Pakistan’s external debt soars to record $91.8b

akmal1

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
ISLAMABAD:

Pakistan’s external debt and liabilities have soared to a record $91.8 billion, showing an increase of over 50% or nearly $31 billion in the past four years and nine months, the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has reported.

The external debt and liabilities of $91.8 billion as of March-end suggest that the figure may touch $100 billion very soon as the country faces grave challenges in meeting growing external financing requirements. Pakistan is scheduled to make some bullet debt and interest payments in the last quarter (April-June) of the current fiscal year, according to sources in the finance ministry.

The $91.8-billion external debt and liabilities were higher by $30.9 billion or 50.6% compared to the level recorded in June 2013 when the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) government came to power.

Of the total external debt and liabilities, the government’s public debt obligations including foreign exchange liabilities were $76.1 billion at the end of March.

In the past four years and nine months, the public debt-related obligations increased 42.5% or $22.7 billion, showed the central bank data. In June 2013, the external public debt including foreign exchange liabilities stood at only $53.4 billion.

A major hike came in the external debt contracted by issuing sovereign bonds and taking expensive commercial loans.

Since June 2013, the PML-N government has acquired a whopping $42.6 billion in external loans, which is taking its toll on the national exchequer due to the mounting debt servicing cost.

Starting from July 2013, with every passing year, the quantum of external debt has kept growing due to the government’s inability to implement policies that could have ensured sufficient non-debt creating inflows.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s first post-programme monitoring report shows Pakistan’s gross external debt in terms of exports was 193.2% in 2013, which is projected to deteriorate to an alarming 316% in June this year.

During this period, Pakistan’s gross external financing requirements have swelled from $17.2 billion to $24 billion.

It was an alarming situation and the government did not have a concrete back-up plan to handle its external account, said sources in the finance ministry. They said the top bureaucracy of the ministry was not very much concerned and it was just a routine matter for them.

There are apprehensions that the country may not survive financially for long without the IMF support. However, they said the finance ministry has not yet prepared a plan that it may share with the IMF in case it needs emergency support.

There are unconfirmed reports that top bureaucracy of the finance ministry may be reshuffled very soon.

The IMF report noted that the bound and stress tests suggest that the external debt-to-GDP ratio would be affected by adverse shocks. “While sensitive mostly to current account and exchange rate shocks, the external debt ratio would exceed 45% only under the real depreciation shock scenario,” it added.

Pakistan’s gross official foreign currency reserves as of May 4 stood at only $11.16 billion. The government took no time in eating up the entire $1 billion Chinese loan received on the second last day of the previous month.

The gross official foreign currency reserves of $11.16 billion include loans of $6.13 billion the central bank has acquired from domestic banks to shore up its reserves. By excluding these short-term borrowings, the reserves are almost at the level recorded in June 2013.

Owing to the huge domestic and foreign borrowings, debt servicing is now the single largest expenditure in the federal budget, estimated at Rs1.62 trillion or 30.7% for the next fiscal year 2018-19. A sum of $5 billion was spent on servicing the outstanding stock of external debt in just nine months of the ongoing fiscal year, according to the central bank. The country paid $3.52 billion in principal loans and $1.44 billion in interest on outstanding loans.

In its Debt Policy Statement 2017-18, which the finance ministry presented to the lower house of parliament early this year, the government admitted that during the last fiscal year the country’s external debt increased at a faster pace than its foreign exchange earnings.

Pakistan’s external debt as a percentage of foreign exchange reserves increased to a three-year high. Similarly, the cost of external debt servicing as a percentage of foreign exchange earnings increased significantly.

Published in The Express Tribune, May 17th, 2018.
 

akmal1

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
پاکستان کا قومی خزانہ وہیں آ گیا ہے جہاں جون ٢٠١٣ میں تھا

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akmal1

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
ISLAMABAD:

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has assessed Pakistan’s gross external financing needs at a record $27 billion for the next fiscal year, but warned that arranging the financing at favourable rates will now be a challenge due to risks to the country’s debt sustainability.

