respect and nurture the private sector. Making money should not be look down at. Irregularities occur due to weak regulatory institutions, which should be strengthened, he said.
Economist Faisal Qamar said governance issues have not been resolved in Pakistan despite admittance at the highest level that most of the ills in the economy are due to bad governance.
Politicians and bureaucrats are not prepared to do away with their discretionary powers that kill merit, he said, adding that when the governance bar is lowered it makes the bureaucracy unaccountable and strong.
“In order to bend rules in their favour the rulers become dependent on bureaucracy,” Qamar said.
He regretted that a detailed report prepared by Dr Ishrat Husain on governance reforms is rusting and no efforts have been made to implement its recommendations that Dr Hussain says could still be implemented with minor adjustments.
The existing procedure for appointments in regulatory bodies where the tenure is constitutionally protected is flawed, Qamar said, adding that the sitting government sometimes delays the appointments for a very long period.
He said as a first step all SoEs should be removed from the control of bureaucracy and transferred to a holding company. It would then be prudent to first restructure these SoEs by appointing new heads through a transparent way.
The appointing body should comprise professionals undisputable integrity, he said. People like Dr Ishrat Husain, Saleem Lakha, Razzak Dawood and Dr Ejaz Nabi should interview the candidates and send the name of three candidates to the prime minister for appointment, he suggested.
He also proposed that there should be no interference from politicians and bureaucracy in this appointment process.
The bureaucracy should be stopped from giving opinion on appointments or interfering in the process.
Economist Naveed Anwar Khan said low literacy rates and poor health indicators are taxing the growth heavily. A low educated workforce with suspect health cannot be expected to perform with the same efficiency that is the hallmark of a skilled, literate and healthy workforce, he said.
The prime minister should sit with leading industrialists once in a month along with the policymakers. This meeting should take place at all costs and progress on deliberations made in earlier meeting should be recorded, he suggested.
Those that failed to comply with the instructions of the prime minister in the previous month should be taken to task, he added.