Pakistan's History of Fudging Economic Growth Rate Numbers.

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Some of the best examples of Fudging up of numbers done by Shaukat aka Shortcut Aziz during musharraf govt. in last 10 years

Financial Scandals

His tenure as the prime minister was marred by a number of financial scandals and wrongdoings.


Steel Mills Case

In 2007, the privatization of the Pakistan Steel Mills by Aziz's government was challenged in the Supreme court. The apex court ruled against the government, noting that the sell off to a group associated with Arif Habib, former client and friend of Aziz, was done in "indecent haste" [5]. In 2008, the Chairman of Steel Mills, General Abdul Qayyum, during the privatization, who was also a long term friend of Pervez Musharraf told in a TV interview [6] how the Mills was sold in throw away prices casting doubts on the entire bidding process.


Wheat Crisis

Towards the end of his tenure, his government cooked up wheat production figures, which forced the Export department to ease restriction on the export of surplus wheat. Later the figures proved to be fabricated, causing acute shortage of wheat in the country and resulting in the loss of billions of rupees to the national exchequer. His own colleagues, members of his cabinet, and party members blamed him for the scandal.


Rift with the Party Members

His party members refused to bail him out during the wheat crisis, and he was denied a party ticket for the upcoming elections. He was criticized by his cabinet members in public for his anti-people policies.


Energy Crisis

In 2008, the country started experiencing the worst of power breakdowns. It was later revealed that during his stint in power, not a single megawatt of energy production was added to the existing system. Privatization of KESC was also blamed by the experts, where his government failed to look after that the new management ensures consumer rights. Result was a highly intermittent power supply to its consumers, with a two hour of breakdown followed by each hour of supply
 

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No policy violated'





Friday, July 03, 2009
If you thought Aziz's 393 was bad, how about 736?

By Rauf Klasra

ISLAMABAD: On Wednesday The News had reported that the former prime minister and billionaire, Shaukat Aziz, had walked away with bulging suitcases full of 393 state gifts bought at pawn shop rates. We stand corrected. It has transpired that the gentleman had actually taken 736 gifts worth price) with him on his last bye-bye Pakistan flight to London. The state booty included half a dozen more necklaces, 18 kt gold, gold coins, pearls, crowns, diamonds, Rolex watches, bracelets, carpets, Chinese pandas (presumably figurines because the list does not elaborate) etc after getting them massively undervalued by the obliging Cabinet Division evaluators.

This has been revealed in the revised and updated final figures pertaining to the foreign gifts retained by the former prime minister during his three years tenure-mostly free of cost and some by paying only token money.

One sources said, the total value of these 736 gifts, whose total price keeping the importance of those gifts given by the heads of foreign countries in the open market view, would easily be over Rs100 million, but it was priced at Rs25 million so that one of the richest prime ministers of our history with Rs7 billion declared assets with Election Commission of Pakistan could retain them free of cost.

The new consolidated list reveals that Mr Aziz only deposited three gifts with the Toshakhana and took rest of 733 with him in his heavy suite boxes on his flight to London in the first week of January 2008, to decorate his multi-million dollars residences in London, Dubai and USA.

The second part of this official plunder and loot of the state assets by Mr Aziz is more shocking, as the official documents revealed that the self-proclaimed "Mr Clean" even got one scarf, gifted by Governor Nepal priced only at a laughable price of Rs25 and retained it free of cost. One cannot even buy a local made Pakistani scarf from the Lunda Market at this price.

As if the under valuing of this scarf was not enough, the fresh list of his total gifts shows that Mr Aziz got a jewelry box given by Prince of Wales Charles and Her Royal Highness Duchess of Cornwall gifted during their visit to Pakistan, priced at only Rs2,000 (14 pounds sterling). The royal couple would surely die of shame if they ever come to know the ëreal' worth of their gift.

The fresh list showed that four ball points purchased from the elitist London shopping store Harrods were priced at Rs200 each (one and half pound). During his visit to China, a jewelry box (Najeonchilgi lacquerware inlaid with Mother of Pearl) gifted to Mr Aziz was priced at Rs6,500 only and he retained it free of cost.

Interestingly, during his reign, Mr Aziz used to claim that he did not take the salary from the Government of Pakistan so as not to put any burden on national kitty. But now it has surfaced that it was more preferable for this nation to pay him monthly salary of about Rs100,000 (Rs3.6 million in three years) instead of free gifts worth Rs25 million (official rate.

Mr Aziz soon after becoming the prime minister had visited Saudi Arabia to perform Umrah along with the brigade of his loyalist ministers, secretaries and officials — who are now understandably mum —with the tall claim that he had paid the expenditures from his pocket. But, later the National Assembly was informed in the question hour that honourable PM Aziz had lied to the whole nation as over Rs10.87 million were paid to him from the government accounts. His claim to pay the Umrah expenditure only proved to be a deceptive publicity stunt.

Mr Aziz even got one gift of jewelry set given by state minister of sports Sudan priced at Rs35,00 only, pair of lady shoes for Rukhsana Aziz Rs2,000, secretary communication also gave one gift of Longines watch No l4 70943349102 valued at only Rs25,000. One crown given by ambassador of Korea was priced at Rs9,000 and given to Mr Aziz free of cost.

The sources said a special method was evolved to facilitate Mr Aziz as the prices of many foreign gifts were even priced equivalent to pirated editions available in Pakistan. For example, two CDs given by prime minister of Norway were priced at Rs200 each while in the Western markets, one original CD is available at minimum rate of 30 pounds. One cannot even buy a CD from the loot sale of big stores at the price at which Mr Aziz got it evaluated. Likewise, the necklace pearl given by PM Bangladesh was priced at shocking price of Rs10,000. One tea set by Begum Khalida Zia was priced at Rs5,000. Dagger in gold was valued at Rs129,200, one sword by Duma Mossco was priced at Rs4,000, one necklace given by prime minister of Sri Lanka Rs5,000. Two lockets of gold and diamonds given by prime minister of Sri Lanka was priced at Rs14,700. One sword by crown prince of Bahrain was Rs9,000 and once necklace (pearl) Rs15,000. The King of Saudi Arabia gave Aziz second costly gift of one gold jewelry set, diamond, ruby, one necklace, one bracelet, pair of ear rings and one ring valued at Rs3.2 million. Mr Aziz took it with him to London.

Council of Qattar International Islamic Bank tried to match the generosity of the Saudis as it gave Mr Aziz one wrist watch Rolex Rs13,00,000, wrist watch Epos Rs65,000, Ball point Harrods Rs800, two green/gold pens Rs600 each, four ball points Harrods Rs250 each, perfume deep Rs1,500, sword by prince Abdul Aziz Saud Chairman Watan Group Rs19,750. Higher Education of UAE gave wrist watch Piaget Rs375,000, wrist watch chopard Rs120,000, Chairman Capital Investment Overseas Abu Dhabi, gave one wrist watch Rolex 1.2 million and Mr Aziz is wearing it these days. President of UAE also gave generously when be gave one gents wrist watch Rolex Rs0.5 million. Azerbijan deputy prime minister gave one gold commemorative coin which was also kept by Aziz free of cost instead of giving it to the Government of Pakistan. President of UAE gave second gift of one wrist watch Rolex Rs928,000, one table clock Rs40,000, one wrist watch Rolex Rs885,000 and Mr Aziz took them all to London.

These expensive gifts were not the end of the long list of expensive gifts Mr Aziz took with him on his last flight from Islamabad to London, as he did not even spare a gift of only Rs25 to retain it what to talk of other expensive gifts.

