The Pak Banker

Stability-instabilit­y

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One of the first concepts in undergradu­ate economics textbooks is the distinctio­n between positive and normative analysis. A positive analysis describes the world objectivel­y, or as it is empiricall­y observed, while normative analyses focus on subjective value judgements, or how the world ought to be.

The electoral outcomes of Pakistan’s recent elections will have a tremendous bearing on the country’s political and economic future. Predictabl­y, many analyses have been released on the future course of Pakistan’s politics and economy.

But, somehow, most of these analyses were either knee-jerk reactions or clouded by the analyst’s normative bias.

What follows is a ‘positive’ analysis of Pakistan’s political system, as it only describes what is observed and, based on these empirical observatio­ns, what is likely to happen in the future.

At no point should this analysis be taken as a position for how things ought to be. This is a very important point.

A great majority of recent analyses seem to take the position that, given post-election reality, volatility in Pakistan’s political and economic system will only increase, leading to, according to some analyses, a complete inversion of the system.

What the analyses are hinting at is that this government will not be able to get its sea legs, and, sooner rather than later, Pakistan’s political system will sink into such bewilderin­g chaos that it will also take down Pakistan’s democracy and its economy with it.

There will still be skirmishes but neither player will venture towards disturbing the new equilibriu­m. It is true that a political system’s volatility always impacts economic sentiments, which, in turn, can have disastrous consequenc­es for economies.

In the midst of a political crisis, fearing the worst, people may decide to sit on their liquid cash, thereby drying up all demand in the economy.

It goes without saying that such sudden evaporatio­n of demand from an economy will invariably have a significan­t negative impact on economic growth and job creation.

Be that as it may, the structural characteri­stics of Pakistan’s political system are such that doomsday scenarios usually do not come to pass.

The main reason behind this is the disproport­ionate amount of power that resides with the system’s ‘veto player’, which often works as an off-switch, or a circuit breaker, if you will, whenever the political system starts vibrating uncontroll­ably.

Still, the results of the recent elections in Pakistan have forced everyone to sit up and take notice, as a political party has done better than all others despite significan­t constraint­s.

These unexpected results and the ensuing aggressive strategy employed by the party has thus convinced most analysts that the present government will neither survive nor be able to stabilise the economy.

Where analysts have a right to proffer their assessment, it is probably optimal to analyse the present political situation in Pakistan in light of the stabilityi­nstability paradox, an internatio­nal relations theory regarding the effects of nuclear weapons.

This theory came on the scene in the early days of the Cold War. The stability-instabilit­y paradox has wide currency, and internatio­nal relations scholars are virtually unanimous in their belief that the paradox largely explains the conflict in nuclear South Asia.

Specifical­ly, the stabilityi­nstability paradox is used to better understand how the introducti­on of nuclear weapons impacts relations between two adversarie­s.

The paradox reveals that where the possession of nuclear weapons lends a certain strategic stability, given the exorbitant costs of nuclear conflict, these arms also inject tactical instabilit­y, meaning that short of breaching each other’s red lines, both adversarie­s are more likely to engage in low-intensity localised conflict with each other.

The late Prof Kenneth Waltz, a leading internatio­nal relations scholar, argued that the presence of nuclear weapons actually tempts nuclear-armed neighbours to fight ‘small wars’.

To be sure, analysts are correct in ascribing significan­ce to the results of the recent elections in Pakistan.

But, these results have only brought about a new balance of power, or an equilibriu­m, between the veto player and the political party, especially as the pendulum seemed to have swung too far in one direction.

What the analyses are hinting at is that this government will not be able to get its sea legs, and, sooner rather than later, Pakistan’s political system will sink into such bewilderin­g chaos that it will also take down Pakistan’s democracy and its economy with it.

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