
So what next for Dr Shaikh? There is overwhelming unanimity in the off-the-record and anonymous tip-offs that he is going to figure in the incoming caretaker set-up. Some say he left the post of finance minister because he is going to be the government’s top choice for prime minister. Some say he is going to be chief minister of Sindh in the interim set-up. But he is not without opposition either. Many feel he is too close to the army because he served as privatisation and investment minister during General (retd) Pervez Musharraf’s tenure and might face objections on these grounds.

Many feel he let the country down, economically. The rupee has hit a historic low. There are just enough foreign reserves for two months’ worth of imports. In 2008, such a situation prompted a balance of payments crisis, which only ended when the IMF offered a bailout package of $11 billion. In 2011, that programme was suspended after Dr Shaikh was unable to push through key reforms, most notably, widening Pakistan’s tax base. Of course, this failure is not his alone, but in politics, there is always a scapegoat, and some feel, this time, it was Dr Shaikh.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 21st, 2013.
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