Finally some good news about Pakistan economy in international newspapers

ThirdUmpireFinger

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Pakistan’s economy

Fuel injection

Lower oil prices prove to be a boon



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THOSE in search of a thriving stockmarket, a stable currency and low inflation would not normally pitch up in Pakistan. It is more readily thought of as a pit of instability than as a source of opportunity. Yet Pakistan is enjoying a rare period of optimism about its economy.

The IMF reckons that the economy will grow by 4.7% next year, the fastest rate in eight years. Consumer prices rose by 2.5% in the year to March, the smallest increase for more than a decade. Twice already this year the central bank has lowered its benchmark interest rate. Some indicators are pointing to an upturn in spending. Compared with a year earlier, cement sales, which are a guide to how much construction is taking place, rose by 5.5% from July to March. Car sales rose by 22% over the same period.

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  • Fuel injection
  • Chill factor
  • A thousand jilted friends
  • Enemies of the state
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  • International Monetary Fund (IMF)
  • Pakistan

A fall of two-fifths in the oil price is a huge slice of luck for a country such as Pakistan. It relies on imported fuel oil for two-fifths of its power supply and is prone to periodic balance-of-payments crises (see chart). The country’s import bill can easily overwhelm the foreign-exchange earnings from textile exports and the remittances that Pakistanis working in the Middle East and Europe send home. In 2013-14 Pakistan’s net import bill for oil came to $12.6 billion, or around 5% of GDP. But if oil prices stay low, Pakistan could save a total of $12 billion in the next three years, says the IMF. The money could be spent on things with more local content and give the economy a lift.

The government of Nawaz Sharif takes some credit for the economy’s new stability. It has stuck to an IMF programme agreed to in 2013, a few months after it came to power in Pakistan’s first-ever handover from one civilian government to another. Foreign-exchange reserves have more than doubled, to $17.7 billion. Electricity tariffs have been raised, and some unpaid bills collected, easing the cash burden on hard-pressed distribution companies. Tax receipts have risen, albeit from pitiful levels, in response to efforts to broaden the base and cut exemptions. The revenue agency has sent over 150,000 tax notices to non-payers. More retailers are being drawn into the indirect-tax net. A draft budget aims to bring the budget deficit below 4% of GDP in 2015-16, from a peak of over 8%.

A privatisation drive that stalled last June resumed in April, when the government sold its stake in Habib Bank, the country’s largest lender, for $1 billion. Three-quarters of bids came from foreign investors. Pakistan’s stockmarket has doubled in dollar terms since the start of 2012, thanks in large part to such foreign interest. Privatisations will only add to the market’s variety and appeal. Listed companies are highly profitable, although in part because they often face too little competition.

Visitors to Pakistan are surprised to discover good roads and a strong business culture. The country is mid-table in the World Bank’s ease-of-doing-business rankings, well above India. The infrastructure is solid enough to support big fast-food chains: McDonald’s, KFC, Pizza Hut and Subway have 187 outlets between them, more than in all of Sub-Saharan Africa’s “frontier” economies combined, says Daniel Salter, of Renaissance Capital, a stockbrokers.
The progress in providing economic stability is encouraging. But Pakistan needs sustained growth of 5-7% a year if it is markedly to cut poverty—at the last count, nearly a quarter of Pakistanis were below the poverty line. There are doubts to whether Mr Sharif has the strength and authority to implement deeper reforms. Despite a better electricity industry, power shortages remain a bugbear. Big firms in textiles, which account for over half of Pakistan’s exports, have long taken to generating their own electricity.

Security is a less tractable problem. A textiles executive says that buyers need to look at and feel the products for themselves before they buy. Yet the representatives of big European retailers are often too scared to come to Pakistan. Fear may fade over time. Optimists point to a sharp decline in recent years in the number of deaths from terrorist attacks—despite frequent grim headline news, such as a school massacre in Peshawar in December. Now the army is stepping up operations in regions bordering Afghanistan that harbour the Pakistani Taliban and other militants. “If we had more security,” says another businessman, “we could double or triple our orders”.


