The Pak Banker

Reducing debt servicing by Rs1 trillion

- ISLAMABAD

Some believe that Pakistan’s real risks are on the external side, and the country should focus on raising money to refinance and service its external debts. However, given its low credit rating, it seems highly unlikely that Pakistan will be able to raise money from the internatio­nal debt markets soon.

Moody’s Investor Service noted in its report of Feb 27 that Pakistan’s “ca” fiscal rating reflects its large debt burden and weak debt affordabil­ity. Pakistan’s total public debt stood at Rs67.3 trillion ($239 billion) on Dec 31, 2023, and accounted for 74.8 per cent of the GDP in 2023, Rs42.6tr (63.3pc) of this was domestic debt.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s (IMF) current estimate of government revenue is 12.5pc of the GDP and expenditur­es at 20.2pc. The principal reason for the gap is interest paid on debt, which the IMF reckons to be around 8pc of the GDP. Interest on domestic debt currently accounts for more than 80pc of the total interest paid by the federal government.

Sri Lanka’s financial advisor, Lazard, a French investment bank specialisi­ng in restructur­ing corporate and sovereign, published a paper titled Domestic Debt Restructur­ing: An Exercise in Laser Surgery in September 2023. A key message of the paper was that domestic debt restructur­ings (DDR) “may be necessary when there is a lot of domestic debt and when the effort required from external commercial creditors to put the debt back on sustainabl­e grounds is exceedingl­y demanding”.

Restructur­ing is a painful and lengthy process, and Sri Lanka has yet to complete the restructur­ing of $12 billion in defaulted global bonds. However, according to The Hindu, it has completed the restructur­ing of its domestic debts of $42bn, a process that started in June 2023. Admittedly, Sri Lanka’s debt situation was worse than Pakistan’s when it defaulted in May 2022, but Pakistan, too, came close to a default in 2023. Sri Lankan Banks have maintained depositor confidence and foreign exchange, and rupee liquidity stress has subsided somewhat. Post-DDR, financial conditions in the local currency debt market also eased somewhat from their crisis peak.

The government has relied heavily on hikes in electricit­y, gas, and petroleum tariffs and energy taxes to increase its tax and non-tax revenues and borrow heavily.

This path is not sustainabl­e and has hurt the economy. Surcharges and levies on petroleum and gas are estimated by the IMF to be around 1pc of the GDP. These indirect taxes have contribute­d to Pakistan’s inflation, currently around 23pc.

The federal government’s net revenues for the first six months of FY24 were Rs4tr, with net off-transfers to the provinces amounting to Rs2.4tr, an increase of 29.5pc over the correspond­ing period in FY23. However, the net federal revenues were not sufficient to pay even the markup on the borrowings, which climbed by 64pc to a record Rs4.2tr. The staggering rise in borrowings and debt servicing is largely due to higher interest rates, currency devaluatio­n, and the government’s failure to increase the tax-to-GDP ratio.

Given Pakistan’s long-term failure to increase its tax base, it is hard to be optimistic about a significan­t improvemen­t in the short term.

Therefore, in the immediate future, the government must reduce its borrowings to create fiscal space. There has been a massive redistribu­tion of wealth from the public to the financial sector due to government borrowings and high interest rates

The domestic debt of Rs42.9tr includes Rs25.7tr (60pc) in Pakistan Investment Bonds (PIB) and treasury bills of Rs8.3tr, about 74pc of the total domestic debt is on a floating-rate basis and exposed to huge interest rate risk.

State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) data shows that the scheduled banks hold nearly Rs13tr in PIBs (52pc). The SBP held Rs5.5tr in PIBs at the end of 2023.

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