PTIs economic policy proposals: flawed and tried-and-failed

mohib

Senator (1k+ posts)
PTI trolls before you start abusing read the very first sentence carefully, for your convenience I'm highlighting it.

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[HI]As a PTI supporter,[/HI] I find its economic and governance plansdisappointing. They are full of clichs and wishes, and quite similar to plans of the PPP, the PML-N and the regime of General (retd) Pervez Musharraf. The heroic claims on employment, growth, reform of state-owned enterprises (SOEs), investment, circular debt and deficit reductions, exports, appear to have been drafted by someone who does not have a good grasp of basic economic issues. The proposed plans are flawed, timid and not credible. They will not translate the groundswell of hope that the PTI has generated into real change on the ground.

The plans Islamic welfare concept is as fuzzy as the PTIs vision of dealing with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan. The system in the world that is actually closest to the version of an Islamic welfare state is one found in Scandinavian countries, where the tax-to-GDP ratio is around 50 per cent, where the governments are squeaky clean, and the majority of citizens law abiding and honest.


The Rural Governance Plan is mostly full of clichs employing vague phrases like power to people where it belongs and lists many actions (such as community based projects), which have already been tried before. Also, the hypothesis that village councils (VC) will not be prone to being captured by the rural elite is nave. Also the VC is too small to be a viable unit for delivering most public services. The proposal to have each council perform banking functions, resulting in 50,000 micro-banks, is unworkable, imprudent and bizarre. The plan should have built upon, and improved, the local government reforms carried out over the last decade.


The Economic Plan is most disappointing. Its key recommendations have been tried before for two decades, with little success. There is absolutely no credible how to on raising taxes, improving expenditure management, reducing fiscal deficits and SOE losses, increasing exports or resolving the energy (and the impending water) crisis. The proposed recommendations are, in fact, quite timid and are akin to tinkering on the margin reflecting perhaps, a fear that the PTI does not want to upset vested interests and unions.


The proposed tax reforms are meek and no different from past efforts, and there is nothing new of substance which will give confidence that tax collection will rise if the PTI comes to power. The partys economic plan seems to shy away from a fundamental overhaul of the Federal Board of Revenue and the more difficult, but urgent, task of introducing a broad-based VAT at the retail level something that seems to be the only logical way to significantly increase taxes. The recommendation that provinces would have to do more is a cop-out. Also, there is no mention of the need to reform the National Finance Commission.


The proposed expenditure reforms are not creative or bold in the least. Other than symbolic actions, no concrete proposals, which are necessary for any real change in government spending, have been made. No specific actions have been mentioned, such as, for example, reduction in number of forces personnel, postponement of major armament procurement or a reduction in defence expenditure. Similarly, no substantive and credible action has been proposed for reducing or prioritising current and development expenditures.



The partys proposed reforms of SOEs are totally unremarkable and have been tried before with no success. For fear of upsetting the unions, the PTI has shied away from the urgent need to privatise the SOEs especially the NBP, oil and gas companies, PIA, the Pakistan Steel Mills and the electricity distribution companies. Instead, a Malaysian model, which was tried in Pakistan in the 1970s, is being proposed without any assessment of whether it will work or not. A plan to have autonomous SOE boards has been tried as well, over the last two decades and without any success.



Energy sector reforms ignore the urgency for increasing pricing and fundamental governance reforms for reducing theft which amounts to between Rs300 to 350 billion in losses. The PTIs claim about reducing circular debt is not possible without pricing and deep governance reforms. The proposed reform fails to recognise that energy is an imported good and will be expensive. Tall claims about reducing the cost of production are based on the Thar coal reserves, a plan which is yet to take off, and a flawed pricing policy of domestic energy products. The recommendation that regulators will go after gas and electricity thieves is nonsensical as nowhere in the world do regulators do such things.



Civil service reforms are meek as well and have also been tried before unsuccessfully. For fear of annoying the bureaucracy, the PTI has made no proposal on overhauling its ossified and unionised service structure. While the intent to raise spending on health and education is laudable, it ignores the reality that effectiveness of spending is much more important than the amount that has been set aside for spending. For example, there is no credible programme on how the PTI will deal with reform blockers, such as the textbook mafia or the 500,000 teachers who are unionised, politicised and poorly trained .



