Pakistan’s current programme with the IMF does seem to be uninformed by this research. Myopic political pronouncements of 2020 as the year of growth notwithstanding the IMF, the donors in league and the rating agencies do not see the economy growing more than the population growth in the current year. With stagnant or perhaps negative growth in income per capita, the share of the bottom 20% can only come down. The relative burden of adjustment reflected in a double-digit inflation, lower expenditure on education and health, rising indirect taxes and utility prices, falling food subsidies and a narrow social protection cover infested with loopholes and connections, is much more on the bottom 20% than on the top 20%. Little wonder, the State Bank thinks that the “underlying structural vulnerabilities” need to be addressed” before talking about a “balanced and sustainable growth trajectory”. It warns those in charge of policies not in its domain: “From the policy perspective, it is important to continue with the adjustment process despite weakening economic activity, as well as the visible stability gains in terms of the falling twin deficits. The policy continuation is warranted given the lingering vulnerabilities in the economy and the chronic nature of the structural weaknesses.”
With all players on one page, the bottom 20% will continue to be kept on a tight leash until the “Ease of Doing Business” crowd — the good old robber barons — are able to compete with the comparators and “the gentlemen at work” learn to practise the art of fiscal prudence and good governance. Who cares if, in the meanwhile, the bottom 20% grows into the bottom 40% or even more. Lord Keynes understood his flock inside out: “In the long run we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task. If in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us, that when the storm is long past, the ocean is flat again.”
Published in The Express Tribune, January 17th, 2020.
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