Pakistan won’t approach Paris Club for debt rescheduling, says Dar

Finance minister says country will pay off all its multilateral liabilities on time


News Desk October 09, 2022
Finance Minister Ishaq Dar. Photo: File/SCREENGRAB

Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has announced that Pakistan will not approach Paris Club – a group of wealthy creditor nations — for debt rescheduling amid Moody’s Investors Service’s decision to cut Pakistan’s sovereign credit rating to Caa1 from B3.

Addressing a press conference in Islamabad on Sunday, he said the major reason behind the rating agency’s decision was concerns that Pakistan was seeking the rescheduling of $10 billion worth of debt owed to the Paris Club.

“We have made a very conscious decision that we will not approach Paris Club. We will manage our matters and we will pay off liabilities of multilateral lenders on time,” he said, adding that a strategy for paying back debts has been formulated.

The decision to not seek relief from Paris Club is in sharp contrast to Dar’s predecessor Miftah Ismail move of seeking debt rescheduling from the creditor nations in a bid to create breathing space in the midst of efforts to rehabilitate more than 33 million people affected by devastating floods.

“Given the climate-induced disaster in Pakistan, we are seeking debt relief from bilateral Paris Club creditors,” tweeted the then finance minister Miftah from New York last month. 

Speaking about the speculations regarding bonds payments, Finance Minister Dar in today’s media interaction denied the reports that Pakistan was going to postpone the payments for the international bonds.

Also read: Moody’s downgrades Pakistan’s credit rating

He said Pakistan will make payments of bonds that are maturing in December this year.

Last month, the price of Pakistan's US dollar-denominated global bonds – Eurobond and Sukuk – slumped while their yields skyrocketed at world markets after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif appealed for debt relief from rich nations to cope with the flood-hit economy.

The global bond investors interpreted the prime minister’s appeal as an indicator that the country was going to default on foreign debt repayments. Islamabad is scheduled to repay $1 billion against a maturing Sukuk on December 5, 2022.

Speaking about the IMF programme, the financial czar said the government had no intention of renegotiating an agreement with the global lender and pledged that the country will fulfil all its “sovereign commitments”.

LC payments up to $50,000 to be released

Ishaq Dar said all Letters of Credit (LC) payments up to $50,000 will be released by the next month.

He said the total pending cases of LC payments are 7,952 and 4,400 of them will be resolved after this decision. He said the government is committed to address the concerns of the business community.

 

COMMENTS (1)

test | 2 years ago | Reply Why not I mean we should ask for complete debt forgiveness from creditor nations to check their moods. I know nothing is free in this world. But at least we should try to push them around to check whether they are willing to forgive our debt or not And also for what purpose we have taken debt of 140 billion dollars I mean i don t see any fortune 500 global 2000 companies in Pakistan and also our exports standing at 25 billion dollars which means all the dollars end up into the accounts of politicians policy makers and businessmen. So i don t see any short term solution except increasing your exports to 100 billion dollars in just few years otherwise TLP is there for sure to claim the power because we will vote for them in next general elections if your western masters refuse to move their factories to Pakistan. We will vote TLP then in next elections.
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