Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Pakistan can meet its debt obligation’

STATE BANK CHIEF DISMISSES ECONOMY FEARS

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PAKISTAN’S $33.5 billion (£27.74bn) external financing needs are fully met for financial year 2022-2023, the central bank chief said last Saturday (23), adding that “unwarrante­d” market concerns about its financial position will dissipate in weeks.

Fears have risen about Pakistan’s stuttering economy as its currency fell nearly eight per cent against the US dollar in the last trading week, while the country’s forex reserves stand below $10bn (£8.28bn) with inflation at the highest in more than a decade.

“Our external financing needs over the next 12 months are fully met, underpinne­d by our on-going IMF programme,” the acting governor of Pakistan’s State Bank, Murtaza Syed, told Reuters in an emailed reply to questions.

Pakistan last week reached a staff level agreement with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) for the disburseme­nt of $1.17bn (£1bn) in critical funding under resumed payments of a bailout package. “The recently secured staff-level agreement on the next IMF review is a very important anchor that clearly separates Pakistan from vulnerable countries, most of whom do not have any IMF backing,” he said.

However, the lender’s board needs to approve the agreement before the disburseme­nt, which is expected in August, before which there remain prior policy actions to be fulfilled, according to sources familiar with the matter.

But some question Pakistan’s ability to meet external financing needs, including debt obligation­s, despite the IMF funding.

Syed played down those concerns saying Pakistan’s public debt profile, one of the “main flashpoint­s” for markets these days, is a lot better than in vulnerable countries with high public debt. The country’s public debtto-GDP ratio is 71 per cent.

“Pakistan’s external debt is low, of relatively long maturity, and on easier terms since it is heavily skewed toward concession­al multilater­al and official bilateral financing rather than expensive commercial borrowing,” he said.

In a recent presentati­on to internatio­nal investors reviewed by Reuters, Syed said $33.5bn in gross external financing needs would be met “comfortabl­y” with $35.9bn (£29.74bn) in available financing. Most of the financing was shown from multilater­als, oil payment facilities, and rollovers of bilateral financing, and the heaviest financing needs were in Q2 of FY2022-23.

The presentati­on also compared the situation in Pakistan to Sri Lanka, which recently defaulted, and said: “Pakistan tightened monetary policy and allowed the exchange rate to depreciate as soon as external pressures began.”

It added that Sri Lanka’s fiscal position had been much worse than Pakistan’s, with primary deficits three to four times larger since the pandemic.

Syed said that Pakistan is being unfairly grouped with more vulnerable countries amid panic in global markets due to a commodity supercycle, tightening by the US Federal Reserve and geopolitic­al tensions.

“Markets are responding to these shocks in an unfairly broadbrush way, without paying enough attention to Pakistan’s relative strengths,” he said.

“We expect this reality to dawn in the coming weeks and the unwarrante­d fears around Pakistan to dissipate.”

 ?? ?? UNCERTAINT­Y: Concerns have been raised as Pakistan’s currency fell nearly eight per cent against the US dollar in the last trading week
UNCERTAINT­Y: Concerns have been raised as Pakistan’s currency fell nearly eight per cent against the US dollar in the last trading week

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