Over the course of the last six months, investors of the stock market somewhat factored in the worst scenario. But what about all the infrastructure projects, piling debt, uncertainty over the future value of the rupee and widening trade deficits? What about K-Electric’s acquisition and the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor? Businesses hate uncertainty, and prime minister’s disqualification would have been just that. However, what has transpired so far has been a good roadmap. The finance ministry has openly said that it will maintain the current dollar-rupee parity. Chinese officials have vowed support for CPEC, regardless of who is incharge, and the stock market gave a glimpse of recovery when it ended flat on Friday. The PML-N has laid out its back-up plan, which is not so different in ideology, in saying that it would want Shehbaz Sharif as the prime minister. At this time, there seems little reason to worry. The government has not been challenged. It’s still at the helm. With elections around the corner, one hopes that the transition is smooth. Nothing hurts business sentiment more than something that happens out of the blue. Pakistan may have never seen a prime minister last a full term, but it may see two successive governments completing their tenure. This is what businesses want. A stable, consistent authority that has control and is open about its agenda, at least. The worst may very well be over for the business community.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 31st, 2017.
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