Pakistan seeks rollover of $494 million-loan
Govt has another $200m loan from IDB for ‘budgetary support’
ISLAMABAD:
Pakistan is seeking a rollover of a $494-million loan obtained from the Jeddah-based Islamic Development Bank (IDB) in addition to seeking a fresh loan for budgetary support, despite the government’s boastful claims about the highest-ever foreign currency reserves.
The government has started procedural formalities to seek a debt repayment extension on the loan obtained last year at a mark-up rate of 5%, finance ministry officials say. The loan matured on January 21 and immediately after that, the government initiated the process of seeking a rollover.
IMF approves $497m loan for Pakistan after bailout review
Moreover, the authorities have sent a request to the IDB to loan $200 million more for budgetary support, the officials said. The rollover and budgetary support are in addition to $417.8 million loans Pakistan borrowed from the bank between July and December last year.
The government, they added, has sought another $100 million short-term loan, which, if effective, would increase borrowings from the IDB to roughly $518 million in the past seven months alone.
Comparatively, the IDB gives expensive loans than two other multilateral lenders – the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank.
In the last fiscal year 2014-15, Pakistan had borrowed over $1 billion short-term loans from the IDB in the hope of returning them within one year.
Sources in the finance ministry, however, say the government is not in a position to avoid short-term expensive loans due to its adverse implications on the much-touted foreign currency reserves held by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP).
The finance ministry’s latest debt policy report states borrowing from the IDB has been mostly done on a short-term basis under a ‘Murabaha’ arrangement.
Pakistan's external debt set to grow to whopping $90b
The government is also keen to get the amount rollover to meet an International Monetary Fund (IMF) condition on Net International Reserves (NIR) – the official foreign currency reserves of the SBP excluding the liabilities.
The net official reserves stood at $9.3 billion by December-end, in line with the IMF condition. As of January 29, the country’s total reserves stood at $20.275 billion, out of which the SBP reserves were $15.435 billion.
Finance Minister Ishaq Dar had congratulated the nation for crossing the $20-billion mark, although a significant portion of the reserves comprises borrowed funds.
In addition to raising money through the expensive Eurobonds and Sukuk bonds, Pakistan also got $1 billion from China aimed at helping the country improve its reserves position. The government is also regularly getting this money rolled over instead of returning it to Beijing.
The decision to get these rollovers has put a question mark over the claims of largest-ever foreign currency reserves. The IMF’s last report on the state of Pakistan’s economy shows the country’s total external debt will balloon to $70.2 billion by June this year. Almost 50% revenues are spent on servicing domestic and foreign debts.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 6th, 2016.
Pakistan is seeking a rollover of a $494-million loan obtained from the Jeddah-based Islamic Development Bank (IDB) in addition to seeking a fresh loan for budgetary support, despite the government’s boastful claims about the highest-ever foreign currency reserves.
The government has started procedural formalities to seek a debt repayment extension on the loan obtained last year at a mark-up rate of 5%, finance ministry officials say. The loan matured on January 21 and immediately after that, the government initiated the process of seeking a rollover.
IMF approves $497m loan for Pakistan after bailout review
Moreover, the authorities have sent a request to the IDB to loan $200 million more for budgetary support, the officials said. The rollover and budgetary support are in addition to $417.8 million loans Pakistan borrowed from the bank between July and December last year.
The government, they added, has sought another $100 million short-term loan, which, if effective, would increase borrowings from the IDB to roughly $518 million in the past seven months alone.
Comparatively, the IDB gives expensive loans than two other multilateral lenders – the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank.
In the last fiscal year 2014-15, Pakistan had borrowed over $1 billion short-term loans from the IDB in the hope of returning them within one year.
Sources in the finance ministry, however, say the government is not in a position to avoid short-term expensive loans due to its adverse implications on the much-touted foreign currency reserves held by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP).
The finance ministry’s latest debt policy report states borrowing from the IDB has been mostly done on a short-term basis under a ‘Murabaha’ arrangement.
Pakistan's external debt set to grow to whopping $90b
The government is also keen to get the amount rollover to meet an International Monetary Fund (IMF) condition on Net International Reserves (NIR) – the official foreign currency reserves of the SBP excluding the liabilities.
The net official reserves stood at $9.3 billion by December-end, in line with the IMF condition. As of January 29, the country’s total reserves stood at $20.275 billion, out of which the SBP reserves were $15.435 billion.
Finance Minister Ishaq Dar had congratulated the nation for crossing the $20-billion mark, although a significant portion of the reserves comprises borrowed funds.
In addition to raising money through the expensive Eurobonds and Sukuk bonds, Pakistan also got $1 billion from China aimed at helping the country improve its reserves position. The government is also regularly getting this money rolled over instead of returning it to Beijing.
The decision to get these rollovers has put a question mark over the claims of largest-ever foreign currency reserves. The IMF’s last report on the state of Pakistan’s economy shows the country’s total external debt will balloon to $70.2 billion by June this year. Almost 50% revenues are spent on servicing domestic and foreign debts.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 6th, 2016.