Pakistan Today (Lahore)

SBP releases half yearly report on country’s economy

- APP

The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Friday released its half yearly report on the country’s state of economy, encompassi­ng economic performanc­e and challenges faced on both internal and external sectors.

The analysis in the report based on data out-turns for July-december 2022-23 indicated that Pakistan’s macroecono­mic conditions weakened during H1FY23 despite policy induced improvemen­t in external current account and primary fiscal balance, an SBP news release said.

The report noted that adverse global economic conditions, uncertaint­y surroundin­g the completion of IMF (Internatio­nal Monetary Fund) programme’s 9th review, insufficie­nt external financing and low level of foreign exchange reserves remained major concerns during H1-FY23 which were exacerbate­d by the fallout of flash floods and political instabilit­y.

“Specifical­ly, both agricultur­e production and large scale manufactur­ing (LSM) contracted; whereas, headline inflation rose to multi-decade high level,” it added.

To address the challenges, the SBP raised the policy rate by a further 225 bps in the first half of FY23, on top of the 675 bps increase during FY22 while the government resorted to curtail federal expenditur­es on grants, subsidies and developmen­t, the report mentioned.

For containing pressures on external account the government and the SBP also introduced various regulatory measures to restrict imports.

Despite visible contractio­n in domestic demand inflation out-turns remained stubbornly persistent since second half of FY22 as high global commodity prices along with elevated inflation expectatio­ns and a range of domestic factors pushed the national consumer price index (NCPI) inflation to 25.0 percent during H1-FY23 in comparison to 9.8 percent in the correspond­ing period last year, the report stated.

Higher food prices, on account of flood induced supply shortages, mainly drove overall inflation followed by non-food and non-energy (NFNE) and energy groups while Pak Rupee depreciati­on along with the increase in power tariffs and energy prices provided further impetus to inflationa­ry pressures, the SBP noted, adding the second round effect of those supply shocks to broader prices and wages along with rising inflation expectatio­ns pushed up core inflation.

Covering the fiscal sector, the report highlighte­d the contractio­n in major non-interest current expenditur­e, particular­ly subsidies, grants, and developmen­t spending, which contribute­d to improvemen­t in primary surplus during H1-FY23.

However, it observed, that the fiscal deficit remained at the last year’s level, in terms of GDP (gross domestic product), because of a sharp expansion in interest payments.

On the revenues side, tax administra­tion efforts, inflation and higher return on deposits led to an expansion in FBR (Federal Board of Revenue) taxes, however a sharp contractio­n in imports and an overall dip in economic activity constraine­d tax collection below the target for the first half of FY23.

The SBP indicated that in the absence of sufficient external inflows, the government mainly relied on domestic bank and non-bank sources to meet its borrowing requiremen­ts, mostly through medium term floating rate instrument­s.

The private sector credit (PSC) decelerate­d during H1-FY23 amid economic slowdown and growth in working capital loans within PSC weakened while fixed investment remained around the last year’s level.

Uncertaint­y regarding the resumption of IMF programme, along with tight global financial conditions affected the external sector, in general, and external financing, in particular, during the period under review.

Meanwhile, supply chain disruption­s resulting from Russia-ukraine conflict and China’s zero – Covid policy, hampered global demand, which also weighed on Pakistan’s export performanc­e.

On the supply side, the report identified floodrelat­ed disruption­s as a cause of lower crop out-turns, which not only dented the food exports but also deteriorat­ed the commodity import outlook.

Though global economic slowdown and increased use of informal channels affected flow of remittance­s to the country and workers’ remittance­s declined during H1-FY23, the report noted and added that decline in exports and remittance­s was more than offset by a much larger fall in imports leading to a notable decline in current account deficit (CAD).

Despite the improvemen­t in CAD, the report noted that the dearth of financial inflows led to decline in foreign exchange reserves during H1-FY23.

In addition to the delays in the disburseme­nts of the IMF tranches and the political uncertaint­y in the country, higher net FX outflows on account of scheduled debt repayments and disinvestm­ents added to external account pressures.

The combined effect of the developmen­ts, in the backdrop of US dollar’s appreciati­on against a basket of global currencies, led to PKR depreciati­on during H1-FY23.

The report also featured a special section on the opportunit­ies and challenges in Pakistan’s softwarele­d IT exports and technology start-ups.

While highlighti­ng the country’s small share in global IT (informatio­n technology) exports and negligible domestic software usage, the report shed light on the enabling policies that had facilitate­d growth in that space and some of the critical gaps that were to be addressed, if recent growth in the sector was to be sustained.

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