But because of the paucity of space, the shocking details of those gifts cannot be reproduced in these columns otherwise, Mr Aziz turned out to be one and the only prime minister in the history of Pakistan, who was given 736 gifts and except only three, he took away all the remaining with him. Thank you prime minister for going when you did because otherwise this list may have run into thousands of cheap gifts.
 

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It seems musharraf regime fudged economic growth rate numbers in every sectors. thats why one after the other last 2 years or so pakistan saw crisi of wheat/sugar/oil/ /electricity etc.

Musharraf regime fudged figures, pushed Pakistan into economic crisis: Ishaq Dar​


Islamabad, Apr 10 (ANI): Pakistans new Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has claimed that the Musharraf regime presented false figures about the economy and created mess on the economic front.
He said that the public debt touched new height during the last eight years. According to him, it rose to Rs 2946 billion from 1947 to 1999, but climbed to Rs 5695 billion by June 2008, showing an increase of Rs 2749 billion in the last eight years. "Those who claim to have broken the begging bowl have actually enlarged it, he remarked.
He said that Pakistans economic situation was so alarming that the government had to revise downward all macro-economic projections, including GDP growth target from 7.2 per cent to six per cent, fiscal deficit target surged from 4.5 per cent of GDP to over six per cent
Addressing press persons at the PM Secretariat last evening, Dar said that the entire figures about the countrys economy would be presented before the Parliament soon for action against those who violated their own Fiscal Responsibility Law.
The mismanagement of economy has resulted in overspending of Rs 558 billion and if the government does not take corrective measures then fiscal deficit will touch 9.5 per cent of GDP by June 2008, The News quoted Dar as saying.
He said the caretaker government was also responsible for this mess, as they too took no step to control the situation. Instead, they hiked POL prices and power tariff, he said and added that over 73.6 per cent population lived below poverty line, according to two dollar a day definition.
To improve the economic situation, he said, the government would generate 2.5 billion dollars from foreign inflows, reducing expenditure and by mobilising revenue generation from various avenues to revive the derailed economy.
The federal minister also outlined the coalition government's strategy to revive the economy, saying that the government would focus on hitherto neglected agriculture and manufacturing sectors in the months ahead. (ANI)
 

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Why fudge the figures? – Dr Pervez Tahir

May 30th 2009 in 2009 May, Dawn English Daily, English Columns
Why fudge the figures? – Dr Pervez Tahir

RECENT press reports about the fudging of GDP estimates for the outgoing fiscal year were a source of deep personal anguish. Between 2002 and 2006, one had struggled, albeit without success, to impress upon the self-proclaimed champions of accountability, transparency and good governance that manipulating data never pays.

Data on poverty, unemployment, GDP growth and prices was 'improved upon'. The result, however, is that other than a small group of hagiographers, no one believed the achievements that were claimed.

The Pervez Musharraf–Shaukat Aziz combine was constantly under pressure to justify their usurpation of power. Doing wonders for the economy and going on about these in daily bulletins was their only hope of legitimising themselves in the eyes of the general public. However, advised by some over-enthusiastic practitioners of the dismal science called economics, they went for the overkill. At the end of the day, it was the economy that brought them down.

Political regimes have been accused by their detractors of economic mismanagement, but never of fudging figures to suit their agendas. The cynic would say they do not have the 'competence' to indulge in this enterprise. The fact of the matter is that being legitimately elected governments, they did not have to. That is why the recent reports are extremely disturbing.

It is difficult to believe that the president or prime minister took more than routine interest in the matter. They have enough on their plate already. Adviser Shaukat Tarin has been pleading ignorance. He has been a bit enthusiastic in his pronouncements about the agenda for reform, but he seems to have done the right thing by changing himself in the face of facts and going the other way rather than ordering the rewriting of facts.

What, then, is happening? Remember the story of the prisoner freed after serving a long sentence? He returned to prison on the plea that this was the only world he knew! Unlike the past, nobody told the Federal Bureau of Statistics or the National Accounts Committee, the deciding forum headed by the secretary of the statistics division, to do anything other than their job. Like the prisoner who came back, there is perhaps this inability to return to the real world and to mechanically reproduce the ways of the past eight years. Lack of professional leadership and failure to invest in the human resource of the Federal Bureau of Statistics reinforces the attitude of being more loyal than the king.

With an unusually adverse external and internal environment, no one in her/his right economic senses is expecting a growth miracle in 2008-09. The planners kept their sights lower when they fixed a target smaller than the achieve ment in the previous year — 5.5 per cent against 5.8 per cent. When the country entered into negotiations with the IMF on the reigning standby arrangement, it said 4.5 per cent and the other party 3.5 per cent. Subsequent consultations brought the GDP growth target down to 2.5 per cent. Growth is likely to be the same or perhaps lower than the population growth of around two per cent. This would imply a decline in GDP per capita, something that the economy has not experienced since the 1950s.

Thus the initial reports of the National Accounts Committee deciding on a GDP growth rate of 2.37 per cent were not surprising. It was lower than the official target of 2.5 per cent and quite credible. It is unfortunate but not unusual that the previous year's growth is also revised at this time in the light of more and better information that becomes available. Nevertheless, the revisions are not so drastic as to bring down the number from 5.8 per cent to 4.1 per cent. Keeping it at the original level would have meant a reduction of GDP per capita in 2008-09.

Estimating GDP for the whole year when the year is not yet complete has its problems. The normal practice is to include all information available at the time of the meeting of the National Accounts Committee. When to hold this meeting becomes an important decision. Late May meetings are held when better infor mation is expected until April. Early May meetings are aimed at avoiding data coming in later. But to avoid data that has become available cannot but be described as fudging. It was not appropriate to account for a decline in largescale manufacturing growth of 5.7 per cent during eight months when the higher decline of 7.7 per cent was known for nine months.

There are also reports about a change in methodology for estimating growth in the agriculture and construction sectors. Existing methodologies do have a number of problems. Incorporating changes has a set procedure. In general, an experts committee is set up well in advance and its recommendations are made public before changing the methodologies. But if the change has been made in an instant move to fix unpleasant results or to obtain a desired result, even a better methodology can be used to fudge figures.

It is hoped that the problem related only to which number to use and how — and did not, as in the past, go to the extent of distorting the primary dataset, a practice perfected into an art by the regime of Shaukat Aziz. It then becomes difficult even for professionals to detect any wrongdoing. Application of the same methodology to process data will yield the same result and there will be variations when the methodology changes. Only a criminal investigation or judicial inquiry into the matter can prove to be of help in unearthing the truth. ¦
 

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What if Pakistan does default? - M.B. Naqvi writes from Karachi


Plain Words
What if Pakistan does default?
M.B. Naqvi writes from Karachi

DEFAULT is a dreaded likelihood. BoP crunch worries the government and the media. One concurs, and regards the situation as dangerous. A naughty thought arises though: What precisely will happen if indeed the dreaded meltdown happens? Who will gain and who will lose? Since the future of the economy is everybody's concern let's find out what precisely will happen.

The time is approaching fast when Pakistan will have to pay its annual debt servicing and discharge some other liabilities amounting to over $4.5 billion. Other payments will follow, including import bills as they fall due; total of net outflows for a year exceeds $50 billion after allowing for $28 billion US and other foreign aid inflows. A lot of money is involved. Meltdown means that Pakistan shall declare it does not have the money and will default.

The prospect of being declared insolvent by rating agencies and international financial institutions abroad is what horrifies. With credit rating zero, the Pakistan government cannot borrow easily from private banks for BoP shortfalls or taking forex loans for short durations.

