Agriculture may need 2 years for recovery: ADB
ADB and the World Bank are assessing the damage caused by one of Pakistan's worst natural disasters.
ISLAMABAD:
Pakistan's agriculture industry - a pillar of the economy - could take up to two years to start recovering from floods, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said on Monday.
ADB and the World Bank are assessing the damage caused by one of Pakistan's worst natural disasters.
Philip Erquiaga, director general of ADB's private sector operations, said the bank expects Pakistan's agriculture sector to get back on its feet within two years. "We are thinking within that time horizon we should be able to see the agriculture sector coming back," he told Reuters.
ADB said earlier it was widening its trade financing for Pakistan by $500 million to help with recovery and reconstruction after the floods. That means the bank could provide up to $2 billion in trade finance.
The ADB expects half of that amount to be used for agricultural commodity imports, said Erquiaga. "The balance of that we will probably see coming in the form of capital goods imports related to the flooding reconstruction," he said.
Washington wants economic and political stability in Pakistan, which it sees as a vital ally in its war on militancy.
The floods, triggered by heavy monsoon rains in late July, forced at least 10 million people from their homes and destroyed 1.3 million hectares in crops just before the harvest of key standing crops such as rice, maize and sugarcane. There were also heavy losses in livestock and damage to irrigation.
Last week, the US Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, said Pakistan's allies could only do so much to rebuild the country. The government, he said, had to raise tens of billions of dollars itself.
Pakistan's agriculture industry - a pillar of the economy - could take up to two years to start recovering from floods, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said on Monday.
ADB and the World Bank are assessing the damage caused by one of Pakistan's worst natural disasters.
Philip Erquiaga, director general of ADB's private sector operations, said the bank expects Pakistan's agriculture sector to get back on its feet within two years. "We are thinking within that time horizon we should be able to see the agriculture sector coming back," he told Reuters.
ADB said earlier it was widening its trade financing for Pakistan by $500 million to help with recovery and reconstruction after the floods. That means the bank could provide up to $2 billion in trade finance.
The ADB expects half of that amount to be used for agricultural commodity imports, said Erquiaga. "The balance of that we will probably see coming in the form of capital goods imports related to the flooding reconstruction," he said.
Washington wants economic and political stability in Pakistan, which it sees as a vital ally in its war on militancy.
The floods, triggered by heavy monsoon rains in late July, forced at least 10 million people from their homes and destroyed 1.3 million hectares in crops just before the harvest of key standing crops such as rice, maize and sugarcane. There were also heavy losses in livestock and damage to irrigation.
Last week, the US Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, said Pakistan's allies could only do so much to rebuild the country. The government, he said, had to raise tens of billions of dollars itself.