City
Epaper

IMF loans can compromise Pakistan's economic sovereignty, says expert

By ANI | Updated: February 10, 2022 20:25 IST

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has agreed to provide a USD 6 billion bailout package for Pakistan, but it can adversely affect common livelihoods and can compromise Pakistan's economic sovereignty.

Open in App

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has agreed to provide a USD 6 billion bailout package for Pakistan, but it can adversely affect common livelihoods and can compromise Pakistan's economic sovereignty.

Valerio Fabbri, writing in Geopolitica.info said that Pakistan's economy is in the doldrums. To make the matter worse, inflation has reached alarming levels- 12.3 per cent in December 2021 - and the country's currency is weakened to Rs 176 to a dollar- a 30 per cent reduction in the past three years.

Amid the economic instability, Imran Khan's decision to pass a mini-budget or supplementary budget to facilitate financial aid from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is set to increase taxes on a range of imports, exports and services.

This has put immense pressure on the Imran Khan government, as food and fuel price are skyrocketing. Pakistan can easily slip into a debt trap in case of loan defaulting, as it has already received USD 3 billion each from China and Saudi Arabia and USD 2 billion from the United Arab Emirates.

This will not only burden common households and hurt the industry, but it will also compromise the country's economic sovereignty too, said Fabbri.

Pakistan's renowned economist Qaiser Bengali said "All the loans it has been taking now, from whatever sources, are to pay past loans."

The mini-budget was a part of the IMF conditions that compelled the Islamabad government to increase power tariffs, levy higher duty on fuel prices and pull out tax exemptions.

This, however, has angered people in Pakistan as the higher taxes have aggravated their sufferings. The mini-budget has fuelled inflation, irking millions of people who are finding it difficult to fulfil the basic requirements, reported Geopolitica.info.

Moreover, the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has forecast high inflation of 9-11 per cent in 2022. Opposition leaders in Pakistan have been criticizing Khan-government for creating survival problems for poor people.

Pakistani legislator Farooq Hamid Naek said, "The revenue of the government is being increased at the cost of oppressing the common man."

Industry and businesses too are feeling the heat. The Vice President of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI), Nasir Khan, said the mini-budget would lead to smuggling of cheaper goods as the cost of domestically- manufactured goods would be higher due to withdrawal of tax exemptions, which will have a negative impact on industrial activities, reported Geopolitica.info.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Farooq NaekpakistanislamabadInternational Monetary FundState Bank Of PakistanNasir KhanDhs punjabImf researchNational and globalState of bank of pakistan
Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentPakistani Actress Humaira Asghar Dies At 32, Decomposed Body Found in Karachi Home by Local Police

MaharashtraRaigad: Suspicious Pakistani Boat in Arabian Sea Turns Out to Be Buoy

OpinionsVicious Plot to Drown Nation in Drugs

EntertainmentPakistani Actor Mawra Hocane’s Instagram Visible in India Again Months After Ban

InternationalPakistan Tragedy: 18 Family Members, Including Children, Swept Away in Swat River; Video Emerges

International Realted Stories

InternationalIDF strikes over 35 Hamas targets in Beit Hanoun

InternationalIDF, Shin Bet eliminate senior terror operative in Lebanon

InternationalFamilies' forum expresses concern over stalled talks in Doha

InternationalPakistani airline sends passenger to Jeddah instead of Karachi

InternationalPolice crackdown on PTI as CM Gandapur's convoy reaches Lahore