The Pak Banker

Imran terms real estate 'biggest mafia'

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Former premier Imran Khan said that real estate is the biggest mafia in Pakistan, as it grabs government land, sells it to the general public and then transfers the proceeds abroad.

"You can't imagine how powerful they are," said Mr Khan while addressing a seminar via video link.

Cadastral mapping, which shows land records with boundaries in digital form, ordered by the last PTI government, showed land worth Rs1.2 trillion had been encroached upon by the land mafia in Islamabad alone. "The situation is the same all over the country," he said.

Holding a free and fair election was a prerequisi­te for reviving the economy, which was "heading for a default", he said. "Whichever government comes in after the fresh election will have to take unpreceden­ted decisions," he said.

Mr Khan noted that political stability was necessary to achieve economic strength. "The economy requires certainty. People don't invest unless they're able to predict what'll happen going forward. Who can predict today what'll happen after one month in Pakistan? Nobody knows," he said while referring to the rising level of credit default swaps, an indicator of investors' confidence in the country's ability to pay back dollar-denominate­d loans.

He also referred to a survey that said 88 per cent businessme­n believed the economy was headed the wrong way. "The only way to restore confidence is holding a fresh election," he said. Mr Khan spent a large part of his speech highlighti­ng the importance of exports for building a resilient economy that's able to survive high growth rates while dodging the boom-bust cycle.

He acknowledg­ed his "mistake" of rolling out multiple amnesty schemes without making it mandatory that the whitened money should then be invested in the export-led industry to build dollar reserves. Mr Khan demanded the powers that be should explain their failure to foresee the economic disaster "that they caused" by staying "neutral" in the midst of an alleged regime change conspiracy.

"I sent Shaukat Tarin to tell the neutrals that the direct impact of political destabilis­ation would be on the economy. The (economic) balance was already fragile," he said.

Earlier, energy sector expert Asif Ali Qureshi told the seminar the latest stocks of power and gas sector circular debts amounted to Rs2.3 trillion and Rs720b, respective­ly.

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