The truth is that it is far too easy to demonise businesses, even ones that abide by the law and deliver quality service to their customers. It is far harder to address the simple fact that has rendered Pakistan’s energy sector — and by extension its economy — dysfunctional: through a combination of theft and bad management, the energy sector is simply not capable of serving the growing needs of the country. The reason is simple enough. Despite rapidly growing demand, it is simply not profitable enough for most investors to deploy their capital towards supplying electricity to Pakistan’s economy. As a result, we have had chronic underinvestment in the national grid, which has fallen into disrepair and can no longer keep pace with the nation’s demands.
There should be absolutely no doubt in anyone’s mind that there is no magic bullet that can fix the problem of power cuts in Pakistan. The problem is simply too intractable — the product of decades of corruption and mismanagement — to be solved overnight, or even in a matter of months. Solving the power crisis is going to be a long slog. Re-nationalising K-Electric is only one among the many asinine ideas that have been floated as some sort of quick-fix to the problem. Even those who advocate them cannot possibly be sincere in their belief that any of them will work.
When it comes to addressing the long-term structural causes of the outages mess, the government’s actions leave a lot to be desired. To be sure, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has managed to take advantage of the opportunity presented by low oil prices to reduce government subsidies on electricity, but he has done so through temporary surcharges rather than a permanent reduction presented on the floor of the National Assembly as part of the Money Bill. Not only is that measure less democratic, it is also a less durable solution to one of the most chronic of problems facing the energy sector.
On the larger, more difficult problem of electricity theft, the government appears to be taking no action at all. Far from going down as the result of a crackdown, electricity theft rates at most state-owned power distribution companies have actually got worse in the first two years of the Nawaz Administration. No investor will go through the expense of setting up a power plant costing hundreds of millions of dollars knowing that a quarter or more of the electricity it will produce will be stolen. And no amount of tinkering with the tariff formulas is going to be sufficient to compensate for that loss. The government would do well to realise that the way to fix this problem is to focus the entirety of its attention on cracking down on electricity theft. Everything else is just a charade that will yield no tangible benefits, economic or electoral.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 28th, 2015.
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