A small IMF mission has come and gone. News reports say the mission failed to persuade our worthy representatives on the urgent need for fiscal reforms. The mission members met with the prime minister and he informed them that the government was following its reform agenda. One wonders who wrote that brief because it seems that the government has decided to do nothing until the budget for 2011-12. Meanwhile, as the media reports it, the IMF has demanded additional measures, including the removal of exemptions and concessions, which have been doled out to the powerful and well-connected over the years. Removing these exemptions, variously estimated to cause a revenue loss of approximately Rs150-200 billion does not require approval of parliament and can be done through a notification. In any event, this is not an additional demand of the IMF; these are the same exemptions which were to be removed as part of the RGST and, to some observers, was the genesis of the opposition to the RGST since it included, removing the tax exemption on agriculture inputs.
Even if this were to happen, it is unlikely that the IMF staff would recommend to the body’s executive board that the next tranche of the stand-by arrangement be released. The board would want to see a more comprehensive and well-articulated set of reforms not only on the fiscal side but also with respect to public enterprises, the power sector, improving governance and embarking on a clear path to resolving the interlocking problem of circular debt. A piecemeal approach will simply not fly.
This recurring pattern of ‘start-stop’ adjustment, which has sadly been the hallmark of our relations with the IMF grievously hurts the economy. Not only does it cause a loss of reform momentum, it dissipates any benefits that reforms may have conferred. The government loses credibility and market confidence is diminished invariably, resulting in a downgrade of our debt, as has happened recently. This downgrade elevates country risk which manifests itself in higher spreads. Just recently, plans for the Oil and Gas Development Corporation to float a bond in the international market have been put on hold in light of widening spreads. Confidence, once lost, is painfully difficult to regain.
While one may have reservations about whether it is apt to describe the economy as being in ‘crisis’ at present, as most economic analysts suggest, a full-blown crisis may well be not too far down the road, unless we can find resources from somewhere to finance our sharply rising budget deficit and imports. Given the improbability of that happening, another economic crisis marked by stagflation and rising poverty levels would be the horrible price the Pakistani people will have to pay because the government is unconvincing, bewildered and stupefied.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 10th, 2011.
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