So far so good. The NPGI may not be a lot for now, but one cannot say the sentiment at least is not noble. But where does the Prime Minister hope to generate funds for so ambitious an initiative? In the same speech in which Prime Minister Imran announced the NPGI, he also announced his government’s plans to divert money from the sale of benami assets into the Ehsas Programme initiatives. To further incentivise the discovery of such assets, the prime minister announced a seven per cent increase in reward money for whistleblowers.
There is, of course, one small potential problem with this ambitious scheme. The entire Ehsas Programme rests on the assumption that illegally-accumulated wealth and assets in Pakistan will be enough to lift the country’s ever-growing poor populace out of poverty. At the same time, nowhere within the Ehsas framework has the PTI government so far outlined a comprehensive plan to create new jobs in Pakistan. On the contrary, thanks to its backbreaking austerity drive, the country’s middle and low-income classes are already feeling the pinch.
Established enterprises are reacting to the pressure from the drive by contracting their operations, laying off some people here and shaving wages there. None of them, for now, provide any hope for new employment opportunities.
Here’s hoping the Ehsas Programme takes off, because a lot more people may be needing it very soon.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 08th, 2019.
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