The International Monetary Fund has acknowledged Pakistan’s reform program is on track and already producing results after the completion of… Read More
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The International Monetary Fund has acknowledged Pakistan’s reform program is on track and already producing results after the completion of the first review of Pakistan’s economic performance.
According to a press statement issued by the Finance Ministry, in its latest report IMF conceded that the business environment has improved and market confidence is returning back.
The IMF adds in its assessment that the government recognizes that structural reforms, especially in the SoE sector, are key to revive economic activity and growth. The IMF has released SDR 328 million (about $452.4 million), bringing total disbursements to SDR 1,044 million (approx $1.45 billion).
The report has confirmed that End-September performance criteria (PCs) were observed with wide margins. These include:
In addition to above, all structural benchmarks (SBs) for end-September, except the SB on AML/CFT, were completed
On the inflation outlook, IMF has lowered Inflation projection for FY20 to 11.8%, down from 13% earlier on account of this fact that the administrative and energy tariff adjustments are expected to offset the effects from weak domestic demand claimed the report. Thereafter, inflation is expected to converge to 5-7%. The report confirms that inflation has been started to stabilize, along with core inflation, and the SBP stance is appropriate (no need for further rate hikes).
However, the ministry is of the view that it will do much better than IMF projection. As inflation during Jul-Nov was 10.8% and with measures taken, it can be brought down to 5% over the medium term.
A significant improvement has been witnessed in the external sector. Overall, the Current Account Deficit (CAD) shrunk by almost two-thirds (74%) in the Q1 FY20 compared to the same period of FY 2019. CAD is projected to decline to 2.4% of GDP in FY20 (4.9%), which is lower than earlier IMF forecasts of 2.6%.
The report states that the transition to a market-determined exchange rate has allowed the rupee to find its new equilibrium quickly, thereby, successfully correcting the ‘exchange rate overvaluation’ of the last 5 years. The report has also acknowledged strong fiscal performance in the First Quarter of FY2020 while stating a Primary surplus of 0.6% of GDP and an overall deficit of 0.6% of GDP, about 1% of GDP better than programmed.
In addition, tax revenue growth was in double-digits (net of refunds) even though customs receipts and other external sector-related taxes have suffered due to import compression.
Pakistan economy has witnessed significant improvements in recent months as evidenced by the performance of key economic indicators mentioned below:
Monthly flow decreased from Rs. 38 billion in July 2019 to about Rs. 10 billion. Targeted to be zero next year. Strategy for dealing with the stock of debt being finalized. Protection for lower-end consumers <300 from price rationalization. More effective recovery/detection of electricity theft (>50 million).
Ministry of Energy will issue an additional Rs. 250 billion Sukuks (with government guarantee) in FY2020 to retire the CPPA liabilities of the IPPs.
An additional credit of Rs. 200 billion for exporters under the Export Finance Scheme (EFS) in FY2020 The interest rate differential (between Kibor and EFS markup) will be paid by an additional Rs. 10 billion subsidy by the government in FY2020.
This will boost the export sector and reduce their cost of doing business SBP will give an additional Rs. 100 billion worth of lending to the exporters, to be subsidized by the government through SBP profits.
The ceiling on NDA of SBP (Performance benchmark) has been enhanced to Rs. 9.1 trillion, an increase of Rs. 339 billion in FY20. This is positive for growth and will be utilized for concessional financing for the export industry.
The ceiling on government guarantees has been enhanced to Rs. 1.8 trillion, an increase of Rs. 252 billion in FY20. This is positive for growth and will allow the government to settle the outstanding stock of circular debt.
The floor on FBR tax collections for FY20 has been revised lower to Rs. 5.2 trillion, due to strong improvement in non-tax revenue. During H1 Fy20, government non-tax revenue collection has hit Rs. 878 billion which is 75% of full-year budgeted collection of Rs. 1.16 trillion. This is positive for growth and will ease the burden on the public and businesses.
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30/12/2019 06:14 AM
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