‘Tanks, missiles can’t save Pak if it’s not strong economically’
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has squandered the economic growth opportunity in the past because of political instability, interior minister Ahsan Iqbal has said, asserting that “tanks and missiles” alone cannot save a country.
Iqbal, who is also the minister for planning and development, claimed that during the 1990s, then Indian finance minister Manmohan Singh had borrowed economic reforms strategies from his Pakistani counterpart Sartaj Aziz and had successfully implemented them in India, the Express Tribune reported.
He said Bangladesh also successfully used the same strategies but Pakistan could not put its own plans to use as the decade was lost to political instability.
He was speaking at the inauguration of Pakistan National Centre for Cyber Security in Islamabad on Monday.
“The first opportunity for Pakistan’s economy to take off came in the ’60s, the second in the ’90s, and the third opportunity is knocking at the doors now, which must not be lost to instability like in the past. Enough is enough,” the minister was quoted as saying by the daily. He described peace, stability and continuity as critical for economic progress.
“We will have to think why many countries which were behind us are now far ahead. China’s per capita income was far below Pakistan’s but is now much higher. Similarly, Bangladesh’s foreign reserves have reached $33 billion while we are at $18 billion. For how long, we will watch other countries overtake us,” he said.
He said “tanks and missiles” alone could not save a country if it’s not strong economically.
“There was a time when terrorists had surrounded us but today the state has cornered them. If we squander this opportunity, the history and future generations will not forgive us,” he said.