This takes one directly to the fundamentals of the country’s economic policy framework which seems to have been based on the inherently defective model of putting the cart before the horse. Physical infrastructure does play a very important role in accelerating economic growth. But when you expand roads, highways and motorways without adding significantly to mass transit facilities such as railways there is no way you can keep a cap on the demand for two-wheelers (the total sales of bikes and three-wheelers surged more than one-fifth to 1.63 million units in 2016-17 from 1.35m units a year ago) and four-wheelers (car sales rose 2.5pc to 185,781 units in 2016-17) that guzzle petrol as if consuming tap water.
The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), the so-called game changer, also envisages a railroad running across the country from Kashgar in western China in the north to Gwadar in Balochistan in the south. One hopes that the government would undertake this project in the right earnest and link it up with all important cities of Pakistan on its way that would bring down considerably the cost of internal goods and passenger transport as at the same time the project curtails drastically goods transportation time from China to world markets.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 24th, 2017.
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