The proposed reforms to accelerate growth and exports have also been tried before, again with not much success. The fantastic-sounding assumptions about raising investment ratios are without any basis, and proposals to tap mineral resources ignore the ground reality and the reduction of foreign direct investment in this sector especially after Reko Diq.



The party has failed to articulate a credible strategy for dealing with the impending water crisis. The proposed reforms fail to
incorporate issues of canal water pricing, reform of the irrigation bureaucracy and the need to get out of low-value, high-water use agriculture (such as growing sugar cane).



Reforms of NAB do not incorporate any lessons learnt from the study of successful anti-corruption agencies in other countries (such as in Hong Kong or South Africa). Also, the issue of overlapping responsibilities of FIA and NAB has not been addressed.



The PTIs proposed plans will not change the status quo and are more of a drizzle and less of the tsunami that the party keeps talking about. Claims about doing better than others are not credible at all because they have no basis in reality. Fancy and glossy power point presentations are not a substitute for real reforms. For the PTI to deliver on its promise of change, it will have to be bolder in its reform programme and discard outdated tried and failed solutions.



Published in The Express Tribune, September 3[SUP]rd[/SUP], 2012.
 

shaheedchoudry

Minister (2k+ posts)
Very funny. Last week N league said that PTI copied their economic agenda. But people at large did not believe that and praised PTI for that. Now N league took another twist and started calling the plan tried and tested.
Mian sahib.......hum aap ki chalain khoob samjhtay hain.
 

ashfaqkhn

Voter (50+ posts)
Just saying "I am PTI supporter" does not make you one. You need to trust the the leadership and their decisions. Anyways i found this article ridiculous as it could be. Nothing has been tried with honesty and sincerity with keeping the people of Pakistan as a top priority. The problem is not the policy its the implementation.
 

Aswan

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
Punjab Govt ka khazana Sara media pe use ho raha hai. I Am wondering what will when they will not have Punjab government money on their disposal.
 

Zoaib

Minister (2k+ posts)
Well, firstly, such a lot of negativity and not a lot of balance.

Second, as Asad Umar said this is a "vision" document not an implementation plan to have included specifics of the "how's" for every point made and a lot of what the writer mentions (such as omissions about water policy, agriculture and education) will be separately dealt with in their own plans.

Thirdly, the writer repeatedly mentions how these measures have FAILED in the past. If something has not worked out previously, does not mean it will not work in the future as well under a political leadership having the will to do so and the commitment to see through with these reforms. Our problem has been primarily of political will rather than absence of any plans...

I'm sure Asad Umar can provide a suitable rebuttal to the technical points he has raised.
 

such bolo

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Most rediculous article i have ever read discussing economic policy
i am surprised that this guy has not approved a single step proposed in the policy
means the whole policy is rubbish
its very strange
 

PoliticsInPK

Councller (250+ posts)
Anyone contradicts with PTI is sold and a corrupt person.

After coming into power first law will be passed by PTI is going to be " PTI is a holy party and anyone who contradicts will be punished with death penalty".
 

bulgars004

MPA (400+ posts)
دنیا کے سب ممالک کے قوانین ایک جیسے ہی ہیں۔ چند ایک ممالک کے قوانین مذاہب مختلف ہونے کی وجہ مختلف ہیں۔ اگر گہری نظر سے دیکھا جائے تو زیادہ تر قوانین قرآن کریم سے لیئے گے ہیں۔ یعنی قانون قدرت سے قوانین اخذ کیئے گیئے ہیں۔۔۔آب مسئلہ ان قوانیں پر عمل درامد کا ہے۔جو کہ پاکستان میں نا تو ن لیگ اور نا ہی پی پی پی کروا سکی۔ اب پی ٹی آئی اس بات کا اعلان کر رہی ہے کہ وہ ان قوانین پر عمل درامد کریں گے اور کروائیں گے۔ تو ان کو آزمانے میں کیا پریشانی ہے؟ اور جو پریشانی نظر آ رہی ہے وہ یہی ہے کہ ن لیگ اور پی پی پی والے پکڑئے جائیں گے اگر ان قوانین کا اطلاق ہو گیا تو۔۔ اس لیئے ن لیگ اور پی پی پی، پی ٹی آئی کی ہر پالیسی سے آپکو اختلاف کرتے ہوے نظر آیئں گے۔
 

zhohaq

Minister (2k+ posts)
A world bank advisor like Mr Abid Hasan can only come to this conclusion....
Even if he is a genuine PTI supporter his faith in Neoliberal economics is far greater...

