The government must be commended for its efforts to focus on the plight of the poorest of the poor under both the asset transfer scheme and the programme as a whole. To be sure, the BISP has met with considerable success and the interest-free loan scheme is also yielding good results. But the government would do well to remember that as many as 60 to 70 million people – about 39% of Pakistan’s population – live below the poverty line. The required resources for the job are, therefore, too great and the available resources too meager to make a major dent in the poverty quagmire through such methods alone, as proven by the failures of previous poverty alleviation schemes such as the Pakistan Poverty Alleviation Fund (PPAF), launched in 1997.
It is imperative, therefore, for the government to focus on long-term measures such as population control and education to tackle the poverty problem. The country’s population continues to grow at an alarming annual rate of over 2 % and, in addition to education being of poor quality, public spending on it is only about 2.4 % of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the lowest in the region. Both must get urgent government attention if we are to equip people with the skills necessary to lift them out of poverty.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 23rd, 2020.
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