‘Budget long on promises, short on sustainability’

Speakers say Rs5.8 trillion revenue target unrealistic


News Desk June 25, 2021
PHOTO: FILE

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The 4.8 per cent growth target set by the government in the 2021-22 budget is unlikely to be sustained in the long run given the state of the economy.

The proposed growth target can be short-term but will pose a challenge to the government in the future as Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), renewable energy, climate change and public sector capacity-building are not in focus.

This was the general view of the economists at a webinar ‘The federal budget 2021-22: A review’ which was organised by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) in the federal capital the other day.

The panelists included Dr Mahmood Khalid, a senior research economist at Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE), Dr Shahida Wizarat, Dean College of Economics and Social Development, Institute of Business Management, Dr Pervez Tahir, former chief economist at Planning Commission, and Dr Abdul Saboor, Dean faculty of Social Sciences, PMAS Arid Agriculture University.

IPS Vice Chairman Ambassador (r) Syed Abrar Hussain chaired the session whereas senior practitioners, including Mirza Hamid Hassan, former federal secretary ministry of power, and Zaigham Rizvi, expert consultant on housing and housing finance, also participated in the discussion.

The speakers observed that better sectoral performance and fiscal discipline during the pandemic have improved growth rate. However, the revenue target of Rs5.8 trillion, which they opined has been set to appease the IMF, is unrealistically high despite the fact that the government has failed in achieving this fiscal year’s tax collection target.

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They termed incentivising the stock market as a way to benefit the privileged at the cost of the poor and the middle class who constitute the major chunk of the society. They warned about a further increase in food inflation which is likely to happen as the government has entertained industry bigwigs in the budget but ignored the common man.

They were of the view that if the government fulfils its promise of providing affordable housing, it will give a boost to dozens of industries that fall within the ambit of the construction industry.

However, the government’s initiative of doling out funds through lawmakers was criticised as it will only serve vested interests and give rise to corruption, the speakers said.

Ruing what they said were misplaced priorities in the budget, the participants were of the view that the primary focus in the Public Sector Development Programme (PSDP) is on brick and mortar projects while human development initiatives that drive growth and development have been ignored.

During the webinar, it was also discussed that the budget does not offer much to the common man as debt servicing and defence expenditure consume most of the budget allocations, resulting in a mere 11 per cent appropriation for development funds that too largely remain underutilised at the end of the year.

Excessive reliance in the budget on indirect taxation, including withholding tax as part of indirect taxes, will further widen the gap between the poor and the affluent. Sustainable and inclusive growth will remain a pipedream in the absence of a paradigm shift in initiating structural reforms, they added.

The speakers maintained that there is a massive crowding out in the financial sector due to the government’s borrowings, starving the private sector of credit for investment in the country. Furthermore, there is a trust deficit between the government and the private sector that needs to be addressed.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 25th, 2021.

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