Source
 
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صحرائی

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
یار یہ تونواز شریف نے خریدے ہوۓ ہے ...لفافہ اخبار ہے

یوتھئو ں کے متوقعہ کمنٹس

(yapping)
 
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صحرائی

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
You should double check rather...

Economist Article praising PM NS for economic turn around. GDP growth, Low Inflation, Stable Currency!

Economist (The Newspaper)believe Pak enjoying a rare period of optimismCar & Cement Sales, Stocks, Privatization, Currency, Infrastructure all positive!

http://www.economist.com/news/asia/21650175-lower-oil-prices-prove-be-boon-fuel-injection


Don't follow patwari logic .. read it first, then comment LOl
 

Knownajnabee

Minister (2k+ posts)
NO Follow Showbaz Sharif example who was hanging president of Pakistan.

KHAN may have said these things but Gullu CM of PUnjab have done this in PPP era. He himself used to lead protest against federal government and attacked many electric grid stations.

:) Thand rakh bhaiiiii
Follow the idiot khan logic. Dont pay bills, close roads, maro, mar jao, take out all money from banks and ask Padri to attack parliament.
 

msaeed89

Minister (2k+ posts)
All was good in this article untill I read this..

Visitors to Pakistan are surprised to discover good roads and a strong business culture.

Now the above sentence totally shows that the article was a PR campaign for Noon government..

How on earth who ever knows Pakistan can put Pakistan's roads as good and business culture strong.

Also it mostly predicts what is going to happen in future even the economic growth record projected is wrong.

Also one of the economist from Pakistan has put the below comment which shows the mirror to these liars.

"If you dig out deeper into the numbers things are not as rosy as painted. Fiscal consolidation is the result of creative accounting.

Almost 2% of GDP liabilities are parked outside budget. $17 b forex are piled through debt creating instruments.

No real increase in FDI. Tax increase is a result of withholding $2b refunds. Net increase after four mini budgets is 1%. 150,000

tax notices sent but hardly 20 000 added in net in two years. GDP figure is cooked. Real GDP was 3.5% but portrayed at 4.14%

for last fiscal year."


 
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ThirdUmpireFinger

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
All was good in this article untill I read this..

Visitors to Pakistan are surprised to discover good roads and a strong business culture.

Now the above sentence totally shows that the article was a PR campaign for Noon government..

How on earth who ever knows Pakistan can put Pakistan's roads as good and business culture strong.

Also it mostly predicts what is going to happen in future even the economic growth record projected is wrong.


For your information Economist is one of the top business newpaper in the whole world. What they will get byrunning PR campaign for NS? come on stop copying your Charsi leader who blamed international and national media for rigging in election 2013.
 

Will_Bite

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
Basically, this article says that Pakistan is a good gamble at this time. One look at the stock market, and anyone will agree. A stock exchange with a tiny market cap with a 100% appreciation in index value in 2 years? 4 tax amnesties in 3 years come to mind.
Considering the amount of loans and liabilities Pakistan has been buried in over the past 2 years, Pakistan would need major bailout in order to stave off default in a matter of a couple of years. Yes, that is how bleak it is. Economist is looking at the picture here and now.
 

SpIDeR.

Minister (2k+ posts)
یار یہ تونواز شریف نے خریدے ہوۓ ہے ...لفافہ اخبار ہے

یوتھئو ں کے متوقعہ کمنٹس

(yapping)

Bhai ji ap ki bat ko hum sahi man bhi lain tu zara imf sai ye bhi pouch m bta dain k ns k is door main ab tik investment kitni ai hai or imf nai karza kitna diya hai 2nd ye jo nijkari ho rehi ab tik us nijkari sai karzo k sood ki qisty hi utr rhi hain... ager kerzy ly kr hi economy asy show kerny hai tu phir Allah hi hafiz hai humry mulk ka...




ab ye na khna k chaina nai 45b ki investment laye hain... wo chaina k apny intrest main hai number one 2nd wo investment chaines companies k through hi ho gi ap k pass just infrastructure hi aye ga baki wo wapis apny mulk hi lay jain gai kisy na kisy traky sai... or jo infrastructure ap k hath aye ga wo bagir ko tex pay kiye usy use karain gi ap k hath mainkiya aya kuch nhi.....
 

