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ISLAMABAD: The experts at a seminar on Friday said the current challenges offered a chance to seriously re-examine Pakistan’s economy for a concrete way forward to overcome the daunting challenges rising in the prevailing situation.
This key message was delivered by eminent speakers at the seminar on ‘Challenges for Pakistan’s Economy and the Way Forward’ organised by the Centre for Aerospace & Security Studies (CASS), a release received here said.
The speakers including former Chairman of Federal Board of Revenue Syed Mohammad Shabbar Zaidi, Pakistan Institute of Development Economics Vice Chancellor Dr Nadeem ul Haque; former Minister of State and Chairman Board of Investment Haroon Sharif, Director Economic Affairs and National Development, CASS Dr Usman W Chohan.
The seminar was concluded by President CASS Air Marshal (R) Farhat Hussain Khan and moderated by Zahra Niazi, Research Assistant at CASS. Former Air Chief Marshal Mujahid Anwar Khan attended the seminar as the guest of honour.
Discussing the structural roots of the economic crisis in Pakistan, and why the country had not been able to address them, Syed Mohammad Shabbar Zaidi pointed out that the biggest issue was the high import bill and weak export base. He argued that labour was not only expensive and inefficient, absence of women in the labour force was also a major challenge.
Given that the current rate of inflation was touching 25%, Zaidi warned that inflation could become uncontrollable if emergency measures, such as curtailing import bill, reducing energy bill by closing all businesses and shops by 6:30 pm, and cutting the administrative costs of the government, etc, were not undertaken.
Dr Nadeem ul Haque lamented that while the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was supposed to be a ‘ladder of the last resort’, for Pakistan, it had become its ‘go-to first option’ due to which it had availed 23 IMF programmes in the last 75 years.
He urged that the government’s strong footprint on the economy needed to be minimised since this had led to its over politicisation, and there was the need to agree on a sacrosanct 10-15 year national ‘Charter of Economy’ to ensure policy consistency.
While sharing IMF’s latest global economic outlook, Haroon Sharif informed that while Pakistan was not the only
country feeling the pain of rising inflation and economic slowdown, the question was how other countries were handling their economic crises.
He added that states like Dubai and Qatar had international financial centres where local laws were not implemented rather, they had a separate set of laws. “Countries create corporate spaces with no government involvement which gives confidence to the private sector. We need to reduce the size of government, build trust with businesses and signal that we are serious about economic revival and moving on a path of progressive growth,” he stressed.
Highlighting the polycrises engulfing emerging economies, Dr Usman W Chohan was of the view that even countries that did well during the Pandemic were struggling in the post-COVID era and that there were generalizable global worries to which Pakistan was no exception. He provided both short-term recommendations, in light of IMF stipulations, and argued for significant structural long-term reforms to make the economy truly sustainable.
While delivering the Concluding Remarks, Air Marshal (R) Farhat Hussain Khan thanked the speakers for their in-depth analysis of the economic challenges facing Pakistan and their policy proposals for a way forward. He highlighted that Pakistan not only lost its industrial base in the 70s following the government’s nationalisation policy which led to de-industrialisation in the country, but it also harmed human resource development and eventually led to high dependence on imports.
President CASS emphasised that without a consistent industrial policy, economic stability could not be achieved. “There is an urgent need for broad-based national consensus on a long-term and viable economic recovery plan,” he concluded.