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Wednesday April 24, 2024

Pakistan’s overall macro-economic performance termed satisfactory

By Rasheed Khalid
December 29, 2019

Islamabad:International Monetary Fund’s Resident Representative for Pakistan, Teresa Daban Sanchez has said that Pakistan’s overall macro-economic performance remained satisfactory because revenue collections increased substantially while there is improvement in the trade deficit and net foreign assets.

While talking here at “Special Conversation with Ms Daban” organised by Sustainable Development Policy Institute, she expected that around the first review of Pakistan’s economic performance under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) might be improved.

However, slower economic growth and failure to get out of grey-list by FATF remained major risks to the programme.

Ms Daban said that though inflation started to stabilise, food price inflation continued to be a major concern. Owing to stabilisation policies of the government, public debt, although at a high level, continued to be sustainable, she added.

She said that there was a successful transition towards a market-based exchange rate regime by the government which helps increase foreign exchange reserves. The government was also successful in controlling expenditures with the help of new public finance management law and avoid borrowing from the central bank. However, economic activity was softening as the economy adjusts to a new stabilisation policies.

She said that slower growth could undermine the programme’s fiscal consolidation strategy and opposition to institutional reforms, which may result in stagnant economic growth and hamper the population to benefit from the reforms. Moreover, failure to get out of grey-list by FATF could have implications on capital inflows to Pakistan. She opined that owing to lack of a majority by the ruling party in the upper house, provinces may underdeliver on their surplus commitments.

Ms Daban observed that the authorities’ steadfast commitment to the programme and decisive policy and reform implementation could help mitigate these risks adding close monitoring, with quarterly reviews, which allowed for adjustment and improvements coupled with strong support by the international community in the form of financial assurances and continued calibration and potential scaling up of social spending helping tackle the risks and faster recovery.

She said that as per Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies (MEFP), the government is committed to strengthen the tax administration and advancing the tax policy by eliminating exemptions by the FY2021 and a joint working group on harmonisation of GST (end-March 2020). Moreover, under MEFP, the government will improve the governance of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) through privatisation of two LNG plants by end FY2020 and published audits of PIA and Pakistan Steel Mill (end Dec 2019) coupled with new SOE legal framework and triage of SOE, both by end Sept 2020.

Regarding poverty reduction and social protection actions as envisaged in MEFP, the authorities are committed to higher spending by expanding PKR 180 billion BISP allocation and better targeting by updating the National Socio-economic Registry (NSER end 2020).

In the question hour, Daban Sanchez clarifies that the IMF does not dictate economic policies of the government, instead IMF helps the government in providing technical support in order to take the right decisions.

Executive Director, SDPI, Dr Abid Qaiyum Suleri said that despite positive first quarterly performance review by the IMF, there was so much misunderstanding and negativity on our national media around the first review of the IMF. He said that the purpose of holding this conversation with relevant stakeholders was to clarify those misunderstanding and negativity around the first performance review. This programme and its review, he said, will be determining the way forward and the short-term, medium-term and long-term vision of the government with regards to the economic policy making for Pakistan.