The import trade will more or less come to a halt because no foreign exporter will accept Pakistanis' Letters of Credit and send goods against them. Only those imports shall be received that will be paid for in advance, depending upon how many dollars and other hard currencies the State Bank can spare or purchase from the open market.

The question recurs: Who will lose and who will gain? In the first instance, the ruling class will be discredited and will be held responsible: doubtless its economic management has been lackadaisical. But it is the PPP politicians who are now controlling the government, particularly President Zardari.

But they have already made enough propaganda that the present economic mess is inherited from General Pervez Musharraf's regime comprising his imported banker boys. This is reasonable.

They were caught fudging production figures with a view to showing a higher rate of growth than was the case. They left behind shortages of electricity, gas, wheat and other food grains. These had been there, but few talked of them until the new government came in March, though inflation has been rising for years.


Electricity is being denied to citizens throughout the country for anything from six to twelve hours a day; life is becoming physically hard. High inflation rates have to be mentioned afresh for their runaway nature. Life for the common man is becoming a hell on earth, with not enough income to pay the prices of essentials in the marketplace and no rest from the heat at home.

Unemployment is causing increasing numbers of suicides, often with family members. People are naturally protesting.

The present PPP-led government has shown a remarkable talent for doing nothing and changing no policy that Musharraf's team had designed. The first direction given by the PPP prime minister to the team writing the budget for the current year was that there would be no paradigm change; all policies to remain the same; that continues to be the situation in political as well as economic matters.

The new politicians vainly think they have shored up their reputation and image by shifting the blame to the past ruler, who is otherwise also being excoriated.

As it is, it is all but certain that IMF will arrange a bailout for Pakistan, probably on November 7 or soon thereafter. There would be other aid also flowing in thanks to the America's satisfaction over Pakistan implementing all the policies Musharraf had laid down. Pakistan's political class comprises rich people; virtually every member of the National and Provincial Assemblies arrives in Armani suits and Italian shoes in Rs.25 to 50 lac cars. Surely they cannot be hurt by inflation.

Who precisely will be hurt is obvious: at least 70 percent of 160 to 170 million people. Obviously, the very rich and the political class can scarcely feel the pain of inflation. It is they who consume the luxury goods, often fine foods that are imported.

Ordinary things that are produced in Pakistan, like toothpaste, shaving cream, soda water are also imported because of certain European, British and American brand names. Even cakes and ice creams with well-known brand names are imported.

Then, there is the issue of importing industrial raw material for industries and, of course, machinery. In the 61 years of independence, Pakistan still continues to import easy to fabricate machinery that requires imported raw material.

Pakistan still imports some urea and other fertilisers despite being a primarily agricultural country that constantly talks about development but has still not been able to produce enough fertilisers of the kind needed, and should have chosen industries that use raw material available in the country. Some such industries will find it difficult to survive. It is a scandal that the country still needs to import wheat and lintels.

Pakistan's exports are not even half of its imports. A figure of well over $20 billion is the trade deficit that immediately feeds into Current Account deficit. That is the heart of the matter.

The present PPP minister for defence has already declared that there is no question of reducing the defence budget. Which means that all the necessary imports that the armed forces require will continue to be imported. That would set the pattern. What the government and GHQ think is necessary will continue to be imported, though perhaps the luxury goods or direct consumption goods to be eaten or drunk will now be ostensibly discouraged.

The recent scramble for dollars has led to the Rupee's value sinking against every major currency; everyone is trying to buy dollars, and exporting them. The more daily shortage of dollars and other foreign currencies, the more the Rupee sinks (and the value of national wealth declines pari passu).

Currency dealers later import the same dollars and sell at higher rates. For the common man, it puts tremendous pressure on prices and inflation rates are intensified. The latest figure shows over 30 percent per week on weekly food inflation rates.

The bigger businessmen don't lose, whatever happens. It is the common man, the Aam Aadmi, who loses at every turn. High inflation gets him; shrinkage of exports due to high inflation rates will go on; new jobs creation will be reduced.

The government will be unable to invest much in development projects to create new jobs. Economic condition will continue to worsen for Aam Aadmi. Already, at current food prices 32 per- cent of Pakistanis have reduced their food intake.

Indications of pauperisation are given by many women, who have locally advertised with hand-written posters that say "I have three children, I want to sell them because I can't feed them." Some fathers have killed their wives and children before committing suicide because of poverty. Marriages are breaking up. This is the condition before the bailout.

How will things shape up after the strongly expected IMF bailout? Pakistan has enough experience of IMF. So much so that the present economic Czar, Shaukat Tareen, another former banker from Citibank, has said for placating the public opinion that IMF would be his last option; he would first tap all other possible sources. The fact of the matter is that he has already tested all possible sources from where a bailout could possibly be expected.

The Americans are in no mood to let Pakistan be bailed out easily for not responding to American advice with the earlier alacrity. The Chinese, despite the friendship, are talking in indefinite terms about future growth in the relations, though they are sure to invest some more. Only, they are not in the habit of writing cheques to get a troubled state off the hook.

That the government and the ruling class look in real trouble has produced in many the not very laudable reactions of Schadenfreud. As a commoner, I too feel mischievously happy when I see the rich in trouble. But their troubles are minor and their money can find new ways to outwit the system, while common man's troubles have to be borne by him as long as he lives.
 

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Kaiser Bengali explains the Economic performance of Shaukat Aziz

Courtesy Teeth Meastro
Kaiser Bengali is currently working for Collective for Social Science Research, a research company based in Karachi, economist Bengali has also served as the managing director Social Policy Development Centre between 2001-2004. Here he talks with TNS about a range of issues and gives his own economic blueprint which is closely tied up with politics. Excerpts of the interview follow:
The News on Sunday (TNS): How do see the relationship between military regimes and economic progress?
Kaiser Bengali (KB): There is a myth about development and economic performance of military regimes. In Pakistan, Ayub Khan, Ziaul Haq and Musharraf have all received unprecedented support from IMF and World Bank. In the case of Musharraf, it was the rescheduling and, of course, money that was coming as rental from the United States for using our space.
There were four factors which contributed to the high growth during the Zia period, none of which can be located in Zia's economic policy. The oil price shock hit the world in 1973 but it was 1975-77 when the first emigrants from Pakistan began to leave for Saudi Arabia and it was 1978 when the remittance inflow began and it peaked in 1982onwards. So the price of the oil price shock was borne by the Bhutto regime but the benefits were accrued by the Zia regime. This rate of remittance inflow gave the govt sufficient fiscal space.
Second, there were very large investments made during the Bhutto period that had long gestation periods. The Pakistan Steel Mills construction started in 1974, and it started commercial production in1982. Similarly there were Heavy Mechanical Complex, Indus Highway, Heavy Electrical Complex, Port Qasim and Ittehad Chemicals (chemical lindustry's foundation was laid in 1970s and chemicals are a major input in a large number of consumer industries). So this investment in the 1970s began to fruit in the 1980s leading to large chunk of output increases.Third, because of Afghan war Pakistan received enormous amount of foreign funding, almost unlimited.
And fourth, Zia resorted very heavily on borrowing and deficit financing. When he took over the debt-GDP ratio of the country was 24%and in 1988 when Zia left the scene, it was 48%. So if you get manna form heaven your performance will be good. However, the poor performance of Zia regime became apparent in the 1990s and till later.

