressures, the economic crisis deepens. Amidst the gathering storm, the current high level of indebtedness has become a cause of concern for the government, parliament and the opposition parties. It may be helpful to examine the factors underlying the perennial problem of Pakistan’s aid dependence to understand why such a crisis recurs with unsettling regularity.
Consider first, the magnitude of the debt crisis at hand. The State Bank of Pakistan’s data shows that the total external debt and liabilities are now over $60 billion, while domestic debt stands at Rs6,231 billion which is even higher ($66 billion at the current exchange rate). The total debt and liabilities, domestic plus external are 67.4 per cent of the GDP. The stock of total debt may not be overwhelming. However, it is the annual flow of external debt servicing relative to the foreign exchange earning capacity that constitutes a crippling burden. The external debt servicing in 2011 was $8.86 billion which is equivalent to half the country’s export earnings standing at $17.79 billion. In spite of record levels of remittances, such a debt servicing burden is simply unsustainable, if Pakistan is to import key items such as fuel, fertilisers and cooking oil that are so necessary for the functioning of the economy and society.
The fiscal picture is just as grim. The combined external and domestic debt servicing burden constitutes about 70 per cent of the government’s gross revenue receipts. Thus Pakistan is faced with a harsh fact: if the civilian government is to subsist, courts are to function, critical subsidies on food and fertilisers are to be provided, key ongoing public-sector projects are to continue and armed forces personnel are to be paid salaries and their weapons maintained, then foreign aid is an urgent necessity at present.
Why is Pakistan so aid dependent? The answer lies in two features of an economic structure that has been shaped by successive elite-based, rent-seeking regimes in Pakistan’s history: (a) The low domestic savings rate which at 12 per cent of GDP is inadequate to finance the investment rate of 24 per cent of GDP required to generate an annual economic growth rate of 6 per cent. The resultant ‘savings gap’ has historically been filled by foreign aid. Cheap loans based on foreign aid further reinforced the proclivity of the ruling elite for rents (unearned income) and ostentatious consumption rather than savings for investment. (b) The provision of direct and indirect subsidies together with import protection induced the emergence of a textile industry (predominant in the manufacturing sector), which tended to concentrate on the low value added end of the textile range and lacked international competitiveness. This set the mould of a manufacturing sector which was unable to diversify, take risks and innovate: hence its capacity to increase foreign exchange earnings for the country was severely constrained.
The low domestic savings rate on the one hand, and a manufacturing sector that was unable to provide enough foreign exchange to finance the import requirements of a high growth trajectory on the other, precluded growth sustainability. Thus relatively high GDP growth could only be achieved during the military regimes of Ayub Khan, Ziaul Haq and Pervez Musharraf respectively, when large foreign aid inflows were available. The structural constraint to the growth of foreign exchange earnings was manifested during each of these periods when the balance of payments deficits built up rapidly. As aid declined in the subsequent periods of civilian government, so did GDP growth.
Pakistan’s aid dependence is rooted in the very structure of the economy. It has been shaped by an institutional framework that restricts the process of savings and investments to the elite. Therefore, aid dependence can be overcome only by restructuring the economy through an institutional change that enables the middle class and the poor to participate in the process of savings, investment and innovation.


The nature of aid dependence – The Express Tribune
 
Per capita aid received by India is the lowest in south Asia..much much lesser than what Pakistan and Bangladesh received.
 
India is the highest aid reciever in Asia... And India has the highest debt in BRICs and South Asia....
 
