The Pak Banker

IMF being urged to relax harsh terms: minister

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Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin has said that stabilisat­ion is no more affordable for Pakistan's economy that should now shift gear towards higher growth and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) would be convinced to relax conditions particular­ly those related to power tariff hike.

Testifying before the National Assembly's Standing Committee on Finance, Mr Tarin said the higher power tariff was leading to corruption and affecting economic growth. The conditions agreed to under the IMF programme were very harsh, he said.

He claimed that the government would take alternativ­e measures to reduce circular debt instead of tariff increases. Similarly, he said, tax net would be expanded instead of increase in taxes to achieve revenue targets. However, he admitted that the state-owned entities that the government was unable to run in the public sector would be privatised.

The finance minister said the IMF was being convinced to have a sympatheti­c view towards Pakistan after it had been hit by the third wave of coronaviru­s pandemic. Unless the country moved to higher economic growth, nothing would improve and if we continue with stabilisat­ion that has been in place for over two years, neither revenue collection would go up, nor job opportunit­ies would be available to people or productive capacity of the economy could improve, he explained.

Shaukat Tarin tells NA panel it was a mistake to keep policy rate at 13.25pc

He informed the committee that the country had been in the stabilisat­ion mode since 2019, but it was no more sustainabl­e and if the government continued with the same policy, there would be no economic growth for next two years. In the upcoming budget, he said, the public-sector developmen­t programme would be increased so that all the provinces would get equal growth opportunit­ies.

He said a lot of complicati­ons were emerging in the absence of economic growth and one of them was the continued increase in capacity payments in the power sector. Even 4pc to 5pc growth next year would not be insufficie­nt, he said.

He told the committee that comprehens­ive strategy had been formulated to shift the gear and move to higher economic growth. He also criticised the high policy rates of the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP). It was a mistake to keep policy rate at 13.25pc in the past, he said.

The minister, who appeared before the standing committee for the first time after assuming charge last month, said the IMF had to be explained that the world was keeping lose the fiscal and monetary purses in view of the health pandemic but Pakistan was still facing those tough conditions. He expressed the hope that the IMF staff would understand Pakistan's position as the government requested for a sympatheti­c view due to the pandemic.

He explained that the IMF target could be met through alternativ­e measures, as higher electricit­y rates were only promoting corruption. The finance minister said he did not believe in increase in taxes to increase revenue collection but those outside the tax net would be tapped. Also, he said, chances for any harassment by FBR officials would be eliminated for which audit procedures would be changed.

As the country lacked proper planning, he said, he selected 10 to 12 sectors on which economic experts had already started working so that they could come up with longterm planning for areas such as price stability, agricultur­e, industry, revenue, housing, social protection, national services, debt management and privatisat­ion of loss-making state-run entities.

Minister Tarin told the committee that 85pc of provincial revenues was being spent on nine major cities, while the health and education sectors across the country were under-funded and ignored. At the same time, the housing sector required to be given more attention and it had only 0.25pc share in Pakistan's GDP compared to its 80pc share in US economy.

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