The Pak Banker

Privatisat­ion matters

- Osman Saifullah Khan

THE question of privatisat­ion is a divisive one. Debates about the issue are often reduced to dances around dogma. Opponents and proponents take it as a given that their position is one based on theoretica­lly and empiricall­y proven facts. Statistics and examples from foreign lands are proffered in support of one's position. Heavy reliance is placed on difficult to refute counterfac­tual claims. Appeals to the national interest are made. The consequenc­es of action or inaction are painted in vivid and frightenin­g detail. Rarely does one comes across a nuanced discussion of the many trade-offs that need to be made in the event of any decision. Privatisat­ion will result in winners and losers. We should know who these are and will be.

Privatisat­ion doesn't affect all Pakistanis equally. Not all feel they have a stake in the debate. Pakistan's rural heartland doesn't seem particular­ly interested. The urban poor don't care. The domestic servant, toiling from dawn to dusk in our cities isn't unduly worried that the state's silver is being pawned off. Those in private sector employment seem quite sanguine. If feathers are being ruffled, it is those of politician­s (of all political stripes) and of the employees and managers of the public sector enterprise­s/corporatio­ns that the government is proposing to privatise.

The issue of privatisat­ion doesn't affect all Pakistanis equally because Pakistan is a highly unequal country. There is stupendous inequality in the ownership of wealth. And there is great inequality in the access to opportunit­y that different Pakistanis have. According to the SBP, the top one per cent of depositors own 80 per cent of the deposits. Around 26,000 farmers (less than half a per cent of the total) own almost 15 per cent of the land. The fortunate few who control this financial wealth eagerly await the chance to pick up state assets. Those contemplat­ing privatisat­ion must ask themselves whether the sale of state assets at this point in time, when those who have the wherewitha­l to buy these assets are such a small minority, will serve only to further increase inequality in our country?

Pakistan's education system is also highly unequal. Very large segments of our population (and consequent­ly the labour force) are illiterate, and many of the nomi- nally literate are functional­ly illiterate. The public sector is a large source of employment for the poorly trained and poorly educated. Of course, the vast majority of those who are poorly educated or low skilled have these disabiliti­es for no fault of their own. It is the state that has let them down. And short of a G.I Bill (the United States Servicemen's Readjustme­nt Act 1944) type of effort to retrain and educate them, these people will remain poorly educated and lacking in useful job skills. Therefore, those contemplat­ing privatisat­ion must ask themselves who will play the role of employer of last resort when the government can no longer do so?

Part of the reason that state-owned enterprise­s can afford to hire relatively unproducti­ve labour, whilst the private sec- tor cannot, is that the profit motive is not the raison d'etre of such organisati­ons. A middle ranking employee of OGDC recently asked me why the government would want to privatise an organisati­on that earns it Rs124 billion a year in profit? He seemed genuinely perplexed. And the question is a good one. It is unclear if the government has a good answer.

One plausible part of an answer involves the concept of opportunit­y cost. This is the cost of an opportunit­y foregone because of the use of resources to pursue a certain course of action. The capital that is tied up in the OGDC balance sheet could be put to many alternativ­e uses. Rs750 billion would go a long way to solve our energy, education and infrastruc­ture problems.

Our public sector enterprise­s suppos- edly belong to each and every Pakistani, but once again the 'ownership' of these state assets is highly unequal. Ownership of an asset entitles the owner to certain benefits. The right to these benefits is what makes the asset valuable to its owner. So what benefit does the common citizen derive from state ownership of corporate assets? Does he or she get cheaper air travel by virtue of being an 'owner' of PIA? Does he get better service or a greater choice of routes and destinatio­ns? Does the ownership of Pakistan Railways confer upon the average citizen the right to clean and punctual train travel? Those who push for a retention of public ownership must ask themselves how truly 'public' this ownership really is.

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