The Borneo Post

Pakistan likely to pay back IMF before Chinese debt — US Treasury official

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WASHINGTON: Pakistan is likely to pay off an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund bailout before its loans from China come due, easing concerns that IMF funds will be used to pay back Chinese creditors, the US Treasury’s top diplomat said.

David Malpass, the Treasury’s undersecre­tary for internatio­nal affairs, told a US Senate Foreign Relations subcommitt­ee hearing that the Trump administra­tion was pushing for more transparen­cy in Chinese lending, including to Pakistan.

Pakistan is negotiatin­g with the IMF over terms of its second bailout since 2013, a loan package valued at about US$ 6 billion, according to local media, with a deal now expected in midJanuary.

Pakistan’s new president, Imran Khan, requested the bailout in October to deal with a mounting balance-of-payments crisis.

Pakistan is a major recipient of China’s Belt and Road infrastruc­ture initiative, with Beijing pledging to finance some US$60 billion in port, road and railway projects there.

But Pakistan’s debt woes have prompted Islamabad to scale back some of the projects.

“One of the challenges is that in many cases they haven’t disclosed the terms of that debt,” Malpass said of the Chinese loans to Pakistan. “In general terms, we think the maturity of the Chinese debt comes after the IMF would have been repaid.”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said earlier this year that there was ‘no rationale’ for a program that repays Pakistan’s loans to China.

Malpass said the challenge in the Pakistan-IMF talks is to forge a program that will foster “substantia­l economic reform” in Pakistan and put its finances on sustainabl­e path. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A man walks past a sign board of Huawei. Earlier this year, neighbouri­ng Australia banned Huawei from supplying 5G equipment, also citing security risks. – Reuters photo
A man walks past a sign board of Huawei. Earlier this year, neighbouri­ng Australia banned Huawei from supplying 5G equipment, also citing security risks. – Reuters photo

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