In its post-programme monitoring report, the IMF also forecast that due to additional borrowings, Pakistan’s external debt would jump to $103.4 billion by June 2019, up from this June’s projected level of $93.3 billion.

Despite changing goalposts twice, Pakistan’s public debt would remain higher than the limit prescribed in the revised Fiscal Responsibility and Debt Limitation Act, showed the IMF report.

Certain tables in the report, which the IMF withheld in the past, show the adverse implications of the PML-N government’s borrowing spree over the past four and a half years. The policy of building foreign currency reserves through expensive loans and ignoring the export performance has come to haunt the policymakers.

The IMF said the elevated current account deficit and rising external debt servicing, in part driven by China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC)-related outflows, were expected to lead to higher external financing needs.

External financing would surge to $24.5 billion by June this year, the IMF said, adding the country’s needs were expected to rise to around $27 billion by the end of fiscal year 2018-19 (FY19) and would go up to $45 billion by FY23.

At that time, Pakistan’s external financing needs will be equal to 10% of the national output, which is a dangerous level.

“Risks to public debt sustainability have increased since the completion of the EFF (Extended Fund Facility) programme. Public and publicly-guaranteed debt is expected to remain elevated at 68% of GDP by FY23,” the IMF said.

Gross fiscal financing needs will likely exceed 30% of GDP from 2018-19 onwards, in part reflecting increased debt service obligations, it added.

However, the more alarming part is the growing challenges to arranging foreign loans. It said Pakistan had so far remained successful in contracting external borrowing that softened the impact of rising external imbalances on foreign exchange reserves.

“While the level of external debt has remained moderate, continued mobilisation of external financing at favourable rates could become more challenging in the period ahead against the background of rising international interest rates and increasing financing needs,” said the IMF.

It said continued scaling up of CPEC investments could accelerate the build-up of related external payment obligations, adding Pakistan’s capacity to repay could deteriorate at a faster pace, with faster depletion of foreign exchange reserves having adverse effects on economic growth.

Debt levels are higher than envisaged during the 2017 Article IV consultation, largely reflecting a significantly higher fiscal deficit.

The IMF’s projections show a bleak path for the next five years. Public and publicly-guaranteed debt is projected to remain close to 70% of GDP by 2023 under the baseline scenario.

“In the absence of strong consolidation measures, the fiscal deficit is expected to remain close to 6% of GDP in the medium term, resulting in elevated debt levels,” it added.

Adverse shocks, notably to economic growth and the primary balance, could lead to public debt ratios rising well above 70%, said the IMF.

Contingent liabilities from restructuring of loss-making public sector enterprises represent additional fiscal risks. High gross financing needs may also pose potential rollover risks.

The IMF said high levels of public debt and gross financing needs presented significant fiscal risks and needed to be addressed in a timely fashion through fiscal tightening to improve debt sustainability.

“In the absence of significant policy effort, the projected public debt trajectory sits higher than that stipulated in the revised FRDL Act with a limit of 60% of GDP on net general government debt until FY18 and a gradual transition towards 50% of GDP over a 15-year period,” said the IMF.

“While the depreciation allowed in December was a step in the right direction, further steps to phase out foreign exchange interventions and allowing greater exchange rate flexibility on a more permanent basis will be critical to contain the external pressures.”

