The Pak Banker

The last IMF loan?

- Assad Ahmad

In the summer of 1991, a series of chartered flights left India carrying nearly 70 tons of the government's gold. In what was seen as a national humiliatio­n, much of the treasure made its way to the vaults of the Bank of England and the Union Bank of Switzerlan­d. Some was sold, and some was pledged, as collateral for foreign currency loans, amid the worst balance-of-payments crisis in India's history.

The proceeds, coming on the heels of a $2 billion IMF emergency loan, weren't enough to plug the dollar shortage. Which is why Mr Manmohan Singh, the newly elected Congress government's technocrat­ic finance minister, had to take drastic steps to reboot the economy, while also approachin­g the IMF again.

Mr. Singh's 1991 budget address, delivered just a few weeks after taking office, couched radical economic reforms between quotes from Victor Hugo and Allama Iqbal - Unaan-o-Misr-o-Roma sab mit gaye jahaan se/ Ab tak magar hai baaqi naam-o-nishaan hamaara. It was, as The Economist later put it, a speech "that would change his country and the world".

After administer­ing a two-day, 20 per cent depreciati­on of the overvalued Indian rupee, Mr Singh proceeded to take an axe to every aspect of government control of the economy. Freeing the currency, easing capital controls and regulation­s, bludgeonin­g import tariffs, slashing subsidies on food and fertiliser - the scope of the reforms proposed was heroic. Short-term economic pain and political backlash, including from within the Congress party, was to be expected. Neverthele­ss, Mr Singh persisted with implementa­tion.

Of particular relevance for Pakistan, Mr Singh's currency market reforms resulted in a near 80pc depreciati­on of the Indian rupee vs the dollar over the course of his term. The Indian rupee has, broadly, been flexible ever since. The long-term results of his reforms - from humiliatin­g near-bankruptcy to the soaring heights of 6.5pc GDP growth sustained over 26 years - speak for themselves. Also of relevance for Pakistan - India's 1991 IMF programme still stands, nearly 30 years later, as its last IMF loan. Over the same period, Pakistan has approached the IMF for assistance eight times.

For all his meaningles­s meandering, Mr Asad Umar was right in his insistence that if Pakistan entered an IMF programme, it must be for the last time. In other words, an IMF programme would have to be coupled with reforms on as grand a scale as Mr Singh's in 1991. Most importantl­y, the changes would have to stick - beyond the IMF programme.

So, what sorts of reforms might such an ambition entail? For starters, real currency flexibilit­y. For too long, Pakistan has been stuck in a cycle of trying to maintain a fixed exchange rate to the dollar, running out of reserves, running to the IMF again, and then administer­ing a lumpy, chaotic, devaluatio­n. This currency manipulati­on reached absurd proportion­s with Mr Dar at the helm but, at some level or other, has been a constant feature of Pakistani economic management for the last 30 years.

The folly, and unsustaina­bility of what is effectivel­y a blanket import subsidy, paid for with borrowed dollars, has been written about at length, criticised ad nauseam, and flies in the face of economic theory and practice. This distortion must never be allowed to happen again. This does not necessaril­y mean a completely freely floating currency, but must be a major step in that direction. It also must remain in place beyond the end of the IMF programme.

To ensure market confidence, this, and any other serious reforms, must be coupled with the clear and consistent communicat­ion that characteri­zed Mr Singh and his boss, P.V. Narasimha Rao. To wit, no prime ministerle­vel meetings with currency dealers talking about reining in devaluatio­n, the night before a devaluatio­n. Everyone in the government, from the prime minister down, must understand what is happening, why it is happening, and why it will be good in the long run. To put it in terms the prime minister might appreciate, reform must be played on the front foot.

Beyond ditching rigid exchange rate targets, there is certainly less room for reform than what India had in 1991. India literally moved from a closed socialist economy, to an open, capitalist one in the space of months. Pakistan is a lot more open to begin with. But this should make the reforms needed, easier.

Aside from the immediate stabilisat­ion measures needed to avoid an escalating financial crisis, Dr Hafeez Shaikh and the prime minister must find an axe the size of Dr Manmohan Singh's and get to work.

The menu comprises the usual suspects - there is no rocket science here. End government support prices for agricultur­al produce, to end absurditie­s like subsidisin­g wheat and sugar exports while importing oilseeds. Take the axe to the energy sector - privatise distributi­on, renegotiat­e generation contracts where possible, deregulate procuremen­t, and remove political interferen­ce from pricing.

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