TNS: What happened in the 1990s?
KB: In the 1990s the civilian governments had no fiscal space because all the resources they had were mobilized for repaying the dept which Zia had left them. You will recall in 1984, Mahboob ul Haq, Zia's finance minister floated whitener bonds with a ten year maturity period. They matured in 1994. If you look at the budget of 1994, debt service rate went very high - almost 40% in nominal terms. Zia government had collected money and spent it [on defense], so in 1994Benazir government had to repay that money.
So, if you say 1990 were not an era of good economic performance, it was there were no resources. I once asked somebody very senior in Nawaz Sharif government as to why the ninth five year plan was not being prepared. His reply was that whenever the economic team met, all they discussed was when was the next installment due and where would the money come from. He said there was no point in discussing any thing else.
TNS: In this backdrop how do you look at the economic performance of Musharraf in the last eight years?
KB: GDP growth rate is an average of growth in its component sectors. So in the years that GDP growth rate was around 8%, in 2003 for instance, banking sector growth rate was 29% and the automobile sector growth rate was 45%. Now if you have some sectors where growth rate is so high, your average will go up, even if the variance is very high.
The banking sector growth rate was high because the government, or the State Bank rather, allowed consumer financing from 2002 onwards. The monetary was you could get a loan for a house, car, fridge, camera, if for nothing else, a vacation or a personal loan. Banks made enormous profits out of consumer credit and profits are a component of GDP. A lot of this credit was going in for buying cars so automobile production went up by 40-45%.
So basically it was a one legged growth and that one leg is consumer financing. You remove consumer financing, everything else collapses. You are only managing an economy for your numbers to look good, for headlines.
TNS: What is the other leg of the economy?
KB: Largely there are two legs of an economy, agriculture and manufacturing. The services sector is the body. If you look at the national accounts, more than 50% of growth of GDP is coming from services sector. Agriculture is stagnant, and so is manufacturing barring one or two sectors, like automobiles. Today we have an economy with weak legs and a bloated body. It is not sustainable.
TNS: What is wrong with consumer financing?
KB: What it did was that it increased money supply in the economy. In the first two years, inflation remained low because there was excess manufacturing capacity in the country. So factories which were operating at two shifts began to operate at three shifts and the supply increased. But once that capacity was reached demand continued to increase because people kept going to restaurants and kept paying out of credit cards. Once supply was constant and demand continued to increase inflation was the result. Sp today we have runaway inflation, nearly double digit and food inflation which is certainly more than12%.
Another things that has happened is that a lot of demand has been created for imported products. W are importing billion dollars worth of mobile phones. We are importing cars, because we only assemble cars here. And with cars come petroleum imports as well.
So we have created two problems: inflation that is out of control and a trade imbalance. Our imports have risen sharply while the exports are stagnant. And this is what the coming government is going to inherit. Just as Zia gave a debt mountain to the incoming government, the Musharraf regime is going to give the next government a massive foreign exchange crisis.
TNS: What about the outgoing government's privatization policy?
KB: Our services deficit which has always been very small is rising sharply because of our privatization and foreign investment policy. All the large entities have been privatized to foreign companies. And the investment (FDI) has been in terms of telecommunications, mobile phones and food. All of these companies earn their profits in rupees but remit their profit in dollars. So there is dollar outflow in terms of profit remittance against which there is no dollar inflow. We have created a liability without creating a countervailing asset.
In 1999 total profit remittance outflow, which in monetary language is called reverse remittance, was 97 million dollars a year. Today it is close to a billion dollars and rising.
TNS: About PTCL, is there a justification for a profit-making enterprise?
KB: There was no real policy or principle involved. This is a neo-liberal government which believes it is not the business of the government to be in business. What they have done is that that have sold PTCL to a company which is a state enterprise. So de facto their policy was that is not the business of the Pakistani state to be in business in Pakistan but it can be the business of a foreign state to be in business in Pakistan.
TNS: There is a massive power and energy crisis n the country. Where did we go wrong?
KB: The last investment that was made in the power sector was in the Ghazi Barotha project, which was an achievement of the political governments of the 1990s. In 1988, the Benazir govt. saw a power crisis coming and they went ahead with establishing thermal power plants which takes about three years to build. If those power plants had not been setup, we would have seen the same situation in 1990sthat we have today. There would have been power outages for eight to ten hours.
Since 1999, the Musharraf regime has not invested n a single megawatt of power. In 2001, we had surplus power, today we are living with power shortage. When Benazir's govt. contracted to buy power at 6cents per hour, there was excessive criticism. Today, for one project they are contracting at 11.5 cents per hour. Today, the world knows that we have a power crisis, it will increase its power knowing that Pakistan has no choice but to buy.
So it is mismanagement of the highest order of the economy. All the investment that they talk about is either portfolio investment, which is the stock market, equity markets or soft investments like telecommunications. These are all investments which do not require these companies to build any brick and mortar and steel structures. So if they have to leave at 24 hours notice, they don't lose much. What do banks lose, furniture?
TNS: But they have paid huge licensing fees.
KB: That is peanuts compared to the kind of profits they have made. They have recovered several times their licensing fees.
TNS: So are big dams like Kalabagh the only solution to the energy crisis?
KB: Dams don't produce water, they only store water and you don't have water. Even now you cannot store water in Tarbela and Mangla to their full capacity.
TNS: You are a strong advocate of low GDP growth rates. Comment.
KB: For about ten years we need to run an economy where the finance minister and the prime minister have the courage not to get good headlines. We need to invest in infrastructure which has deteriorated to a point that we don't have productive capacity.
When you are investing in infrastructure, and by that I also mean cities which are totally chaotic where no foreigners wants to come, and physical and human infrastructure, the results are going to come after a while. So you are not going to get any output and the GDP is going to be low. Ten years later when you have infrastructure in place then you can target double digit growth rates. That growth will be based on real sectors - on agriculture and manufacturing outputs, not an hot air balloon sectors like mobile phones. By doing so, you will have a massive boost in employment, income generation and poverty reduction.
As for inflation it will be controlled by switching expenditures from current heads to development heads - by abolishing concurrent list ministries and reducing defense expenditure.
TNS: In an idea economic model, what sort of a role do you see for the private and public sector.
KB: Private sector is good in producing those commodities, which are low technology and require small capital investments. We have seen that our private sector is unable to put together large outlays. We have no one in this country of the caliber of Tata or Ambani in India. These are areas where the state will invest.
TNS: But then the state tends to over staff?
KB: There is no problem with that. This is where your economic and social values come in. Is the purpose of the state merely to fill the pockets of profit makers? Or is the state supposed to work for the welfare of the maximum number of people?
It's a value judgement. When Shaukat Aziz went out for all out privatization, he made a value judgement. The welfare of the people of Pakistan didn't matter, what mattered was the corporate profits and he made that decision accordingly. As a state we need to determine what are our values. Are we prepared to have a few people who can enjoy summer holidays in Switzerland and the rest of the people virtually starving? If that is acceptable, then fine. We should follow that policy.
TNS: And now to the most immediate issues. How do you look at the current food crisis?
KB: There was a mala fide intention to begin with. The Shaukat Aziz ministry (Finance) predetermined the growth rate they want to achieve. So when you increase the wheat output you increase the agricultural sector growth rate. When you do that GDP growth rate will go up.
There was something else that was suspect here. The estimate for the wheat crop is made after the rains, but this time they made an announcement of a bumper crop before the winter rains and, based on that announcement, allowed certain part to export wheat to India, apparently half a million tones. After that transaction was complete, the rains came and news began to come in that we are going to have a normal crop. A normal crop means that you import two million tones of wheat which is a routine
Because they had earlier announced a bumper crop, they took time to admit that they were wrong. So the LC for import of wheat was also delayed. One wheat had been exported and we had a normal crop, the wheat market knew there was to be a shortage. Now stockists every wherein the world will behave like that that when they know there is a shortage and prices can go up, they withhold their stocks. They are not evil people. This is normal behavior and this is what a market economy will do if there is a shortage.
They made another mistake. Instead of placing an order for 2 million tonnes of wheat, they placed an order of 1.5 million tonnes of wheat first. Then they realised this mistake and placed another order for half a million tonnes of wheat. After their first order, the signal had already gone out in the market that shortage will remain. So they continued to withhold stocks. If they knew that wheat was arriving and prices will fall, they would have released stocks and that would have taken care of the shortage.
TNS: Prices of other commodities have doubled alongside?
KB: There are two components of economic management: fiscal policy and monetary policy. The State Bank is following a restrictive monetary policy while the finance ministry is following a liberal fiscal policy, one is contradicting the other and neither of them effective. The government is borrowing heavily from the State Bank for its expenditure. That means the money supply increases. On one hand, the State Bank is trying to restrict money supply by increasing interest rates, and on the other the government is raising the money supply. When money supply increases prices will rise.
There is another reason for increasing food prices. Our agricultural yield per acre is constant on declining for most crops because we are not investing in our land, in supporting agriculture. The government's adhocism is causing problems. When the government suddenly imported tomatoes and prices crash. As a result the farmer will not grow tomato next year, shifting the crisis to the next year.
For eight years Shaukat Aziz has mismanaged the economy like no other finance minister. Because Shaukat Aziz knew he does not has to go back and ask people for votes, he couldn't care less about what he did to the economy. All he had to show for was the stock market performance which is only hot air.
 