His ideological pining can be seen here:
the PTI has shied away from the urgent need to privatise the SOEs — especially the NBP, oil and gas companies, PIA, the Pakistan Steel Mills and the electricity distribution companies.
This is a long standing WB cure all for developing countries.
Privatising the power generation sector and some distribution (like KESC) have pushed the country of the financial cliff. Sure PIA can be privatised but utilities will always lead to disaster.
He wants us to end up like other WB inspired experiments like what Bechtal did to the ppl of Cochabamba.

For fear of annoying the bureaucracy, the PTI has made no proposal on overhauling its ossified and unionised service structure. For example, there is no credible programme on how the PTI will deal with reform ‘blockers’, such as the textbook mafia or the 500,000 teachers who are unionised, politicised and poorly trained .

Union busting is another prescription. Yet in the 60 and 50 when unions were more robust workers rights were protected and the pakistani middle class came into being. After the 90's when Benazir inaugrated the neoliberal experiment and unions have been essentially destroyed workers are far more exploited and real wages have bottomed out.
The proposed reform fails to recognise that energy is an imported good and will be expensive. Tall claims about reducing the cost of production are based on the Thar coal reserves, a plan which is yet to take off, and a flawed pricing policy of domestic energy products.
The recommendation that regulators will go aftergas and electricity thieves is nonsensical as nowhere in the world do regulators do such things.

This one is hilarious. Pakistan deranged policy of importing furnace oil to burn for power generation has a ardent supporter in WB. The fact Pakistan is sitting on one of the world biggest coal reserves isnt of concern.
You know Samar Mubarakmand is on record saying a WB team tild him due to Indias concern over environmental polltion he was told WB didnt think the Thar power generation was fesable leading to his quixotic USG project.
The fact is WB wants to increase Pakistan dependence on imported oil to maintain its leverage so Pakistan can be made to dig it self deeper into the Neoliberal abyss...

On theft which is one of the highest in the world , MR abid hassan is a dove. Most theft is done by industrial customers and its captive power plants. If regulators dont go after them I dont know who will. Who else will make Ittefaq steel pay 9 years worth of power bills???
The party’s economic plan seems to shy away from a fundamental overhaul of the Federal Board of Revenue and the more difficult, but urgent, task of introducing a broad-based VAT at the retail level — something that seems to be the only logical way to significantly increase taxes.

Lol more sales tax. More inflation. No no PTI is completely out of its mind to aim for a progressive tax net like in Developed countries. Make the consumer pay. No wealth taxes,property taxes, Agricultural taxes, Capital gain tax,Income taxes just more sales taxes. Does this make any sense to anyone. Let the land owners and industrialist get away with all the money which they send over seas and tax the working class and middle class to run the government. Ingenious idea.


I couldnt be happier that this WB douche finds PTI economic policy disappointing
. It means they have gotten things right. You cant name a single country in the world that has developed following the prescription of the IMF and WB.
This fact isnt accidental.

 
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iftikharalam

Minister (2k+ posts)
Anyone contradicts with PTI is sold and a corrupt person.

After coming into power first law will be passed by PTI is going to be " PTI is a holy party and anyone who contradicts will be punished with death penalty".

The first sentence is true!! just add, he is also enemy of Pakistan!! I strongly believe anyone planning to vote someone against PTI is mentally retarded and enemy of Pakistan!!
 

