This is an unprecedented rise of 70 per cent when compared to the previous fiscal year. Examination of the budget reveals that the Punjab government, far from being ‘self-reliant’ is heavily dependent on foreign finance to underwrite projects such as the Orange Line — which may not come into profit for 20 years or more. To the surprise of nobody, Punjab far outstrips the other provinces when it comes to FPA allocations. Balochistan is in its traditional position of bottom of the list, seeking Rs4 billion, Sindh Rs12 billion and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) Rs36 billion — a grand total of Rs52 billion collectively and not far off the FPA that Punjab seeks for itself alone. The allocation is defended by Punjab on the grounds that K-P is barely half the size of Punjab in economic and developmental terms, and that is a defensible position but it does nothing to dampen the sense of resentment felt in other provinces that everything revolves around Punjab, its needs and wishes are paramount and must be fulfilled at all costs. That feeling is exacerbated for K-P by the federal government withholding substantial development funding by pleading poverty. Technically the Punjab budget is not ‘wrong’ — but it is wrong to claim one thing whilst doing another. A little more transparency could result in a little less angst.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 29th, 2016.
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