With depleting foreign exchange reserves, the pressure is already mounting on the country to quickly conclude another bailout package with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the second one since 2013, when Islamabad was loaned $6.7 billion. Officials have set mid-January as the target date for the international lender to sign off on the deal. Fitch said successful talks on IMF support could help in stabilising Pakistan’s external finances but added a note of caution that the programme will face a significant implementation risk. In October, Finance Minister Asad Umar announced that Saudi Arabia had offered $3 billion in foreign currency support to the country’s central bank and a further loan worth $3 billion in deferred payments for oil. That announcement came as a godsend for the country desperately looking for balance of payments support. As Fitch notes, the financial commitments given to the country by Saudi Arabia, China and the United Arab Emirates have helped the economy plug its near-term financing gap. A dire comment it appended to its report is that Pakistan’s tensions with neighbouring countries pose a geopolitical risk.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 17th, 2018.
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