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SOmething more on fudging up of growth numbers by Mush &shortcut Aziz combine



On the domestic front, in spite of the celebrated macro-economic figures, the conditions of the masses under Musharraf continued to deteriorate. The regime got a lot of laurels from the World Bank and other Imperialist institutions. These institutions have had a tradition of sending their employees or chosen representatives to become finance ministers of Pakistan. Apart from Dr. Mubashar Hasan, every finance minister of Pakistan was either an employee, or was selected and sent by the IMF and the World Bank. This started right from the very inception of the country; after Musharraf's take- over, Shaukat Aziz was brought over for the job. He was a banker at Citi Corp. and was selected by the IMF. He was even elevated to the post of the Prime Minister while retaining the portfolio of finance. Consequently, the masses were even further subjected to poverty, unemployment, disease and worsened infrastructural conditions of life. Yet the laurels showered upon the Musharraf/Aziz economic management were not seen for more than a decade. The chorus of praise from the offices of IMF and the World Bank in Washington was echoed by most of the bourgeois economic experts of Pakistan. The development and growth of economy under this regime has been expressed by another Pakistani expert, Shuja Nawaz, who is the editor of 'Financial Development', the multilingual quarterly of the IMF and the World Bank. In his recent book 'Crossed Swords' he wrote the following:

"Musharraf could point to the economic progress under his regime. Earlier, Sharif had introduced privatization and the ascendancy of the business class a good start for the hitherto moribund government-controlled economy, but he had allowed it to be tainted by corruption. Musharraf's regime continued the pro-business trend, under his finance minister and then Prime Minister, Shaukat Aziz. Its economy began growing at a rapid pace, hitting 7% average GDP growth. Pakistan managed to escape the strictures of the IMF and began attracting investment flows from expatriate Pakistanis and the Middle East. It benefited enormously from the flow of US aid following the global 'War on Terror' launched by the United States following attacks on its soil by Osama Bin Laden's Al Qaeda from bases in Afghanistan".21

Although he rightly attributes corruption to Sharif, under Musharraf the corruption and plunder perpetrated by the ruling classes continued unabated. In an article in Dawn, some of the figures of bad loans and bank write-offs emerged:

"Pakistan borrowed from external sources $15 billion during last four years and the government banks and financial agencies wrote off loans worth Rs 33 billion in three years...These figures were placed before the Senate by the minister of state for finance Omer Ayub. The massive write-offs on an ascending scale began with Rs. 5.6 billion in 2003, and went on with Rs 10.42 billion in 2004, Rs 9.908 billion in 2005 and Rs. 19.338 billion 2006 (...)

"The industrial sector was the major beneficiary with Rs25.82 billion. The trade sector's write-off was Rs3.21 billion and the agricultural sector got away with Rs2.83 billion. The total number of borrowers who got such write-offs, he said, was 11, 220 in 2003, 17, 869 in 2004, 45,249 in 2005 and 19,378 in 2006. Eleven investors from the industrial sector got away with a write-off of Rs12.37 billion in 2003 (...)

"In addition to the Rs33 billion loan write-off, they also got subsidies totalling Rs24 billion, which makes a total of Rs 57 billion.

"Trading in Pakistan is said to be substantially profitable, particularly in imported goods. That is why most industrial houses have opened their own trading houses for foreign goods and services. Yet they got a loan write-off of Rs.21 billion...

"Many farm lords obtain loans with no intent to repay and eventually get it written off. What is striking is that along with a loan default of Rs33 billion which was written off in three years, they also got subsidies of Rs24 billion to make it doubly profitable. Clearly, the outflow of public funds is a continuous process under any 'system' of government. Such loans were given by government banks and financial institutions, often under political pressure or to reward some politicians, and often written off following the same kind of political bargaining. Many of the sitting members of parliament are beneficiaries of such write-offs. They include Chaudhary Shujaat Hussain and his family members. The loans were also given to the friends and relatives of senior officials in Islamabad who controlled the banks, and later written off under their influence (...)

"At its peak, the non-performing loans were around Rs250 billion. Some of the borrowers had no intention to repay, or planned to repay one or two instalments and then default, as they were a large company.

"(...) Industrialists prefer to borrow money from banks while keeping their own money in banks on a long-term basis and earning large profits.

"The country's foreign debt, which had gone down to $35.47 billion in the year 2004, has risen again to $40.172 billion which includes some foreign liabilities. In the year 2006 Pakistan borrowed $3.014 billion. This has happened in spite of the record home remittances of overseas Pakistanis of $6.5 billion and the record overseas direct investment of $6.4 billion. In addition, Pakistan borrowed dollar 3.64 billion last year." 22

As we have seen in this work, even during the period of a relatively healthy boom in the world capitalist economy in the 1960s, the high growth rates under Ayub failed to raise the general social conditions and develop society in relation to the economic growth. How could Pakistani capitalism have developed society under the high economic growth rated under Musharraf/Aziz regime, when the world economy was itself in crisis and booms were only artificially propped up by heavy credit financing and a series of bubbles that were going to pop? In March 2001 the US economy, the largest in the world, was facing a virtual negative growth rate scenario. The sickness of Pakistani capitalism had worsened in spite of the fact that a rosy picture of the macro-economic statistics was being presented. Shuja Nawaz again praises the Musharraf/ Shaukat Aziz economic management:

"One of the biggest challenges faced by Musharraf when he took over was the sorry state of the economy. Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves at the time were around $300 million, with foreign direct investment (FDI) around the same figure. Relative political stability, the inflow of remittances from expatriates after 9/11, the opening up of the economy to private foreign investment, all contributed to a healthier economy, with foreign exchange reserves rising to around $13 billion. Workers' remittance rose from $1.1 billion in 2000 to $4.3 billion in 2005. FDI meanwhile rose to $2.2 billion, according to the World Bank.

