Pakistan’s Moment of Economic Opportunity

Posted on October 30, 2008
Filed Under >Yasser Latif Hamdani, Economy & Development, Politics
73 Comments
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Yasser Latif Hamdani

Ours is a mismanaged country but one with potential to amply fulfill the needs of its citizenry. In so far as our economy goes, there is nothing that is wrong with it structurally.

Prima facie Pakistan’s current economic difficulties emerge out of high import bill and corresponding lack of investment.  The huge rise in the oil price internationally over the last few years along with an international crisis of agriculture production has affected this country just like it has affected all countries around the world.   For us, it also has to do with the unique geo-political role that we are forced to play without an effective negotiator on the top.

The recession in the West has given us breathing space. The oil price is now back down into the US$60 to a barrel range on the international market.  This is – as with all capitalist systems- an automatic correction of what was an unusually high increase in the costs of fueling the global economic system.

As it stands right now, Pakistan’s policy makers shall find a greater cushion than they expected.  If some of the price decline is passed on to the consumers in Pakistan, it will slow down the inflation rate considerably. The 30% to 50% food inflation rate over the last few weeks will go down to 12% to 16% in the coming months.  Even if it isn’t passed on, the correction vis a vis import bill is going to be substantial.  The policy makers thus have a menu of options available.

An important factor would be increase the tax base to include agricultural income.  Similarly, selective weekend taxes for petroleum products, as much as several hundred percent, will help bring both the burgeoning fuel demand and reduce pollution.  Similarly for power, instead of load shedding during the work week, it would be better to increase the tariff by significant amount on Sundays.  At the very least our policy makers should heavily tax imported products and luxury items for which there are local alternatives.

Pakistan’s economic growth will slow down from between 6 to 7 percent to between 4 to 5 percent.  To achieve a growth rate between 4 to 5 percent in times of a global recession is no mean achievement and it reaffirms the point made earlier.  Similarly, the State Bank’s decision to increase money supply by cutting in interest rates and cash reserve requirement indicates that the policy makers tend to agree that Pakistan’s current crisis is not demand pull (since the economy is slowing down) but is cost push due to external factors.  The immediate and possibly temporary reaction to State Bank’s decision was the appreciation of the Pakistani rupee which has generally been seen as welcome. Pakistani rupee will stabilize as the situation globally favors the developing world.

Ultimately the real solution for our economic woes, to use the hackneyed phrase, lies in increased foreign direct investment.   Since 2001, Pakistan had received only up to US$ 64 billion inflows, which is – no matter what people say- a pittance compared to our potential.  As an English-speaking nation of 165 million industrious and talented people, Pakistan presents an excellent opportunity for any foreign investor but for three major drawbacks.

One, we assume and project the same assumption on to foreign investors that that investments in Pakistan and India are mutually exclusive and since we view everything in comparison to our giant neighbor, we tend to underestimate ourselves increasingly so in the last decade and a half. Second, and more conclusively it is terrorism that has dulled Pakistan’s foreign investment in every sector including sport and tourism. In 2004-2005, Pakistan was an exciting tourist destination with Basant festivals, Polo matches and Cricket.  Today foreign sports teams are very rightfully apprehensive of visiting the country and almost every Western embassy has a travel advisory out. The Marriot bombing has all but completely brought not just international but domestic commercial activity to a halt.  And finally, it is the infrastructure.  For all of the last government’s purported achievements in the economic sphere, their inability to create power solutions for an annual demand for electricity growing at 7-10 percent.

How does one do it though is a tricky one. The first two are political issues. India’s existence as a bigger nation in our neighborhood need not be a threat to us. Indeed if Pakistan were to play its unique role as a neighbor of one emerging global economy like India, while courting Asia’s foremost power house China and manage to keep its ties with the US as its Major Non-Nato Ally at the same time, it is highly probable that under a democratic regime, Pakistan can manage to create a trillion dollar economy in two decades or less.

But this means a solutions or management of all existing disputes but most importantly the water crisis.  The most crucial issue however will be what role Pakistan plays in the Iran-US. Instead of waiting for the time where US gives Pakistan an option similar to the one it was given in 2001, Pakistan should play a pro-active role in bringing Iran and the US together by playing exactly the kind of role it played in the 1972 between China and the US. It would not be out of place to attempt once again to revive the long dead Regional Cooperation Development organization or the RCD between Turkey, Iran and Pakistan which would guarantee greater regional stability and economic options for Pakistan. Winning the war on terror is going to be essential but the war itself ought to be fought on several fronts one of which has to be economic.

The fall out of the war on terror has been economic and our allies should compensate us for our losses. But perhaps the most important thing any of our allies can help us with is in the power sector. Ideally the US should have boosted us by providing us the same kind of civil nuclear deal that it has offered India but much of that is impossible at present because of the history of nuclear proliferation and now that Dr. A Q Khan has rescinded on his earlier confession.  We still might get a nuclear deal from China. This is not all though.

