The current government has, in fact, breached the debt limit of 60 per cent of GDP imposed under the Fiscal Responsibility and Debt Limitation Act of 2010. Besides internal debt, Pakistan is heavily indebted to external lenders. According to IMF estimates, Pakistan now requires $76.19 billion or 30 per cent of its per annum GDP in order to pay off its maturing loans. Based on this estimation, the international lending agency has placed Pakistan amongst a list of most indebted countries. But despite expressing concern about government borrowing, the IMF remains keen to lend more money to our country and has just signed another loan agreement, lending Pakistan $6.7 billion. This latest in what has become a long line of ‘rescue’ loans, tied to conditionalities of economic reform, has done little to help promote sustainable development which would allow the country to overcome its need to keep borrowing money.
It does not take a rocket scientist to realise that borrowing could only reduce poverty if the funds which become available are carefully invested in productive endeavours that not only generate sufficient revenue to repay the debt, but can also produce surpluses, which must be used to improve the lives of ordinary people. In reality, however, there are many slips between the cup and the lip.
The policy prescriptions accompanying loans taken from international lending agencies usually result in adoption of top-heavy strategies to induce growth, which primarily serve elite interests rather than alleviating lingering inequalities within the country. For example, encouraging consolidation of private and transnational business concerns, while downsizing public services and implementing regressive taxation schemes, achieves little in terms of poverty alleviation despite increasing government indebtedness.
Unless our economic managers can arrest the ongoing depreciation of the Pakistani rupee, our external debt burden will continue to increase. About 66 per cent of the total increase in external debt is estimated to be caused by unfavourable movement of the exchange rate since 2007-08 alone. There have also been other challenges, including the global financial crisis, the horrific natural disasters over the past few years, and the ‘war on terror’, which have all contributed to further diminishing prospects of economic growth, while causing Pakistan’s debt to spiral out of control.
The existing level of our public debt is unarguably unsustainable. Given the ever larger proportion of government revenue that has to be spent on debt (and defence) payments, there are just not enough resources left to address the basic needs of our masses. But if the government does not invest in the human development of its citizens, the prospects of long-term economic growth will also remain bleak. Unless concerned decision-makers implement a comprehensive and effective strategy to manage public debts, this vicious cycle of indebtedness will haunt our future generations, while simultaneously reducing the availability of resources needed to improve their productive capacity in an increasingly complex world.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 22nd, 2013.
Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.
COMMENTS (6)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
In short, this article confirms that Jinnah's dream has failed. Jinnah was warned by economists that Pakistan could not survive if he pushed his wild dreams. How right they were. Also, bulk of the problem rests on our defense spending. It recognises India as its enemy but due to India's rapid growth and therefore its affordibility towards its defense spending is vast our defense spending ratio against India is widening. We now do not have the capacity to be in the arms race with this now super nation. It is now time to pack and hand over the keys to whoever wants it. We are now bankrupt.
@jilal: Pakistan's debt to GDP ratio is around 65% compared to 100% for US. But 1) US tax to GDP ratio is 26% compared to 8.9% for Pakistan 2) US imports from the world in its own currency and hence its debt is all in its local currency which it can print at will. That is clearly not the case for PAkistan
@jilal: Pakistan's debt to GDP ratio is around 65% compared to 100% for US. But 1) US tax to GDP ratio is 26% compared to 8.9% for Pakistan 2) US imports from the world in its own currency and hence its debt is all in its local currency which it can print at will. That is clearly not the case for PAkistan
@jilal: Pakistan's debt to GDP ratio is around 65% compared to 100% for US. But 1) US tax to GDP ratio is 26% compared to 8.9% for Pakistan 2) US imports from the world in its own currency and hence its debt is all in its local currency which it can print at will. That is clearly not the case for PAkistan
I think one way forward is to borrow as much as possible and then default totally. Start afresh with a new currency. Pakistan will be economically isolated for a while but eventually the world will come around and accept that there is no way other than provide some aid. @Jalil, U r right that Pakistani debt is peanuts compared with the US debt but Pakistan's economy is even more peanuts compared with the US (17 Trillion per year) and the world trades in their currency. Please have a date with reality.
Borrowing and more borrowing-that is the order of the day. USA is the richest country in the world today, but at the same time the one with most debt($17 trillion)-ours is peanuts infront of them.