"A key role in this was played by the steady management of money supply and interest rates by the State Bank, giving businessmen some sense of stability. According to the government, the GDP rose from around 4.1 percent in 2000 to 7.8 percent in 2005. Military spending, though, showed a decline from 4.1 to 3.4 percent of GDP. But the US and other financial assistance following Pakistan's alliance with the United States in the 'War on Terror' yielded immediate gains; between 2001 and 2006, some $10 billion had come in through open channels to Pakistan".23

US aid was mainly spent on the so called 'war on terror'. Rather than dousing the flames of this insurgency it further fanned them up. The destabilisation and turmoil resulting from this horrendous misadventure has resulted in unimaginable suffering for the poor masses, especially in the FATA region. And yet this aid gave a glossy shine to the macro-economic statistics. Similarly, the reliance on FDI (Foreign Direct Investment), that is the world-wide cornerstone of neo-liberal economic development, hardly brings any respite to the plight of the workers and the downtrodden masses. Not surprisingly, the policies initiated by this monetarism or Reaganomics has brought disastrous consequences for the working classes.

These policies of privatisation, down-sizing, deregulation and liberalisation enforced by most post 1980 regimes at the behest of capitalism, have resulted in further impoverishment of the masses. And the main aim of these policies was to create a more 'feasible' climate in which to attract the FDI.

Shaukat Aziz and Musharraf were always bragging about these rapacious economic policies. They were perhaps more aggressive in this crusade than their predecessors. They used massive credit financing to bloat the economy and boost the growth rate. But as elsewhere, this resulted in rather debilitating the economy and the piling up of public and state debt. This led to a consumer boom in property and certain other sectors, although this consumerism was confined mainly to Pakistan's relatively small middle class. The vast population was almost excluded from this cycle and there was a negligible 'trickle down' effect. But expansion of these selective sectors had a negative impact on infrastructure. The already weak infrastructure was creaking under the burden of this consumerism. This gave rise to contradictions between commodity consumption and the infrastructural facilities. Poverty intensified and the gap between 'haves' and 'have-nots' further widened, while the banks accumulated massive profits and the corporate sector rejoiced at these 'reforms'. Speculators had a heyday. The Index soared and the stock exchange casino became the most profitable venue of investment.
 

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IMF Loan Stifling Pakistan Economy

Ibrahim Malick January 11, 2010
Tags: IMF , Pakistan , Kerry-Lugar bill , economy
Some special interest groups in Pakistan rejected the Kerry-Lugar bill as an affront to their honor and interest but corporate media activists seem to care less about the onerous conditions imposed by the IMF which translates into more misery and poverty for ordinary citizens. In November 2008 the

International Monetary Fund approved a 23-month Stand-By Arrangement for Pakistan in an amount equivalent to US$7.6 billion to support the country's economic stabilization program. The total amount of the IMF resources made available under the arrangement equals 500 percent of the country's quota. The arrangement was approved by the IMF Board under the Fund's fast-track Emergency Financing Mechanism procedures.

The fiscal policies of General Musharaf's rule (FY2007/08) had put the country at the brink of bankruptcy. The external current account deficit had widened to a record level; net capital inflows declined significantly, and currency depreciated substantially. A delay in the pass-through of higher international prices to domestic consumers led to a large increase in the fiscal deficit, and its monetization by the State Bank of Pakistan contributed to rising inflation and a sharp decline in international reserves. Pakistan was unable to secure funds from any other source so the IMF loan appeared to be a godsend.

It sounds funny but my Executive Producer was following this story so keenly that he woke me up in the middle of the night to say that the first installment had hit the country's Central Bank.

Generally speaking there was no criticism – like a borrower with poor credit history who signs away their first born to a sub-prime mortgage, the Pakistani media blindly let it slide.

No one raised an eyebrow that the IMF required Pakistan to raise the power tariff by 24 percent during the current fiscal year in three phases – six percent in the October-December quarter, 12 percent in January-March and six percent in the April-June period. A 4.4 percent tariff increase was announced in October 2009, and now a notification is pending for an additional 13.6 percent increase.

IMF's stated objective for this arrangement was two fold: "to restore macroeconomic stability and confidence through a tightening of macroeconomic policies; and to ensure social stability and adequate support for the poor and vulnerable in Pakistan."

But this dual 'objective' is an oxymoron.

Like other developing countries, the government of Pakistan has been the leading source of employment and channel for capital. But market fundamentalists define governments as inefficient economic actors, and so prioritize reducing their economic role.

Austerity measures are imposed by raising prices of electricity and cutting other government provided subsidies so external debts (in our example IMF debt) can be paid back. Increasing electricity tariffs in Pakistan will eventually translate into layoffs and reduction of entrepreneur's capacity to compete in global market.

Under the same IMF agreement, the State Bank of Pakistan has stopped selling foreign exchange to banks for financing crude oil imports and this results in a weakening of Pakistan rupees. Pakistan forex is also impacted by higher interest rates, another IMF condition that Pakistan had to swallow. Charging higher interest rates for credit is the classic way to control inflation and it fits well within the IMF framework.

But high interest rates are choking Pakistan's economy: small and medium-sized businesses and farmers cannot afford credit, and so are often forced out of business. Pakistani farmers are forced to sell their land leading not only to less productive agriculture but environmental devastation.

Some would argue that higher interest rates attract foreign investment in government bonds. But at best these are short-term investments by profit-seeking investors. Pakistan's experience under Musharaff/Quresihi tells us that short term investments have a destabilizing impact. The faster it comes, quicker it leaves.

The Kerry-Lugar Bill became an issue because it was aid to Pakistani people – directly to the civil society and it bypassed Pakistan's army.

Please see: http://ibrahimsajidmalick.com/where-are-all-the-klb-bashers/378/

It was made an issue by a handful of journalists and dropped like hot potatoes when GHQ told them to stop. It was aid- not a loan.

IMF's sub-prime loan to Pakistan has conditions that impact life and livelihoods of ordinary citizens and no TV anchor, no mainstream journalist is willing to scrutinize this debt? I wonder why?
 

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GDP growth estimates of 2.37pc fudged: official




Sunday, May 17, 2009
By Khalid Mustafa

ISLAMABAD: The government has fudged the figures in an attempt to bring the reasonable GDP growth estimates of 2.37 per cent of ongoing fiscal close to the target of 2.5 per cent as agreed with International Monetary Fund.

If the government did not manoeuvre the figures, the GDP growth for current fiscal would be 0.5 per cent even if the cut in the size of GDP of fiscal 2007-08 by 1.7 per cent from 5.78 per cent to 4.1 per cent was acknowledged. And if the last year's GDP of 5.78 per cent is kept as base, the GDP growth of the current fiscal must stand at -1 per cent, reveals the detailed investigation conducted by the News.

"The National Account Committee that met here on Saturday put its credibility on stake as it approved without any objection the working paper on GDP prepared by Federal Bureau of Statistics," a senior official told The News.

For instance, the Federal Bureau of Statistics (FBS) did not include in the national accounts the growth in Large Scale Manufacturing of -7.7 per cent registered during July-March period, instead it included the growth of LSM registered during July-February period that stands at -5.7 per cent, the official said.

Moreover FBS included dubious figures of growth of major crops in GDP growth estimates for 2008-09. According to Planning Commission's Annual Development Plan (ADP) for 2007-08, the major crops growth target was 4.5 per cent. Under the ADP, the target of wheat was earmarked at 24 million tonnes, rice 5.7 million tonnes, sugarcane 56.5 million tonnes and cotton 14.1 million bales.

But in the working paper prepared by FBS which NAC approved, it has been shown that rice produce in the ongoing fiscal has been estimated at 6.96 million tonnes as against target of 5.7 million tonnes; but wheat produce estimates have reduced to 23.4 million tonnes against target 24 million tonnes, cotton 11.8 against 14.1 million bales and sugarcane 50 million tonnes against 56.5 million tonnes.