Published in The Express Tribune, March 16th, 2018.
 

akmal1

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
صرف پانچ سالوں میں ایک سو ارب ڈالر بیرونی قرضوں کا ہدف حاصل کرنے پہ ہم نون لیگ اور انکے ووٹرز کو پیشگی "خراج تحسین" پیش کرتے ہیں

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نوٹ: واضح رہے کہ یہ خراج تحسین نون لیگیوں کو توپوں کے سامنے باندھ کر پیش کیا جائیگا

SpiffyPeacefulAmericancrayfish-size_restricted.gif
 

Anuuge67

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Solution for this PROBLEM is very simple. Do Not Borrow Fiat Money From Jews. Second Pakistan can pay this amount in one lump sum..by seizing STOLEN MONEY FROM PAKISTAN BY TWO MAIN TRAITOR DAKOO ZARDAREE HARAMEE AND NAWAZ PIG. We have 300 billion in swiss bank alone. Once SAQAIB NISAR issues the VERDICT AGAINST THE TWO TERRORIST MASS MURDERER ROBBERS, WE WILL TELL THE JEWISH DEVIL TO GO AND F IT SELF.

NO MORE BORROING FROM SATANIC TRIBE OF N Y. Defeat dajjal by removing his contacts in pakistan. No More PEE PEE PEE OR PML HINDU NAWAZ LEAGUE,, OF TERRORIST RAPIST.
 

Admiral

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
پاکستان کا قومی خزانہ وہیں آ گیا ہے جہاں جون ٢٠١٣ میں تھا

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یعنی خزانہ واپس گٹر میں

لیکن قرضے دیکھ کر تو لگتا ہے پاکستان نے جاپان سے ریس لگائی ہوئی ہے قرضوں کی
 

akmal1

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
یعنی خزانہ واپس گٹر میں

لیکن قرضے دیکھ کر تو لگتا ہے پاکستان نے جاپان سے ریس لگائی ہوئی ہے قرضوں کی

سر جی یہ جاپان کو دیکھ کر قرضے لینے کی پالیسی اس فورم کے ایک انتہائی نون لیگی ممبر راجہ صاحب کے مشورے پہ عمل کر کے اپنائی گئی
راجہ صاحب کی دلیل بہت مضبوط تھی کہ
جب جاپان نے اتنے قرضے لے رکھے ہیں تو جاپان کی طرح ترقی کرنے کیلئے ہمیں بھی "انے وا" قرضے لے لینے چاہییں
 

Citizen X

(50k+ posts) بابائے فورم
Is mein to abhi China wala Cpec ka $60 billion shamil nahi hai. Yah koi hain pooch ne wala in chor aur looteron se ke $160 billion kahan jhonk dala ?
 

chandaa

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
Who cares? Filthy patwaris will dance on this as they don't care about Pakistan, innein chand botiyaan phainkoo phir baley Pakistan ka kabaraa kar dou yeh jawar numaa insaan naarey maartey rahein ge.
 

Admiral

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
بھوکی قوم کے ساتھ جو چاہے مرضی کرو ، یہ تو مری پڑی ہے
اب کپڑے بھی اتار لئے گئے ہیں

ملک اور عوام کے ساتھ جو ہو رہا ہے، اس سے عوام تو بےحس ہو ہی چکی ہے،، اب تو لگنا شروع ہو گیا ہے کہ کچھ عرصے تک جن کو پریشانی ور احساس رہتا ہے ملک کا، وہ بھی مایوس ہو کر بےحس ہو جائیں گے
 

Raaz

(50k+ posts) بابائے فورم
ملک اور عوام کے ساتھ جو ہو رہا ہے، اس سے عوام تو بےحس ہو ہی چکی ہے،، اب تو لگنا شروع ہو گیا ہے کہ کچھ عرصے تک جن کو پریشانی ور احساس رہتا ہے ملک کا، وہ بھی مایوس ہو کر بےحس ہو جائیں گے
اصل میں ہمارے جیسے قوم کو تھریڈ ورلڈ نہی کہنا چاہئے بلکہ جاہل ورلڈ کہنا چاہئے
جہاں لوگ کوئی بات سمجھنے کے قابل ہی نہی
ایسے لگتا ہے جیسے فرعون کے زمانے میں رہ رہے ہیں
اور دوسری طرف سمجھ دار ورلڈ ہے جہاں کی ذہنیت ہی علم پر مبنی ہے

.....اتنا زیادہ فرق
 

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