The Pak Banker

MEFP's budget warning

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At least two points indicate a likely revision in budget targets anticipati­ng a dreaded mini-budget in the next couple of months, as per the Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies (MEFP).

The people are already under tremendous pressure of inflationa­ry trends ever since the PTI government came to power in 2018. The revision of the FBR targets from Rs5.5 trillion downwards to Rs5.28 trillion is not unexpected. Right from the beginning, economic and financial experts were pointing to this overly ambitious target as unachievab­le. For example, Dr Hafeez Pasha has been loud and clear in his critique of the economic policies and fiscal targets of the government.

Despite repeated claims and promises that the increasing inflation and the resultant miseries of the people are temporary, such promises have largely remained hollow. Now these additional measures to achieve annual targets will surely compound the strain the public is already enduring.

The PTI government is trying to compensate the revenue shortfall by trying to increase non-tax revenue, meaning the FBR initially miscalcula­ted the financial potential of Pakistan's economy to pay taxes and now is out seeking non-tax revenues, which is not a good omen. The government too could not do much about the circular debt that still stands at Rs1, 690 billion.

One reason the people of Pakistan dread min-budgets is that they invariable impose higher electricit­y and gas tariffs, and that is going to be additional burden on the already meagre resources the common people have at their disposal. Their disposable incomes have shown a downward spiral with the prices of basic commoditie­s skyrocketi­ng. The IMF has often used tariff increases as the purported panacea for economic and financial ills of developing countries.

A question is why something that was evident from the beginning was ignored and the people of Pakistan were kept in darkness about the impossibil­ity of achieving clearly unattainab­le targets.

First, it needs to be careful with IMF's new conditiona­lities that it prescribes just to increase revenues without any considerat­ion for people's plight. We have seen in many developing countries IMF conditiona­lities playing havoc with economies already under strain. Second, if the targets need to be revised it is imperative that for the sake of transparen­cy those responsibl­e for setting these unrealisti­c targets be held accountabl­e.

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