However, the working paper of FBS shows that major crops growth has increased to 7.7 percent despite the decline in growth of three major crops as against the target of 4.5 percent.

If the real picture of the major crops is accounted for, the agriculture growth stands at 2.7 per cent and if the LSM growth of -7.7 per cent in July-March period and agriculture growth of 2.7 per cent is included in the national accounts the GDP growth of country for the ongoing fiscal stands at 0.5 per cent.

Advisor to Prime Minister on Finance Shaukat Tarin when contacted for comments over the massive reduction in last year's GDP growth from 5.78 per cent to 4.1 per cent by FBS and NAC and not including the LSM growth in July-March period in national accounts and inclusion of faulty major crops figures in national accounts, he said: "Let me find out as to what has been approved by National Accounts Committee and then I will come to you for comments for response."

When he was informed that the NAC approved the working paper of FBS as it is, of which the copy is available with The News, he said it is quite alarming if it happened so.

However, latter The News tried again and again for comments but his cell phone was found powered off.

The official who attended the NAC meeting said that the FBS has also took a dubious decision to drastically reduce the last year GDP growth by 1.7 percent from 5.78 percent to 4.1 percent.

The official said for last 10 years it never happened that growth of last year has drastically been adjusted downward. "The said decision has been apparently taken to reduce the base so that the GDP for current fiscal could be shown at reasonable level closed to 2.5 percent GDP target."

In 2006-07, the provisional growth was at 7 percent, which got later revised at 6.8 per cent and finalized also at 6.8 per cent. However, the provisional GDP growth for 2007-08 was calculated at 5.78 per cent, which has been finalized by National Accounts Committee at 4.1 percent.

The official also disclosed that one of the participants objected on non-inclusion of LSM growth till March which is of -7.7 per cent, but the FBS official said that the month of March was abnormal because of the Long March activities so the growth in March was not included knowing the fact that whole current fiscal remained the abnormal year but it did not mean the abnormal months and year should not be includes in national accounts.

Head of the National Accounts Wing in FBS could not be contacted for comments despite many attempts.
 

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Is "great" economic growth under Musharraf , a bluff?


Inflation will soar to 10pc (The Nation)

SHAHBAZ RANA
ISLAMABAD- Contrary to what the previous rulers claimed, the government Wednesday issued a bare factsheet on economic front, which negated all tall claims of "unprecedented economic growth", breaking the begging bowl and taking the poor out of poverty.

Unearthing what the Pakistan Democratic Alliance inherited from the Shaukat Aziz-led setup, the Federal Finance Minister, Ishaq Dar shared the "balance sheet" with the media, according to which the real GDP growth will remain at 6 per cent instead of the last government's target of 7.2 per cent for fiscal year 2007-08, inflation will soar to 10 per cent instead of 6.5 per cent, revenue collection will stand at Rs 990 billion, not Rs 1025 billion.

Most disturbingly, the fiscal deficit that the last government projected at 4 per cent of GDP, or Rs 398 billion, will slip to an alarming 9.5 per cent of GDP if the new government did nothing. Though the Minister talked of a plan to restrict it to 6 per cent of GDP. He proved through figures that the Shaukat Aziz-led economic team fudged the figures to show the budget deficit at 4 per cent of GDP.

He also said, "They replaced the kashkol with the deg."
The Minister hinted at increasing oil prices to contain the budget deficit.
He talked of empowering the parliament on economic issues and strengthening the NA Standing Committee on Finance to investigate matters, particularly former economic team.

The previous government understated the figures and did not pass on the rising oil prices to the consumers because of the election year and wanted to show how much it spent on development programmes without caring where the actual budget deficit was going, he regretted.
He linked inflation with money supply, which according to the estimates, would remain at 19 per cent against the projection of 13.7 per cent. The current account deficit will widen to 9.2 per cent against the budget projection of 4.8 per cent. The reserves will melt down to $ 11 billion if no action was taken but he said the government had a roadmap to generate about $ 2.5 billion to keep it at $ 13.7 billion. Mr Dar said the reserves will be enough to finance 3 to 4 months worth of imports. He said Pakistan's credit rating would remain at B2/B.

Talking about GDP growth, the Finance Minister said the agriculture sector will grow at rate of 3.8 per cent of GDP instead of 4.8 per cent, the Large Scale Manufacturing sector would grow by 7.5 per cent against target of 10.5 per cent, Manufacturing sector will register a growth of 7.1 per cent over the target of 9.9 per cent and other sectors will grow at 6.8 per cent against the target of 7.1 per cent.

Ishaq Dar said the new setup was most worried about the fiscal deficit. It had already overrun by 2.7 per cent of GDP or Rs 195.3 billion during July-February 2007-08 and recorded at 4.6 per cent of GDP against the target of 1.9 per cent.

He said the un-adjustable budget items, inaction and mismanagement of the previous government has brought the country at disaster level. The last government under budgeted Rs 318 billion in the budgetary documents to hide the facts from the masses aimed at gaining vested interests.
He said the last regime left a bulk of Rs 522 billion on account of many factors, including various subsidies for the new government and it was now facing a towering challenge how to arrange this money. The Minister reminded that this amount was roughly half of total government revenues.
The last government fixed Rs 25 billion subsidy on oil in the budget but due to non-passing of increasing oil prices to the consumers, the subsidy would soar to Rs 153.6 billion by the end of year, an overrun of Rs 138.6 billion. Similarly, despite NEPRA recommendation of increase in tariffs, the last regime did not do it and ended up with a huge subsidy of Rs 70.7 billion.
He lamented that the irrational decision of exporting wheat resulted not only in the wheat crisis but also caused an additional burden of Rs 45 billion. The above three heads alone (oil, power subsidies and wheat import) contributed to increasing the budget deficit by 2.6 per cent. Besides that, the last government gave a supplementary grant of Rs 25 billion on Swat Operation.
The Finance Minister claimed that there were certain budgetary items where evidently significant underestimation was made. The Minister quoted domestic debt payments in which an overrun of Rs 125 billion was discovered and a Research and Development subsidy amounting to Rs 43 billion was hidden from the masses. The last rulers set revenue target at Rs 1,025 billion against the FBR estimates of Rs 990 billion just to show that the trillion-rupee milestone had been reached.

He said so far the government borrowed Rs 421 billion from the SBP to finance the deficit, which in turn was fueling the inflation. He said the government would try to opt non-bank borrowing over bank borrowing.
Talking about the money spread, the Minister said when in 1999 the military took over, Rs 643 billion was in circulation against the current Rs 4.837 trillion. In 1999, the food inflation was 2.2 per cent, which would remain at 14 per cent by the end of the current fiscal year.

Negating the last government claim of breaking the begging bowl, the Minister showed the rulers borrowed $ 5 billion more than what they returned.

An interesting fact that the Minister pointed out was that from 1947 to 1999 (42 years) the public debt was Rs 2946 billion. In the last eight years alone, however, the debt swelled by Rs 2749 billion.

He underlined sustainable GDP growth, control inflation, arrest twin deficits, and increase tax-to-GDP growth as major challenges for the new government.
 

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Punjab fears shortfall of 2.4m tons in wheat output




By Ahmad Fraz Khan

LAHORE, April 6: The wheat output in Punjab will be 1.5 million tons less than the target of 18 million tons, and there are worries here that the national yield will also fall to 21.6 million tons, much below the targeted 24 million tons.

Farmers, however, term even the revised figures 'overly optimistic' and apprehend another shortfall of 1.6 million tons. They think that the country would not be able to produce more than 20 million tons – around 3 million tons below the national requirement.

