The Free Press Journal

IMF warned against bailout for Pak to repay Chinese lenders

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The US on Tuesday cautioned the IMF against a possible fresh bailout for Pakistan's new government to pay off Chinese lenders who have invested in the strategic China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.

"Make no mistake, we will be watching what the IMF does," US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told CNBC in an interview. He was responding to a question on reports that Pakistan was drawing up a plan to seek a massive USD 12 billion bailout package from the IMF.

"There's no rationale for IMF tax dollars – and associated with that, American dollars that are part of the IMF funding – for those to go to bail out Chinese bondholder­s or China itself," Pompeo said.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has said that so far it has not received any such request from Pakistan. Cash-strapped Pakistan has availed of 14 IMF financing programmes since 1980.

Pakistan needs about USD 3 billion in the next few months to avoid defaulting of loans from IMF, China and the World Bank. Pakistan currently has around USD 5 billion worth of loans from China. Much of this has been used to fund major infrastruc­ture projects under the USD 50 billion CPEC.

The CPEC is a network of infrastruc­ture projects that are currently under constructi­on throughout Pakistan that will connect China's remote Xinjiang province with Gwadar port in Pakistan's Balochista­n province. Key Trump administra­tion officials are opposed to China wooing some developing countries with so much debt. They fear China is using loans and debt to gain influence over poorer states.

It is claimed Imran Khan, set to be Pakistan's new Prime Minister, will seek a bailout as soon as he forms a government

During the CNBC interview, Pompeo implicitly criticised China saying: "We're not looking for dominance. "We're looking for partnershi­ps. Others choose to behave differentl­y." He added: "We want these to be commercial­ly available projects led by the American private sector.”

It is claimed Imran Khan, set to be Pakistan's new Prime Minister, will seek a bailout as soon as he forms a government. Pakistan's economy is currently struggling due to falling exports whilst rising oil prices make imports more expensive.

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