It is cliche to lament Pakistan’s melange of issues but the pitfalls are no less real. Notwithstanding our November 21 editorial on declining poverty, the cycle of struggle will continue for the approximately 30 per cent to 40 per cent of population that lives below the poverty line. An analogy is drawn between the prospects of students from families that can afford private education versus those who are only able to send their children to unreliable government schools. Government figures, instead of complaining about the conundrums the country faces, would be better suited to executing plans to assuage those problems. While our money-minded culture, with people infatuated with having stakes in stocks and businesses small or large-scale, might project an image of some economic independence or autonomy, conference attendees correctly alluded that we are far from being self-sufficient. An urgent order of business is to correct the economic policies in place to promote equity and equality for all in the public sphere and facilitate steady growth.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 5th, 2016.
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