According to the final forecast of the Crop Reporting Wing of the Punjab Agriculture Department, the province's production would be around 16.5 million tons.

Provincial Agriculture Secretary Fayyaz Bashir attributed the shortfall to several factors, like reduction in cultivation area because of delayed sugarcane harvesting, shortage of water and decline in the use of DAP fertiliser because of its rising price.

"To begin with, the area under cultivation dropped by two to three per cent because of the delay in cane harvesting and then water shortage hit the crop."

He said that rains were less than what water managers had hoped for and DAP prices went through the roof, wiping out more than two million tons of the crop.

Farmers, however, refuse to accept what they call a simplistic explanation. They said it was an extension of a series of wrong decisions.

Bilal Israel, a grower from Sadiqabad, said the government did not announce its procurement price in September, reducing the commercial viability of the crop for farmers. He said that the crop was sown on 20 million acres instead of 20.12 million acres. It was more because of the government's failure to announce a new procurement price than the delay in cane crop harvesting which made farmers miss the target, he said.

The DAP price, which was Rs900 a bag last year, soared to Rs1,400 at the start of the sowing season and then to Rs2,900 a bag. Farmers were discouraged by the hike in price of the important fertiliser and by the abnormal delay in announcement of the procurement price, he said.

Rana Majid Zafar from Faisalabad says that mismanagement factor caused shortage of irrigation water.

According to Mr Zafar, the shortage was 30 per cent, and not the officially announced 22 per cent. Terming the official water shortage figure incorrect, he said rural areas were hit by power outages of about 10 hours a day, making it impossible for farmers to get sub-soil water.

Ibrahim Mughal of the AgriForum Pakistan said the certified seed stock fell after the wheat price soared last year. He said that farmers sold even the portion of grain they usually kept for sowing and to make matters worse, the stock of the Punjab Seed Corporation proved to be inadequate. "Now the new government needs to help farmers by increasing procurement targets."

He said that the Punjab Food Department should purchase at least four million tons and Sindh and Passco should buy two million tons each. "Government agencies must not procure less than eight million tons to make up for previous policy mistakes," he said. "This is the only way to ensure food security, otherwise Pakistan may end up importing more than two million tons of wheat next year," he said.
 

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The economic chargesheet



By Dr Pervez Tahir

THE constitutionality, legality and the morality of Musharraf's impeachment is doubted by few. But many, and this includes some supporters of impeachment, seem to believe that he did turn the economy around. This is patently false.

An illusion of turnaround was created by imposing a wrong strategy of growth, sustained by a series of commando actions to enforce a culture of being economical with the truth. No wonder, when the inevitable meltdown occurred, it was simply unstoppable.

Take the criminal choice of growth strategy first. Any economist will tell you that growth in national income, the so-called GDP, can be achieved by promoting consumption, investment or net exports. The choice among these depends on the stage of development of a country. While net exports are good for both developed and developing countries, consumer spending dominates growth in the former and investment in the later. The reason is that developed countries have already accumulated a sizeable stock of capital while developing countries like Pakistan have not.

Growth under Musharraf has been driven by consumption. For example, GDP at market prices grew at six per cent in 2007-08. Consumption at 6.5 per cent, however, exceeded the GDP, the extra consumption coming from imports. Investment made a negligible contribution. Again, consumption-led growth has been contributed by the predominance of the services sector. In the past eight years, the average annual growth of services was 6.2 per cent, higher than the GDP growth of 5.6 per cent. The commodity-producing sector, important for livelihoods, grew far less at 4.9 per cent. The most pro-poor sector of agriculture posted the lowest growth of 2.8 per cent. The sector of the rich and the powerful — finance and insurance — achieved the highest growth at 14.4 per cent.

In the years of Musharraf as chief executive, the GDP growth was very low. In 2000-01, it was around two per cent which deeply upset him. All illegitimate governments focus on the economy to have a semblance of legitimacy. The Shaukat Aziz team, which was still trying to get its feet wet, assured it would correct the situation.

The correctives applied were two-fold. On the one hand, the staff of the Federal Bureau of Statistics (FBS) was put on the mat and asked to 'improve' its collection arrangements and methodology. On the other hand, the State Bank was drawn into financing a consumption-oriented growth strategy by co-opting the 'autonomous' governor into the official economic team.

The dirty work of threatening the suppliers and processors of data in the name of the 'big boss' was assigned to the economic advisor, who being a contract employee was all too eager to be 'result-oriented'. Secretaries in charge of Statistics were put on notice, the most pliable of them working effectively as director general of FBS, a lower post but one crucial to manufacture desired outcomes.

After this, GDP growth never looked back. It went up and up to reach the peak of over nine per cent in 2004-05. Early estimates had shown this growth to be around 6.6 per cent mainly because agriculture had done extremely well. But this quite respectable growth was not satisfying the 'dream' economic team. A commando action jacked it up first to 7.5, then 8.4 and eventually to above nine per cent. There was an implicit consensus from then on that growth would never be allowed to fall below seven per cent. Any deviation from this implicit consensus led to explicit interventions. The lying about the wheat output last year provides a graphic example of how the much-trumpeted growth was won by the Musharraf regime.

Sectors which do not have a very reliable database and those dependent on occasional surveys suddenly started to show high growth rates. This was done when major crops and large-scale manufacturing, with relatively more reliable data, could not justify the magic growth number. Thus minor crops, small-scale manufacturing, informal services and transport made their contributions in the hour of need. Sectors under the control of government, such as public administration and defence, electricity and gas distribution came in handy to fill any gaps that remained. The Shaukat Aziz Sector, i.e. finance and insurance, danced to his tune.

Growth and investment have to match for credibility. In the beginning, the slow-moving investment was explained away by claiming higher productivity. When the argument became unsustainable, investment was also jacked up without conducting any detailed enquiry or survey.

Fudging was perfected to an art form, and was fully 'responsive' to public concerns. Prices have always been of great concern to the public. This used to be the permanent item, number one on the agenda of the Economic Coordination Committee of the cabinet meeting nearly every fortnight. Spurious regional comparisons coming out of this meeting are well-known.

What is not known is that if the price of a commodity showed an unpalatable rise in some area, the problem was always 'fixed' by the next meeting, with the chair claiming the success of the 'measures' taken and telling the PR staff, no, dictating the text to be sure, what to highlight in the media. Inflation thus remained low in the five to six per cent range. Part of the reason why inflation recently has been extremely high is that prices are being reported as received.

With growth high and inflation low, policy consistency required that poverty must fall. In 2001, the correct survey-based estimate was 35 per cent, implying a rising trend but it was announced as 32 per cent. Even this was not published for a long time and was officially questioned in a smaller subsequent survey supervised by the economic advisor. The survey for 2005 was a well-planned operation. The data was not released and results announced until commando action in the computer centre of the FBS did not, by an iterative process, yield the desired result of 24 per cent. By re-fixing the poverty ratio for 2001 at 34 per cent, it was claimed that poverty had come down by 10 percentage points between the two years.

The success on the poverty front could not have been allowed to be contradicted on the employment front. Commando action in the Labour Force Survey added two to three million new jobs.

To recap: the chargesheet against Musharraf must include (a) the active promotion of conspicuous consumption of the rich by ignoring the sectors on which the large majority of the people depend and creating a bubble rather than sustainable growth; (b) the destruction of the integrity of the statistical system. While Shaukat Aziz is absconding, all other members of the team continue in important positions hoping for the return of the big boss. The responsibility rests in his person as much as his chosen economic team because efforts to tell him the truth met with his displeasure.

The writer was chief economist of the Planning Commission in 2000-06.
 

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