Eastern Eye (UK)

Minister: Pakistan keen to complete IMF reforms deal DAR PINS HOPES ON DONOR CONFERENCE IN NOVEMBER

-

PAKISTAN’S finance minister has promised internatio­nal lenders to stay true to economic reforms despite a new estimate that his country quickly needs more than $16 billion (£14.22bn) to recover from devastatin­g floods.

Finance minister Ishaq Dar also said a flood donors’ conference promised by French president Emmanuel Macron would take place next month, which he hoped would help Pakistan both with immediate and longer-term needs.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in late August released $1.1bn to Pakistan as part of a $6bn package sealed in 2019 as the new government of prime minister Shehbaz Sharif moved forward on reforms.

“It will be our endeavour, even at the cost of extra effort, that we should complete the programme successful­ly,” Dar told AFP in an interview last Friday (14) in Washington.

Doing so “sends a positive signal to the internatio­nal community and the markets,” he said, voicing appreciati­on to the “very responsive” promises of other nations for Pakistan.

Dar – who took the job for the fourth time last month after his predecesso­r quit – acknowledg­ed political risks.

Former prime minister Imran Khan, the cricket star turned politician ousted in a no-confidence vote in April, has been plotting a return amid protests seeking an early election.

Khan late in his term slashed petrol prices, defying his own government’s package with the IMF, which says subsidies should only benefit the neediest as Pakistan struggles to put its finances in order. Dar said some of his political allies had advocated letting Khan stay on longer to face the consequenc­es of the economic crisis.

“It would have been selfish to have a political approach,” Dar said.

The new government took over to face unpreceden­ted monsoon rains that submerged one-third of Pakistan

– the world’s fifth most populous country.

Such disasters are forecast to worsen in the coming years due to climate change, even though Pakistan contribute­s less than one per cent to the carbon emissions heating up the planet. Dar said a new study commission­ed in part by the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank found Pakistan sustained $32.4bn in flood losses and would require $16.2bn for reconstruc­tion and rehabilita­tion.

“With that challenge, obviously, we have to go to the drawing board” to allocate funding, he said.

He said that minor adjustment­s may be needed but “everything is in order” for the next review of the IMF which could release further funding.

Dar said he expected Macron’s donor conference sometime in November and that he hoped it would address needs beyond the three to four years typically eyed for immediate disaster recovery.

The World Bank earlier this month once again downgraded the growth forecast for Pakistan, expecting it to expand by only two per cent in the year through June due to the floods as well as inflation and troubled finances.

Dar, while not criticisin­g the World Bank’s methodolog­y, said he was a “little more optimistic” and envisioned growth of three per cent. “I think things are settling down already,” he said, while not ruling out impacts from global troubles.

Jihad Azour, director of the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia department, said that a mission would visit Pakistan next month to start the next review.

He reiterated concern about Pakistan’s blanket fuel subsidies, calling the policy “very regressive.”

“We are encouragin­g Pakistan as well as also other countries to move from an untargeted subsidy that is a waste of resources and to dedicate those resources to those who need it,” Azour told reporters.

 ?? ?? OPTIMISTIC: Ishaq Dar
OPTIMISTIC: Ishaq Dar

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom