The Pak Banker

Making foreign exchange reserves sustainabl­e

- ISLAMABAD - APP

At the end of December last year, India's total liquid foreign exchange reserves stood at $ 427b. A gradual build- up boosted them to $ 582b on Sept 4 showing a massive increase of 36.3pc in eight months and four days.

Pakistan's total foreign exchange reserves that stood at $ 17.93bn at the end of last year went up to $ 19.961bn on Sept 4, depicting an 11.3pc increase.

Both countries have economic and strategic reasons to follow the same course. But given the fact that Pakistan's reserve coverage of its imports is far smaller than India's - six months against 20 months - the State Bank of Pakistan ( SBP) would continue to build foreign exchange reserves to take the import coverage closer to India's. Normally, Islamabad does not compare its import coverage against reserves with India's but nowadays it does just in case hostilitie­s between the two nuclear- armed nations escalate further or the Indo- China border conflict gets out of hand.

Even if Pakistan and India succeed in normalisin­g their relations after a diplomatic breakthrou­gh for which efforts are underway, Pakistan has lately realised it needs to improve the import coverage of reserves to remain prepared for uncertaint­ies of economic or strategic nature, government officials say.

Islamabad has realised it need to improve its import coverage of reserves to be prepared for uncertaint­ies That necessitat­es a sustained growth in exports, remittance­s and foreign direct and portfolio investment­s - and a constant check on the import bill, which means freer imports of raw materials for exportbase­d industries, but cautious foreign buying of consumer items.

The tripling of the export credit guarantee limit for British importers of Pakistani goods to 1.5m pounds, Pakistan's eagerness to comply with all the EU conditions to remain on its GSP- Plus list, sector- specific incentives for exporters, removal of bottleneck­s in settling the claims of export rebates, planned improvemen­t in energy supply to exporters and stricter monitoring of the realisatio­n of export proceeds can help exports grow in the future.

But at the moment, the situation is far from satisfacto­ry. In July- August, Pakistan's goods' exports went down more than 4pc year- on- year to $ 3.58bn. Though this decline can largely be attributed to the super rains that the export hub of the country received during this monsoon - and a rebound in months ahead can be expected - yet the kind of increase in exports required for helping the country's overall external sector remains a far cry.

During the first two months of this fiscal year, Pakistan received $ 4.86bn in home remittance­s. This amount is 31pc higher than the remittance­s of $ 3.71bn the country received in July- August 2019. An effective crackdown on informal remittance­s and foreign exchange coming in bulk with the overseas Pakistanis returning home after losing jobs abroad are two main reasons for an additional inflow of $ 1.15bn in just two months. To sustain this rate of growth in the future, the SBP and the Federal Investigat­ion Agency ( FIA) should continue to work closely to ensure that illegal foreign exchange transfer into the country does not start again. The government is lobbying intensivel­y with the host countries of the Pakistani diaspora, particular­ly Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, to secure some sort of job security for Pakistanis living there.

Time will if this lobbying works. Meanwhile, the export of manpower from Pakistan has slumped. In the first eight months of the current calendar year, only 178,161 Pakistani left home for foreign jobs, according to the Bureau of Emigration and Overseas employment. In full year 2019, this number stood at 625,205. So regardless of the current high growth in remittance­s, the issue of sustainabi­lity is very much real because a far smaller number of Pakistanis are getting overseas jobs now and hundreds of thousands of those working in foreign countries have recently returned home.

Some officials admit privately that at least 400,000 of them have come back home in January- August and the returnees also include those that had lost jobs in the Gulf region due to the localisati­on of jobs there before the outbreak of Covid- 19. A build- up of foreign exchange reserves in the short term seems possible. Even the improvemen­t in the import coverage ratio of reserves may continue till the time Pakistan's industrial activity does not start moving at a high speed.

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