Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Pakistan don’t need too many policy prescripti­ons, says finance minister

HIGHLIGHTS COUNTRY’S ROADMAP TO COPE WITH CHALLENGES AND PUT ECONOMY ON A SUSTAINABL­E GROWTH TRAJECTORY

- PROFIT APP

Federal Minister for Finance and Revenue Muhammad Aurangzeb said Tuesday that Pakistan does not need too many policy prescripti­ons, but execution of the already signed policies.

Muhammad Aurangzeb is leading Pakistan’s delegation in the IMF and World Bank2024 Spring Meetings in Washington DC where he highlighte­d the country’s roadmap to cope with the challenges and put the economy on a sustainabl­e growth trajectory.

In an interactiv­e session with Atlantic Council’s Geo-economics Center and South Asia Center titled “Opportunit­ies and Challenges for the Pakistani Economy through 2024 and Beyond”, he outlined

Pakistan’s key measures to achieve economic stabilisat­ion by increasing tax-togdp ratio, undertakin­g end-to-end digitalisa­tion of FBR, reforming stateowned enterprise­s (SOES), boosting exports, increasing remittance­s, improving the business environmen­t and attracting foreign direct investment­s.

Sharing Pakistan’s current economic landscape, he said the country had entered a much better shape this year than at the beginning of the last year, adding it had to do a lot with the nine-month SBA programme which in turn “ushered in a macroecono­mic stability for the country.” He said the country’s overall GDP was moving in the right direction, although the headline number was not that significan­t, however, different sectors were performing well.

He said, agricultur­e witnessed 5% growth owing to bumper crops; the services sector was moving quite well and inflation had come down from the peak of 37%-38% to closer to 20%-22% while the exchange rate was stable.

“So all of this has moved us in the right direction, now we will take it forward from here [for which] we need, in the first instance, permanence in the macroecono­mic stability,” adding the government had initiated discussion with the IMF on the larger and extended programme that would help put the economy on a sustainabl­e growth path.

The finance minister was of the view that the ”timely decisions and timely executions” were the key aspects to run even the smallest institutio­n or the largest country on the planet . . .”

He said Pakistan does not need too many policy prescripti­ons as “we have known what and why, not for years but decades.” We know to focus on tax-aspect, tax-to-gdp, investment-to-gdp, increasing exports, getting the circular debt in order and accelerati­ng the privatisat­ion agenda.

”These are some of the things that my predecesso­rs had been signing with the Fund. It is time for us to start moving with execution of some of these aspects,” he said.

Aurangzeb said Pakistan was looking for a larger and extended programme as it would need a two-three-year time period to go through the structural reforms programme.

The finance minister termed discussion­s with the IMF mission that visited Pakistan last month for the 2nd and final review of the SBA programme ‘very constructi­ve and positive.’

Talking about revenue generation, the minister said the government on a shortterm basis intends to cut down on the leakages [in revenue collection] and ensure speedy decisions by tax tribunals.

More importantl­y, he said, Pakistan needed to bring untaxed and under-taxed sectors in the tax network, under the medium-term agenda “We have started moving in that direction,” he remarked.

Under the transforma­tion programme, he said the country had already started the process of end-to-end digitalisa­tion of the tax system to minimize human interventi­on.

This week, he said, world-class consultant­s were being shortliste­d and hopefully would be appointed by the end of the current month, with the mandate to work on the design framework and its implementa­tion, ensuring transparen­cy.

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