Pakistan must make dams and make them quick. If Kalabagh is out of the question, then alternatives must be looked at and a quick decision taken on. Similarly the Iran-Pakistan pipeline is also essential and if India joins in, this pipeline might just be a pipeline of peace and prosperity in the region. All in all, if this democratic government was to play its cards right, it could raise up to another US$ 30-40 Billion in direct investment over the next 3 to 5 years and that would be more than enough to sustain and develop it.

The late US President Richard Nixon, one of the 20th century’s greatest statesmen, wrote in 1991 that Pakistan as a democracy, an important “modernist” Muslim state and a US ally was one of the most important countries in Asia, close relations with which were imperative for US’ own interests in Asia and the greater Islamic world. Unfortunately the policy makers in the US in the 1990s did not listen to him.  Now more than ever it is clear that our allies need us more than we need them – it is this essential premise on which we should deal with the world with our head held high.

Indeed if nations were judged by how hard they were hit and still managed to move on, Pakistan has given a good account of itself going from one crisis to another in quick succession.  But nation states, as with individuals, are judged not by how many crises it takes to bring them down but how far they travel on the road to progress and towards their stated aims and objectives. Without getting into ideological pretensions, the consensus that all major players in Pakistan’s politics have is that Pakistan ought to be: an economically viable state run by constitutional democratic means which was the original aspiration of the people of this country.

Our rulers have bungled up opportunities and have let the people down far too many times in the past. It is time for the current democratically elected government to take a long hard look at the situation and refrain from mock tough rhetoric that does no one any good.

Pakistan must seize the moment and take this as an opportunity to catch up.

73 responses to “Pakistan’s Moment of Economic Opportunity”

  1. YLH says:

    Whoa seriously people…

    Unlike the armchair activists and idealists here sitting cosy in Virginia or wherever else, I am part and parcel of the Lawyers’ movement … so lets not get ahead of ourselves and derail this discussion. No one is defending Zardari, corruption, generals etc. The very fact that you chaps have to either resort to personal attacks or change the topic to Zardari shows that you didn’t have an argument to begin with. What private griefs you have I know not, but the issue being discussed here is purely an economic one and you guys have failed pathetically to point out what “structural” issues you see with the economy. Indeed- my comment of mismanagement is a far greater indictment of Zardari and Co (and our ruling elite) than your claim that Pakistan’s economy faces structural problems. But this would require logical thinking, which seems to be in short supply in Virginia these days.

    Ibrahim,

    You’ll be surprised no doubt to know that I believe that Islamic principles of economic social justice and equality are the missing ingredients in the western capitalist system. I don’t see as contrary to secularism… but I do find your narrowmindedness at times to be completely contradictory to the spirit of Islam even.

    But the solutions you’ve given, with which I agree wholeheartedly in principle, are not solutions for the problem at hand. Your hur fun maula comment was a dead give away of the fact that you really didn’t have an opinion on the article above but chose to attack it only because of your own personal disagreement and hatred for me. But for clarity, my major in college i.e. Economics doesnt make me an economist. I wrote this article as a Pakistani trying to clear the cobwebs of ideology that certified non-economists have created and look to the real problems. These issues require rational solutions… so let us check ideology and personal faith at the door.

    As for the 3 comments… I was posting through a blackberry and not every comment was immediately visible on it. So I apologize for the multiple posting.

    -YLH

  2. Jusathot says:

    Allow me to digress a little to reply to YLH & Co

  3. meengla says:

    @Viqar,
    I am ‘finished’ for now. I will respond whenever I see it appropriate–perhaps in light of ‘new data’. But the fundamentals of my ‘position’ will remain a pragmatic democratic system pitted against the powerful military-led Establishment of Pakistan.
    Thank you,
    Meengla

  4. Viqar Minai says:

    @meengla,
    Are you finished? Or is there something more?

  5. meengla says:

    @Viqar,
    This is not so much a defense of YLH but more like to point out the shallowness of your’s and the arguments of multitude like you: In my last debate with you on this Blogspace, you didn’t want to give political-space (time) to the new democratic setup. You want it perfectly fine and you want it now. My argument in that topic (and in this one) is to let the political process take its time and let the electoral politics takes its ‘natural course’. But you…you wanted (wants?) Zardari to restore the judges NOW. You wanted (wants?) Zardari to give up the powers under 17th Amendment now?
    I am inclined to call you a ‘deluded idealist’ but that would be too much credit. There are no ideals in your thought: Just agitation against the govt. of the day, to appear ‘cool’. When you heaped scorn over the new democratic setup in Pakistan–refusing to give it time in a country–arguably, the most difficult country to govern–you presented no solutions except to expect ‘full restoration of judiciary’ and standing up to the Establishment.
    Well, the new govt. tried to reign in the ISI but got its winged burned pretty fast. Next step would be the jackboots marching prematurely down the power center of Pakistan. Perhaps THAT is what you want anyway?!
    Let the democratic setup have its time. The setup is TRYING very hard to follow the Charter of Democracy signed by Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif. So far it has not been too bad, despite the ‘usual’ chaos associated with a democratic dispensation.

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