Khaleej Times

China lends $1B to boost Pak FX reserves

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islamabad — China has lent Pakistan $1 billion to boost the South Asian country’s plummeting foreign currency reserves, two sources in Pakistan’s finance ministry told Reuters, amid growing speculatio­n of another Internatio­nal Monetary Fund bailout.

The latest loan highlights Islamabad’s growing dependence on Chinese loans to buffer its foreign currency reserves, which plunged to $9.66 billion last week from $16.4 billion in May 2017.

The lending is the outcome of negotiatio­ns for loans worth $1$2 billion that was first reported by Reuters in late May, the two sources told Reuters.

“Yes, it is with us,” said one finance ministry source, in reference to the Chinese money. The second source added that the “matter stands complete”.

With the latest loan, China’s lending to Pakistan in this fiscal year ending in June is set to breach $5 billion.

In the first 10 months of the fiscal year, China lent Pakistan $1.5 billion in bilateral loans, according to a finance ministry document seen by Reuters. During this period, Pakistan also received $2.9 billion in commercial bank loans, mostly from Chinese banks, ministry officials told Reuters.

Beijing’s attempts to prop up Pakistan’s economy follow a strengthen­ing of ties in the wake of China’s pledge to fund badlyneede­d power and road infrastruc­ture as part of the $57 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.

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