Khaleej Times

Pakistan to borrow Rs4.3T from banks as devaluatio­n looms

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borrowing from commercial banks rose to Rs850 billion, between July 01, FY-16 and May 19 FY-17.

It was Rs502 billion in the like period of FY-16. “The government continued to borrow from the commercial banks to fill its budgetary gap and meet the shortfall in tax and non-tax revenues,” SBP says.

However, Islamabad at the same time, repaid the banks Rs188 billion. “It missed the annual target of bank borrowing set at Rs741.3 billion for FY-17. It is already higher than the target amount.”

If the government borrowing from the commercial banks in FY-18 stays as high as in FY-17, the banks will be left with very little cash for the creditstar­ved private sector. So far, the economy was looking up in FY-17, on the back of higher output of industrial products. It is, indicated by 5.6 per cent growth in large scale manufactur­ing. As a result, the private sector was demanding more credit to continue to fund the uptick. But if the credit is restricted, will the economy grow? The answer, obviously is “no.”

The big budgetary deficit is not Abbasi’s only headache, he is also facing a big trade account (TA) and the current account deficit (CAD), which are eating up the forex reserves. In order to stop the forex wrought, Abbasi is launching foreign bonds — including sukuk bonds and eurobonds for up to $3 billion. As exports declined and imports rose sharply over the last four years the forex reserves were seen at around $21 billion. It led to two dangerous habits: Finance Minister Ishaq Dar went on a beg-and-borrow spree to replenish the reserves, chiefly through expensive foreign credits.

The repayments of these loans starts in FY-18. Finance Minister Dar got several loans on high interest rates, some as high as 8.6 per cent. The second: because of the pressure on forex reserves, and widening TA and CAD deficit, a range of specialist­s, economists, currency changers, businessme­n, exporters and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns have repeatedly demanded to devalue the rupee. Their proposed reduction in the value of the rupee against the US dollar, however differs form 5 per cent to 20 per cent. The Pakistani currency this week, was quoted at one dollar to 105.60 for selling and 105.40 for buying, in the inter-bank market. In the kerb, dollar was quoted at 107.4 for buying and 167.65 for selling. The exporters, including the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry and the All Pakistan Textile Mills Associatio­n which is the worst hit as textiles, Pakistan’s largest exports, heavily declined. Both organisati­ons claimed “the over-valued rupee is the key cause of their reduced exports. “Our textile exports are down because the over-valued rupee has made them globally uncompetit­ive.”

“The government-imposed taxes, high cost of imported and domestical­ly

If we offer them [overseas Pakistanis] attractive rates of return, the bond issue will raise the amount of $500 million to $700 million

Zafar Shaikh, director-general, Central Directorat­e of National Savings, Ministry of Finance

produced inputs, expensive electricit­y and the overall cost of doing business have pushed export prices. Our expensive products are no longer accepted. As a result, textile exporters to the global market, like Bangladesh, and Vietnam, besides China and India have virtually ousted Pakistani textiles exports from many countries.

The government plans to launch a dollar-denominate­d bond of $500 million to $700mn during this year. “Eight to nine million overseas Pakistanis will be offered to invest in these dollar denominate­d bonds.

“If we offer them attractive rates of return, the bond issue will raise the overall amount of $500 million to $700 million,” Zafar Shaikh, director-general, Central Directorat­e of National Savings, Ministry of Finance, says. The writer is based in Islamabad. Views expressed are his own and do not reflect the newspaper’s policy.

 ?? AFP ?? Over-valued rupee has made Pakistan’s textile exports globally uncompetit­ive. —
AFP Over-valued rupee has made Pakistan’s textile exports globally uncompetit­ive. —

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