Current account deficit shrinks 59%
Amounts to little over $1.005b, improvement comes on back of falling import bill
KARACHI:
Pakistan’s current account deficit amounted to a little more than $1 billion in July-November, according to data released by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Friday.
The current account deficit shrank 59%, or $1,452 million, year on year in the first five months of the fiscal year, as it amounted to $2.4 billion in the same five-month period of the preceding fiscal year.
Current account deficit shrinks 72%
The notable improvement in the current account balance in the last five months was mainly due to shrinking trade deficit in both goods and services. It amounted to $8.1 billion in Jul-Nov as opposed to almost $10 billion recorded over the comparable period of the last year.
A deficit or surplus reflects whether a country is a net borrower or lender of capital with respect to the rest of the world.
As a percentage of the gross domestic product (GDP), the current account deficit decreased from 2.2% in July-Nov 2014 to 0.8% in July-Nov 2015.
The country recorded a current account deficit of $2.28 billion in the last fiscal year, which was significantly smaller than the deficit of $3.13 billion in 2013-14. Analysts believe the encouraging trend in the country’s current account balance in the recent past is a consequence of major inflows under the Coalition Support Fund (CSF), substantial growth in workers’ remittances and a sharp reduction in the oil import bill.
Recovery: Current account deficit shrinks by $1.5b in July-April
Pakistan’s total imports of goods in July-Nov were valued at $16.3 billion as opposed to $18.6 billion in the same months of the preceding fiscal year, which shows an annual decrease of 12.3%.
Pakistan exported goods worth over $8.8 billion in July-Nov as opposed to the exports of goods valuing over $9.9 billion in the same five months of 2014, reflecting an annual decline of 10.7%.
Workers’ remittances remained almost $8.1 billion in July-Nov, up 7.6% from the same months of the last year. Remittances have played a significant role in improving the country’s external sector, as they make up for almost 50% of the import bill and cover the deficit in goods and services accounts.
In one of its recent statements, the SBP had noted that a current account deficit of the size of end-fiscal 2015 “seems manageable” in 2015-16. “This is supported by the expected surplus in the capital and financial account in 2015-16 on the back of planned Euro/Sukuk bonds inflows, official disbursements, and the remaining IMF funding under the EFF programme,” it said, adding that the lower global oil prices have yet to find their bottom.
Current account deficit shrinks, amounts to $159m
Declining oil prices are going to result in a year-on-year drop of over 23% in Pakistan’s oil import bill in 2015-16, as per the estimate of the IMF. However, many analysts believe the deficit in the current account is unlikely to change into a surplus by the end of 2015-16 despite a massive drop in international oil prices.
Exports, which are continuously declining, will not be able to sustain the pressure on the current account balance once inflows from the IMF dry up in mid-2016 and Pakistan starts making Paris Club loan repayments, they say.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 19th, 2015.
Pakistan’s current account deficit amounted to a little more than $1 billion in July-November, according to data released by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Friday.
The current account deficit shrank 59%, or $1,452 million, year on year in the first five months of the fiscal year, as it amounted to $2.4 billion in the same five-month period of the preceding fiscal year.
Current account deficit shrinks 72%
The notable improvement in the current account balance in the last five months was mainly due to shrinking trade deficit in both goods and services. It amounted to $8.1 billion in Jul-Nov as opposed to almost $10 billion recorded over the comparable period of the last year.
A deficit or surplus reflects whether a country is a net borrower or lender of capital with respect to the rest of the world.
As a percentage of the gross domestic product (GDP), the current account deficit decreased from 2.2% in July-Nov 2014 to 0.8% in July-Nov 2015.
The country recorded a current account deficit of $2.28 billion in the last fiscal year, which was significantly smaller than the deficit of $3.13 billion in 2013-14. Analysts believe the encouraging trend in the country’s current account balance in the recent past is a consequence of major inflows under the Coalition Support Fund (CSF), substantial growth in workers’ remittances and a sharp reduction in the oil import bill.
Recovery: Current account deficit shrinks by $1.5b in July-April
Pakistan’s total imports of goods in July-Nov were valued at $16.3 billion as opposed to $18.6 billion in the same months of the preceding fiscal year, which shows an annual decrease of 12.3%.
Pakistan exported goods worth over $8.8 billion in July-Nov as opposed to the exports of goods valuing over $9.9 billion in the same five months of 2014, reflecting an annual decline of 10.7%.
Workers’ remittances remained almost $8.1 billion in July-Nov, up 7.6% from the same months of the last year. Remittances have played a significant role in improving the country’s external sector, as they make up for almost 50% of the import bill and cover the deficit in goods and services accounts.
In one of its recent statements, the SBP had noted that a current account deficit of the size of end-fiscal 2015 “seems manageable” in 2015-16. “This is supported by the expected surplus in the capital and financial account in 2015-16 on the back of planned Euro/Sukuk bonds inflows, official disbursements, and the remaining IMF funding under the EFF programme,” it said, adding that the lower global oil prices have yet to find their bottom.
Current account deficit shrinks, amounts to $159m
Declining oil prices are going to result in a year-on-year drop of over 23% in Pakistan’s oil import bill in 2015-16, as per the estimate of the IMF. However, many analysts believe the deficit in the current account is unlikely to change into a surplus by the end of 2015-16 despite a massive drop in international oil prices.
Exports, which are continuously declining, will not be able to sustain the pressure on the current account balance once inflows from the IMF dry up in mid-2016 and Pakistan starts making Paris Club loan repayments, they say.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 19th, 2015.