City
Epaper

Millions more to fall below poverty line in Pakistan

By IANS | Updated: December 11, 2019 15:35 IST

At the end of two years of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) government, 18 million more people may slip into abject poverty due to low economic growth and double-digit food inflation, claimed the countrys renowned economist.

Open in App

Hafiz A. Pasha, the former finance minister of Pakistan and an earlier advisor of Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, said that eight million people have already been added to the ranks of the poor by the end of the first year of the PTI government. He has projected that 10 million more people will slip below the poverty line by the end of the current fiscal year.

"The situation is very alarming due to an economic growth rate that is close to the population growth rate and an exponential increase in prices of perishable food items," said Pasha while talking to The Express Tribune on Tuesday.

"We do not have latest official poverty statistics," responded Federal Minister for Planning and Development Asad Umar when he was contacted for the government's version.

The minister said the country was exiting a severe balance of payments crisis which had its own implications. Umar said the PTI government accelerated the poverty alleviation measures aimed at protecting the poor and vulnerable people from the adverse impact of macroeconomic adjustments.

Pasha said that the government's decision to simultaneously increase taxes, energy tariffs and devaluation of currency contributed to the increase in poverty.

By June next year, four out of every ten Pakistanis will be poor, according to Pasha's working.

At the end of the PML-N government, three out of ten Pakistanis were living in poverty when the poverty ratio had been estimated at 31.3 per cent by him. A year ago he had estimated that national poverty ratio would increase to over 37 per cent, which he now has updated in the aftermath of a surge in food inflation.

The food inflation was recorded at 16.6 per cent in cities and 19.3 per cent in rural areas in November over a year ago, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.

The official poverty figures are missing since 2014-15 a year after start of the last IMF programme, reported The Express Tribune.

In an earlier article, Pasha had said that the incidence of poverty fell from 36.8 per cent in 2015 to 31.3per cent in 2017-18. The decline of 5.5 percentage points implied that almost six million people were taken out of poverty in these three years, he added.

The year 2018-19 has witnessed a change in the trend. The per capita income growth was only 0.9 per cent and more recent estimates indicated that it may have been even lower, he added.

"There is a real risk that the incidence of poverty could increase by almost 5 percentage points from the level of 35 per cent in 2018-19. Therefore, by the end of 2019-20, the level of poverty in Pakistan could once again approach 40 per cent," he added.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: pakistanPTIImran Khan
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalIslamabad Car Blast: At Least 12 Killed After Vehicle Explodes in G-11 Sector of Pakistan

NationalNational Security Tightened as Pakistani Terror Cells Plan Strikes on Delhi and Other Sensitive Locations

CricketHong Kong Sixes 2025 Final: Pakistan Crowned Champions; Defeat Kuwait by 43 Runs

CricketHong Kong Sixes 2025 Final: Pakistan to Face Kuwait In Summit Clash Today at Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground

CricketSA vs PAK LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch South Africa vs Pakistan Hong Kong Sixes 2025 2nd Quarter Final Match

International Realted Stories

InternationalEAM Jaishankar meets Indian envoys in New York to review India-US ties

International"Very bleak message to international community": South Africa envoy on Delhi terror blast

InternationalG20 Summit will show that "Africa is capable of providing global leadership," says South African Envoy to India

InternationalTrump’s support for H-1B reignites debate over skilled-worker visas

International"Excited by India's chairmanship of BRICS," says High Commissioner of South Africa to India