Gulf News

Imran has to make some tough choices

The reforms needed to salvage Pakistan’s economy will be nothing short of biting the proverbial bullet

- By Farhan Bokhari,

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s decision last week to seek a fresh loan from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and a sharp devaluatio­n of the rupee almost in tandem, must prepare Pakistanis for a period of belt-tightening with clear political implicatio­ns. After many years of a practicall­y loose management of the economy — notably under the previous government — Pakistan must now brace for tough times ahead. The adjustment­s needed to salvage Pakistan’s economy will be nothing short of biting the bullet and that too without precedence in the country’s history.

Faced with what appears to be Pakistan’s worst set of economic challenges, Imran and the other leaders of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party must quickly rise to a threeprong­ed challenge.

The IMF has a history of imposing tough conditions on countries that approach the Washington-based lender for bailouts to salvage their economies. Ultimately, an IMF-led cleanup, though painful for the borrowing countries, follows long periods of profligate and reckless spending by the borrowers. That in brief has been Pakistan’s history too.

Going forward, Imran needs to ask himself if he can successful­ly oversee long overdue economic reforms within Pakistan’s current framework of laws and constituti­on in considerin­g the first challenge. Given that reckless tax evasion has become a chronic problem with Pakistan’s economy, taking corrective measures in that direction will not be easy.

Those at the centre of this recklessne­ss have repeatedly managed to flout laws simply to avoid accountabi­lity. To make matters worse, Imran and his allies do not have a large majority in the parliament to make new laws and amend existing ones in support of a cleanup. Given that the economic challenges have risen out of a lax enforcemen­t of laws in Pakistan, Imran will need to consider the imposition of a de jure or de facto emergency as part of reforms.

Imran will also have to enforce much tighter standards of accountabi­lity across the board. So far, the prime minister has maintained a reputation of being personally clean, which is no mean achievemen­t in a country surrounded by a significan­t black economy. And yet, Imran’s push for a cleanup will just not be convincing for the Pakistani public unless he clearly demonstrat­es that no exceptions will be made, irrespecti­ve of party loyalties of those at fault.

And last but not the least, he must immediatel­y tackle the problem of too many voices emerging from the PTI without a visible centrality of authority. Though Imran is the prime minister, some of his party’s leaders have appeared to be working at cross purposes thereby giving the impression of too many cooks who may eventually spoil the broth.

Last week, one PTI leader even publicly pronounced the new benchmark likely for the Pakistani rupee’s future exchange rate — a matter of speculatio­n that no one from any government should ever display in public. Others have publicly spoken about the future of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), only adding to the recent confusion over this crucial affair and reinforcin­g the impression of a virtual absence of a central authority among ruling circles.

The challenge at hand is not easy. Though opposition leaders continue to intensify their protests against Imran, they ought to consider themselves fortunate for not having to tackle the challenge of managing Pakistan’s economy.

Beijing’s support

Meanwhile, dealing with the IMF will trigger its own unpreceden­ted challenges for the country. In late July this year, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo publicly demanded that any potential new IMF bailout for Pakistan must not include funds for the country to pay off its Chinese lenders. In openly raising this matter, Pompeo was targeting China’s promise of investing up to $62 billion (Dh228 billion) in Pakistan under the CPEC. Across Pakistan, many see CPEC as not only evidence of Beijing’s continued support to the country, but also as an assurance of future developmen­t and modernisat­ion.

But aside from what motivated Pompeo’s remarks, Imran and his government must appreciate the need to revamp Pakistan’s economy to make room for future obligation­s. Given that Pakistan’s tax collection framework is one of the worst performing anywhere in the world, there is an urgent need to undertake sweeping and tough reforms.

With less than one per cent of the country’s population filing an annual tax return and just more than 70,000 paying an income tax, there is plenty of room for progressiv­e change. Tragically however, no previous government has taken bold reforms that could tackle the menacing effect of widespread tax evasion.

Imran will inevitably face a political backlash if he chooses to tackle the multi-faceted challenges surroundin­g Pakistan. However, the one important consolatio­n for him and the PTI government must be the light that will shine at the end of the proverbial tunnel — a reformed Pakistan.

In seeking to begin negotiatio­ns with the IMF, Pakistan faces the danger of being forced to reveal full details of its economic ties with China, including confidenti­al ones. Irrespecti­ve of how these negotiatio­ns go, it is vital that Pakistan must begin to tackle its economic challenges head-on.

■ Farhan Bokhari is a Pakistan-based commentato­r who writes on political and economic matters.

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