arafay

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
un believably stupid article. This is why you should NEVER invest in stock based on news articles. the writer paints such a rosy picture of pakistan's economy that for a moment, even i was tempted to call arif habib commodities. However as they say the devil is in the details and so lets look at some ground realities

1) govt of pakistan owes over 500 billion rs to distribution companies aka circular debt. this figure doesnt appear i any budget documents but it must eventually be paid and when its paid, the budget deficit would go over 8%
2) hardly any growth in tax collection. the fbr target was revised 3 times but it will still be missed.
3) hardly any foreign direct investment. so far the chinese investment is just on paper only. we will see how many of the $44bn is loans in the future
4) the forex reserves were built up through a combination of loans, gifts and bond sales. this money will have to be returned with interest.
5) the current account deficit has skyrocketed and imports are currently being financed by selling govt shares in profitable companies like UBL, HBL etc.
6) the country is facing crippling power shortage and load shedding.
 

mrk123

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Crux of the article is found in the heading....Lower oil prices prove to be a boon
Wanted to point this out before someone thinks that the improvement in some of the economic indicators should be construed as a result of anyone's doing in Pakistan.

Similar articles and IMF reports were being published during the reign of your leader's nemesis, the coward commando.

We were told that we were the emerging 11 - the fastest growing stock exchange - one of the booming real estate market blah blah.

Read this and learn a lesson that the governments rarely have a hand in controlling the economy of a country. Even the US economy is a beast with a mind of its own.
There are 100s of other factors that make or break an economy especially in our countries where own fundamentals are never strong. These indicators and signs fade away as
fast as they are thrown at us.

According to the reports by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Pakistan was the third fastest growing economy after China and India during that era.In 2002, the Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) was declared the “Best Performing Stock Market of the World for the year 2002”.

Our industrial sector registered 26.5% growth on average. Manufacturing and construction sectors recorded a 30 year and 17 year high, respectively. The highest increase in tax collection of around Rs1trillion was injected in government revenues.

Amazingly, Pakistan railway was making profits. Other indicators include a drastic decrease in poverty. CNG fuel, information technology and especially the telecommunication sectors registered massive growths, and the dollar was just at Rs60.

Musharraf even played a significant role in transforming the infrastructure of this country. Four dams (Subakzai, Gomalzam, Khurram and Tangi) were constructed during his period.

He initiated the plans to work on seven motorways in different areas of Pakistan; some were completed during his period and others remained under construction. Advanced Gawadar port, Kachi Canal Project, Lyari Expressway and a 650km long coastal highway are also among the many achievements of Musharraf’s period.

Pervez Musharraf can also be hailed as the liberator of the media; being a dictator, he was the only one who seemed confident enough of himself and his countrymen to have given Pakistani’s the freedom of speech as well. He took major steps to empower the Pakistani women in our local and national assemblies and his aggressive education policy contributed to major positive riffles in Pakistan’s education system; our literacy rate improved by 11% during his period.

Nine well equipped engineering universities and 18 public universities, all over Pakistan irrespective of ethnic orientations, were made during his time. Several technical colleges and institutions also spurted during his reign.

Pakistan’s launched its first satellite, Paksat-1, in his time – Musharraf made it happen. Hisremarkable words cannot be forgotten:

“Pakistan’s space programme is now ahead of India after the formal launching of Paksat-1 and this is due to the hard work of our scientists, and I am sure Indians would take another 30 months to do the job.”

Source

 

miafridi

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
A fall of two-fifths in the oil price is a huge slice of luck for a country such as Pakistan. It relies on imported fuel oil for two-fifths of its power supply and is prone to periodic balance-of-payments crises (see chart)

This sentence says it all. Government has little to do with this.:)
 

ptilover788

MPA (400+ posts)
need to provide cheaper electricity and gas to industries than we will be able to compete bangladesh india and china,,we were so bad that a little improvement made patwaries happy
 

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