Pakistan to Push Growth to 3.5% Amid IMF Austerity Measures
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2023-06-09 10:19
Pakistan’s government will present a carefully-knitted together budget for the next financial year as it looks to balance

Pakistan’s government will present a carefully-knitted together budget for the next financial year as it looks to balance boosting stuttering economic growth with the tough conditions imposed by the International Monetary Fund to revive a bailout program.

Finance Minister Ishaq Dar in his speech in the lower house of parliament Friday will lay out a growth target of 3.5% for the fiscal year that starts July 1. The IMF predicted the same forecast for Pakistan in April. It’s an ambitious goal after currency depreciation, unprecedented summer floods and import curbs are estimated to slash GDP growth to 0.3% in the current year through June.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s coalition government will seek to trim fiscal deficit to secure a resumption of the IMF’s $6.7 billion program and raise revenue collection to fund its 1.15 trillion rupees public sector development program in the new fiscal year. Raising taxes will test his administration’s already frayed popularity ahead of a national election due no later than October this year.

“This is going to be a challenging budget,” said Sana Tawfik, a Karachi-based economist at Arif Habib Ltd. The government will “find a middle ground that will definitely be tilted toward the IMF.”

The government has shared its budget documents with the Washington-based lender to demonstrate its commitment to sticking to the program goals as the country struggles to address the worst economic crisis of its history. Its currency has shed almost 30% against the dollar over the last year, its foreign exchange reserves now cover only about one month of imports and there’s at least a $2 billion gap in external funding out of a $6 billion target set out by the IMF.

The economic hardships are complicated by a political crisis as former premier Imran Khan continues to clash with the country’s powerful military and the government. Sharif’s term in office ends in August and fresh polls must be called within 60 days of that.

With an eye to elections the government is making some populist moves as well. It will give subsidized fertilizer to farmers for agricultural growth, according to a statement by the Prime Minister’s Office earlier this month. It also aims to provide some relief to industries and incentives to the technology sector, Dar said in a press conference on Thursday.

“The IMF or anybody else can’t object against a decision, if we take it with prudence and within our resources,” Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal said Tuesday.

Typically, a budget in an election year would be front-loaded with popular measures but the government will be “careful not to create any big mess with IMF,” said Abid Qaiyum Suleri, executive director at Sustainable Development Policy Institute, an Islamabad-based think tank.

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