We first had a chance meeting in 1973 in a hostel room of the then University of Islamabad, serving as a makeshift office of M L Qureshi, who was busy reestablishing the Pakistan Institute of Development Economics after the fall of Dhaka. I was assisting him in the revival of the Pakistan Development Review. Mr Qureshi introduced Meekal as the brilliant son of his friend Aziz Ahmed, a deputy chief in the Planning Commission. Tall and handsome, Meekal took an arrogant look at me and said: “So you are the guy who would edit greats. Hope GC (Government College, Lahore) prepared you for this!” Then he kept on talking to Mr Qureshi as if I did not exist! What else can you expect from the son of Mr Aziz Ahmed, I thought. East Pakistani politicians used to grumble: We don’t know any central or provincial government. We only know Aziz Ahmed. He was the all-powerful secretary general of the government of East Pakistan.
In 1974, I joined the Ministry of Finance. When General Ziaul Haq took over in 1977, all those recruited during Mr Bhutto’s period were punished in one form or the other. My immediate ‘punishment’ was a transfer to the Planning Commission. There was, as a matter of fact, no commission. Dr Mubashir Hasan, Mr Bhutto’s finance minister, viewed the place as a bastion of anti-people economics. No deputy chairman had been appointed after the unceremonious exit of Qamarul Islam in 1972. The elite group of economists, mostly the scions of the CSP, had either left for international financial institutions or was in the process of doing so. Meekal, I was told, was in the process of completing his never-ending doctoral dissertation that started at Oxford in 1970. He was in and out of the Planning Commission until the completion of his dissertation in 1980. He had joined as assistant chief in the mid-1960s –– the heydays of the Planning Commission. Eventually, he became the chief of International Economics and rose to be the joint chief economist, concerned with macroeconomic planning. He retired as chief economist while on deputation with the IMF. The then finance minister, Shaukat Aziz, had asked him to return as deputy chairman, a position that was offered to him during the second coming of prime minister Benazir Bhutto as well. While the declining role of the Planning Commission was a factor in his decision to decline the request, the fact that he had left the country for personal reasons weighed more.
While Meekal’s work at the Planning Commission and later as a senior adviser to the executive director for a group of countries that included Pakistan, suggests macroeconomic policy as his main area of interest, his written academic work is nearly entirely in the domain of microeconomics. His doctoral thesis was on “Productivity, prices and relative income shares in Pakistan’s large-scale manufacturing sector, 1958-70”, a fashionable subject of research in those days. Real wages, remittances and aid effectiveness were his other interests. When on attack — intellectually that is — he would pick up holes in language and data, challenge the appropriateness of methodology and point out the misleading nature of conclusions, and all this in a style very few could match in wit and sharpness.
May his soul rest in peace.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 14th, 2014.
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Read this article last night and was grief-stricken, only because I had no inkling that the great Meekal A. Ahmed had passed away. I could not even muster a few words as comment.
Meekal was very knowledgeable on economic matters, but far more importantly as far as Pakistan was concerned, he had his feet on the ground. With a few lines in the comments section of ET, he could debunk and bring down the house of cards on which an author had written a preposterous article. Based on my few interactions with him on ET, I could surmise that he was a man who had "been there and done that". As an Indian, I can say without a doubt that he is the tallest Pakistani economist that I have ever known.
I shall miss Meekal A. Ahmed on the pages of ET greatly. RIP.
Meekal Sahab used to post very knowledgeable comments on these pages on the issues of economy. His absence will be dearly missed RIP
Rest in Peace, Meekal Sahab, ET is that much poorer with your passing
"Then he kept on talking to Mr Qureshi as if I did not exist! What else can you expect from the son of Mr Aziz Ahmed, I thought. East Pakistani politicians used to grumble: We don’t know any central or provincial government. We only know Aziz Ahmed. He was the all-powerful secretary general of the government of East Pakistan."
So his father was the secretary general of East Pakistan? When I contemplate on some of his past articles, especially when the subject of India came up, I sense that at times, his father's loss [E. Pakistan] was taken personally by Mr. Meekal Ahmed.
I thank the late Mr. Meekal Ahmed for taking the time to occasionally interact with me through the webpages of the Express Tribune, albeit in a small way.
In his demise, Pakistan lost a fine economist and a fine human being. May he rest in peace and may God give him respite from the Kali Yug.
Just known Mr Meekal Ahmed through his columns in ET and his occasional, very articulate and sound comments on others' op-eds. His knowledge, insights, wit and discernment stood out. May Allah grant him a high place in Jannah. Ameen.