India is the highest aid reciever in Asia... And India has the highest debt in BRICs and South Asia....
Yeah right & whose economy is highest in south Asia. Now come back to real world & compare in % in South Asia concept as your own countrymen were saying that % is best way to show reality. I am waiting for you in reality wonderland.:hang2:
 
Yeah right & whose economy is highest in south Asia. Now come back to real world & compare in % in South Asia concept as your own countrymen were saying that % is best way to show reality. I am waiting for you in reality wonderland.:hang2:

Its because aid doesnt reach all Indians... The higher caste/sardars/babus in India eat it all up

Icewolf with his madrassa math and logic!!
Hey dude..read my last post clearly...even trolling takes a bit of skill these days..else you just end up being insulted! :D

Its because aid doesnt reach all Indians... The higher caste/sardars/babus in India eat it all up
 
Its because aid doesnt reach all Indians... The higher caste/sardars/babus in India eat it all up
are u joking bro in india have no sardari or feudal system like pakistan.

The feudal archetype in Pakistan consists of landlords with large joint families possessing hundreds or even thousands of acres of land. They seldom make any direct contribution to agricultural production. Instead, all work is done by peasants or tenants who live at subsistence level. In Pakistan's remote areas, one "periodically run into vast estates — comparable to medieval Europe — in which the landowner runs the town, perhaps operates a private prison in which enemies are placed, and sometimes makes local people dependant through debt bondage, generation after generation."

Feudalism in Pakistan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
are u joking bro in india have no sardari or feudal system like pakistan.

The feudal archetype in Pakistan consists of landlords with large joint families possessing hundreds or even thousands of acres of land. They seldom make any direct contribution to agricultural production. Instead, all work is done by peasants or tenants who live at subsistence level. In Pakistan's remote areas, one "periodically run into vast estates — comparable to medieval Europe — in which the landowner runs the town, perhaps operates a private prison in which enemies are placed, and sometimes makes local people dependant through debt bondage, generation after generation."

Feudalism in Pakistan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Son, India has all of it, including caste system.

Indian feudalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Use of the term feudalism to describe India applies a concept of medieval European origin, according to which the nobility held lands from the Crown in exchange for military service, and vassals were in turn tenants of the nobles, while the peasants (villeins or serfs) were obliged to live on their lord's land and give him homage, labor, and a share of the produce, notionally in exchange for military protection. The term Indian feudalism is an attempt to classify Indian history according to a European model.
Historians have become very reluctant to classify other societies into European models and today it is rare for Indian history to be described as feudal by academics; it still done in popular usage, however, but only for pejorative reasons to express disfavour, typically by critics. These include zamindar, jagir, deshmukh, chaudhary and samanta. Some of these "systems" were abolished after the independence of India and the rest of the Subcontinent, but most still exist, officially or in its remnants. D. D. Kosambi and R. S. Sharma, together with Daniel Thorner, brought peasants into the study of Indian history for the first time.[1]

 
Son, India has all of it, including caste system.
bro caste system also practice by pakistani muslims and indian muslim and never forget 1st cusine marrige .by the way fudeal system practice in india but only remain in 2-3 states .mostly indian[90%] states are free from fudeal system unlike pakistan where fudeal system fallowed by in whole pakistan .
 
bro caste system also practice by pakistani muslims and indian muslim and never forget 1st cusine marrige .by the way fudeal system practice in india but only remain in 2-3 states .mostly indian[90%] states are free from fudeal system unlike pakistan where fudeal system fallowed by in whole pakistan .

Caste system is haram in Islam... No Muslim practices caste system..

1st cousin marriage.. WTF and what a huge stereotype..

Feudal system is practiced in Sindh and Balochistan mostly...
 
India is the highest aid reciever in Asia... And India has the highest debt in BRICs and South Asia....

You are right. India has always received more aid than our country. Here is the proof from World Bank---

ScreenHunter_07+Aug.+24+19.13.jpg
 
You are right. India has always received more aid than our country. Here is the proof from World Bank---

ScreenHunter_07+Aug.+24+19.13.jpg

In absolute terms, yes we are higher. Consider it in per-capita though. In 2012, India got 2.6 billion for a population of 1.2 billion. That's about 2.3 per person. Pakistan got 3 Billion for 180 million people. Previously as well, India has been higher in total, but Pakistan in per capita.
 

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