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The Perfect Doom Loop

Atif Mian's recent tweets on debt financing in Pakistan.

The Perfect Doom Loop

Accounting vs economics: When it comes to balance of payment crises, there's a temptation to look at financing or current account deficits and say, "we are short X billion dollars, let's bridge that gap through administrative actions by curtailing imports"

Tempting as this might be, it's a foolish policy that results in even greater disaster

When you try to cut imports through administrative restrictions, you essentially open multiple auction markets where some bureaucrat decides what is "essential" and what is not. It is a recipe for corruption and for gatekeepers to get rich quick

But let's leave that aside, the greater cost is economic

A restriction on imports, even with the most pious of bureaucrats, will inevitably strike at the heart of "production networks". For example, if an exporter cannot import raw material, or an intermediate input for production - the entire export chain will break down

Economists have carefully looked at the multiplier effects of disruptions in these production networks, and found them to be quite large. So now you have a situation where your attempt at closing the X bil $ gap has, (a) reduced economic output, and (b) further pressured balance of payment as exports will start drifting down

But this is not all, there's more pain to come!

Recall that the original problem was deficits, deficits in balance of payment, but also deficits on fiscal side - and very large deficits

What happens when growth slows down due to (a) above? A well-known fiscal math fact is that tax revenue is quite elastic to growth, but fiscal expenditure is not

In plain english, when growth slows, your tax receipts go down, but you still have to pay the salaries and service the debt. So when supply (growth) shrinks and deficits rise, you will see, (c) stronger inflation

Where are we then? (a) falling growth/output, (b) continued balance of payment pressures, and (c) stronger inflation

But, there is yet more pain to come ...

The import-curtailing administrative actions were deemed "necessary", because government was afraid to devalue the currency

So now you have (a), (b) and (c), while having a large black market exchange rate premium. Every investor knows gov cannot sustain the unsustainable, and eventually ER will snap.

So in anticipation, FDI dries up, domestic investment dries up, there is capital flight, there is hoarding of dollars, domestic liquidity dries up ...

This gives you, (d) a perfect doom loop.

So a policy that started with "plugging an accounting hole", ends up doing very serious - and totally avoidable - damage to the economy.
 
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It’s a typical case of an American living beyond his means using credit cards, and then spend rest of his life doing credit refinancing. While his quality of life goes for a toss.
 
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Atif Mian's recent tweets on debt financing in Pakistan.

The Perfect Doom Loop

Accounting vs economics: When it comes to balance of payment crises, there's a temptation to look at financing or current account deficits and say, "we are short X billion dollars, let's bridge that gap through administrative actions by curtailing imports"

Tempting as this might be, it's a foolish policy that results in even greater disaster

When you try to cut imports through administrative restrictions, you essentially open multiple auction markets where some bureaucrat decides what is "essential" and what is not. It is a recipe for corruption and for gatekeepers to get rich quick

But let's leave that aside, the greater cost is economic

A restriction on imports, even with the most pious of bureaucrats, will inevitably strike at the heart of "production networks". For example, if an exporter cannot import raw material, or an intermediate input for production - the entire export chain will break down

Economists have carefully looked at the multiplier effects of disruptions in these production networks, and found them to be quite large. So now you have a situation where your attempt at closing the X bil $ gap has, (a) reduced economic output, and (b) further pressured balance of payment as exports will start drifting down

But this is not all, there's more pain to come!

Recall that the original problem was deficits, deficits in balance of payment, but also deficits on fiscal side - and very large deficits

What happens when growth slows down due to (a) above? A well-known fiscal math fact is that tax revenue is quite elastic to growth, but fiscal expenditure is not

In plain english, when growth slows, your tax receipts go down, but you still have to pay the salaries and service the debt. So when supply (growth) shrinks and deficits rise, you will see, (c) stronger inflation

Where are we then? (a) falling growth/output, (b) continued balance of payment pressures, and (c) stronger inflation

But, there is yet more pain to come ...

The import-curtailing administrative actions were deemed "necessary", because government was afraid to devalue the currency

So now you have (a), (b) and (c), while having a large black market exchange rate premium. Every investor knows gov cannot sustain the unsustainable, and eventually ER will snap.

So in anticipation, FDI dries up, domestic investment dries up, there is capital flight, there is hoarding of dollars, domestic liquidity dries up ...

This gives you, (d) a perfect doom loop.

So a policy that started with "plugging an accounting hole", ends up doing very serious - and totally avoidable - damage to the economy.
When no dollar for import or for LCs and thousands of container stuck on port for month and edible perish ...we are bankrupt. Ishaq Dar should leave Pakistan in same chartered plane which brought him ....Mr Houdini
 
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One possible scenario:

Lebanon's middle class vanishes as economy collapses​


another:

Economic crisis: Is Egypt the 'new Lebanon?'​

 
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One possible scenario:

Lebanon's middle class vanishes as economy collapses​


another:

Economic crisis: Is Egypt the 'new Lebanon?'​

All such countries depend on American and Saudi largesse which has dried up.
 
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One possible scenario:

Lebanon's middle class vanishes as economy collapses​


another:

Economic crisis: Is Egypt the 'new Lebanon?'​


And is Pakistan the new Egypt (after Egypt becomes the new Lebanon?
 
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And is Pakistan the new Egypt (after Egypt becomes the new Lebanon?
There are too many similarities. Lot more than between Lebanon and Egypt. Pakistan is almost exactly twice the population of Egypt and has twice the problems. There is no Suez Canal revenue or strategic importance, no pyramids or Luxor for tourism. Both have overbearing military and dysfunctional democracy. Both are collapsing under foreign debt. It is like someone created a broken mold and decided to produce two copies of broken nations. In a sociological sense too, there are similar identity crises. Egypt is physically located in African geography but is culturally Middle Eastern. Pakistan is physically located in South Asia geography but psychologically wants to live in Middle East.
 
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