Gulf News

Islamabad seeks US help in reviving $1.1b IMF loan plan

PAKISTANI RUPEE PLUNGES SHARPLY AMID DEEPENING ECONOMIC CRISIS

- BY SANA JAMAL Correspond­ent

Pakistan is reportedly seeking US support in reviving the stalled IMF programme as the country urgently needs external financing to support the battered economy.

Finance Minister Ishaq Dar told a visiting US delegation and that Pakistan was doing its best to set the economy on a positive trajectory and would continue to fulfil its internatio­nal financial obligation­s.

“Despite challengin­g economic conditions, the government is focusing on fixing things in the right direction,” Ishaq Dar was quoted as saying.

The US delegation was led by Deputy Assistant Secretary of the US Department of Treasury, Robert Kaproth, and included macroecono­mists.

The Pakistani side included the State Minister for Finance and Revenue Dr Aisha Ghous Pasha, special assistant to PM on finance Tariq Bajwa, secretary finance, and senior officers from the finance division.

Dar said that despite the difficult situation, the government will be introducin­g reforms in all sectors including the energy sector and capital market to achieve economic growth.

He apprised the US delegation of the government’s economic priorities to fix the economy while fulfilling its internatio­nal obligation­s.

Pakistani media reported that the meeting was part of efforts to convince the Washington-based global lender IMF to release $1.1 billion and revive the stalled programme. Pakistan entered the $6 billion IMF programme in 2019, which was raised to $7 billion this year. Pakistan will get $1.18 billion after the programme’s ninth review, which is currently pending.

IMF conditions

The meeting comes after the Pakistan government indicated that it was willing to comply with all tough conditions set by the IMF for the next tranche of the bailout package and requested the global lender to send its mission to Islamabad soon to conclude a long-awaited agreement.

The major IMF conditions include a market-based exchange rate, an increase in electricit­y and gas prices, and additional taxes to contain the fiscal deficit. Pakistan is seeking a crucial instalment of $1.1 billion from the IMF to avoid the possibilit­y of a sovereign default.

With interest rates at 17 per cent, inflation hitting 24.5 per cent in December, and foreign reserves barely enough to cover three weeks of imports, Pakistan is in urgent need of external financing.

Sharp fall in rupee

Pakistani currency plunged to a historic low of Rs255.43 against the United States dollar in the interbank market on Thursday. On Wednesday, the rupee closed at Rs230.89 against the greenback but yesterday, the currency witnessed massive depreciati­on of around 10 per cent in the interbank market after the unofficial cap on the currency was removed.

Before the removal of the cap, local markets had three different rates — the central bank’s official rate, the rate by the foreign exchange companies, and the black market rate.

Dar has been widely criticised for the dollar peg, also called “Dar Peg” in Pakistan. Ishaq Dar fixed the interbank rate, keeping the value of the dollar artificial­ly low which led to a widening gap in official and open market rates, encouragin­g the black market and causing a huge decline in remittance­s sent through banking channels.

 ?? Courtesy: PID ?? ■ Finance Minister Ishaq Dar meets US Treasury Department Deputy Assistant Secretary for Asia Robert Kaproth in Islamabad.
Courtesy: PID ■ Finance Minister Ishaq Dar meets US Treasury Department Deputy Assistant Secretary for Asia Robert Kaproth in Islamabad.

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