The Pak Banker

Buyer’s remorse

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The process of consultati­on with allies is underway. Yesterday, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met the MQMP convenor and the JUI-F and PPP leadership. It remains to be seen how quickly decisions are taken.

Since becoming the face of the unity government, the PML-N has rapidly lost the goodwill it spent years building up while in opposition.

After Finance Minister Miftah Ismail’s press conference on Sunday, it is clear that while the PM and his kitchen cabinet are aware of the economic crisis, they look to their party’s leadership in London for ‘guidance’ on policy matters. Nawaz Sharif et al, meanwhile, seem to be making decisions that are more in the interest of the PML-N than the people.

Internal difference­s are causing serious delays in economic governance, as well as creating uncertaint­y in the capital markets. The reaction on Monday to Mr Ismail’s press conference came in the form of another sell-off in the stock market and the continued weakening of the rupee-dollar exchange rate.

It is difficult to sympathise with the PML-N, even though the party keeps reminding us that the economy is in the shape it is because of the decisions the PTI made in its last days in power. Yes, the unsustaina­ble fuel and electricit­y subsidies draining Pakistan’s treasury were indeed introduced by the PTI, but what has this new government done about them?

It is strange to hear senior PML-N leaders lamenting the subsidies, yet not even coming up with a subsidy rationalis­ation plan though it is in their power to do so. The truth is that while they can blame Mr Khan all they want, each day of their own indecision is costing the treasury billions of rupees and wreaking further destructio­n on the capital markets.

The PML-N contends that any difficult decision it has to take must first be endorsed by the other parties in its government. This not only betrays the PML-N’s lack of trust in the parties it chose to ally itself with in order to remove the PTI from power, it also exposes its lack of foresight when forming the government.

If the PML-N so desperatel­y wanted the other parties to share the burden of economic decision-making, why did it not demand that the finance ministry be headed by a coalition partner?

It is evident that the PML-N is only suffering from buyer’s remorse, and it is only the commitment­s it made to secure the vote of no-confidence that are holding it back from abdicating its responsibi­lities altogether. If there is no decision in the next few days, the PML-N should step down and let a caretaker set-up take over.

Even that decision will likely come with political costs — people will ask what the vote of no-confidence really achieved. However, the way the transition of power has been bungled, there is hardly any other option.

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