pakistani 86

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
میں ان کالم نگار کے پی ٹی ٓائی سپورٹر ھونے پر شک نہیں کر سکتا لیکن ایک بات پورے یقین سے کہہ سکتا ھوں کہ موصوف کچھ ذیادہ ھی مایوس قسم کے انسان معلوم ھو رہے ہیں کیونکہ یہ خود تو نا امید ھیں ہی ھم سے ھماری امیدیں بھی چھین لینا چاھتے ھیں۔ او بھائی ھم نے کب کہا کہ پی ٹی ٓائی سے غلطیاں نہیں ھو سکتیں ھم تو یہ کہتے ھیں کہ عمران خان والا رسک بھی لے ھی لیا جائے۔ باقیوں کو تو ٓازما ھی چکے اب خان صاحب کو بھی موقع ملنا چایئے دیکھیں کیا ھوتا ھے۔ اور اگر اللہ نہ کرے خان صاحب بھی ھماری امیدوں پہ پورا نہ اترے تو پھر ھم انقلاب کے اس حصے کی طرف بڑھیں گے جہاں ٓانکھوں میں اترے اور زمین پہ بہتے رنگ میں کوئی فرق نہ ھو گا۔ کچھ بھی ھو اقتدار اب واپس کسی ظالم کے پاس نہیں جائے گا۔۔۔۔
 
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zhohaq

Minister (2k+ posts)
In short, its not that hard to figure it out:
Just concentrate on the John Perkins interview bit.And the case studies mentioned like Jamaica, Chile,Bolivia,Ecuador. There are some leaps of logic and contraction but its essentially true.
They make the country take on debt which is wasted on useless infrastructure projects or sent overseas by Mr.10% marka charectors back to their countries,and then impose their conditionalities.
(Privatise state instituition,devalue money, break down capital controls and trade barriers, EOZ,sell assets at pittance etc)

And then notice why so many of our EX Finance ministers,Etc since early 90's have been invariably US trained, WB toadies or Ex city bank employees.
(Shaukat Aziz, Hafiz Sheikh , Shaukat tareen, Javed Burki, Mahbubul Haq, Moinuddin Qureshi etc)
 
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sultan6623

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
I do not understand these kind of peoples logic. PML-N says its copy of their policy and no one criticize that time the policy was flop. When PTI announced its policy every one criticizing. Polices can be same but we believe only IK can implement them and get the maximum results. We need a good governance system in Pakistan and PTI is the only party who can do it, simple is that.
 

zzubairkhalid

Councller (250+ posts)
Nobody has last words , thus be willing to face constructive criticism , so that whatever is missing be ready to take on board so that everybody has stake and ownership , alien thing solo often not successful keeping in view multiple divided nature of our society and to learn from others' experience is also a greater wisdom.
 

zzubairkhalid

Councller (250+ posts)
Nobody has last words , thus be willing to face constructive criticism , so that whatever is missing be ready to take on board so that everybody has stake and ownership , alien thing solo often not successful keeping in view multiple divided nature of our society and to learn from others' experience is also a greater wisdom.
 

Wahab Afridi

Councller (250+ posts)
very well written article being a business and management graduate and Msc in HRM these policies are mere rhytorics just like imran khan who is idealist which is against the realism .. so PTI followers should atleast do research or read to those who are scholars and expert.. no doubt imran khan is a good social worker bt he is not a good politicians he is making ppl fool
 

Dengue

MPA (400+ posts)
very well written article being a business and management graduate and Msc in HRM these policies are mere rhytorics just like imran khan who is idealist which is against the realism .. so PTI followers should atleast do research or read to those who are scholars and expert.. no doubt imran khan is a good social worker bt he is not a good politicians he is making ppl fool

business graduate from university of dera ghazi khan? or from a 2 number college of london?
 

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
& [MENTION=8406]jagga9[/MENTION]

Mansoor, to tell you the truth. I am confused. There is alot of contradiction. Also, alot of what they have proposed was actually PRACTICED by Musharraf! Kya huwa? Yes.. it was helpful lekin it wasnt sustainable.. like tax collection drives.. Remember NAB? Mujhe batao PTI ne aysa kiya KAHA hai jo Musharraf ne nahi kiya?

Here is how I see it. If a politicians isnt willing to speak of these, be assured, he wont change anything.
1. Land Reform. Bring every inch of land under documentation via titlement. If you own a land, register with the Govt's Titlement office. Theek? Then every year you pay 1~3% of the value of that property. Value assessment : Suppose your property value is Rs10lakh and you claim its Rs5lakh. Titlement office can then force you to sell your land to the Govt for Rs 5 lakh. Titlement office will make a profit by selling that land in open market. The profit will serve as bonus for the Titlement Office employees. Now employees of Entitlement office have the incentive to go after those who lowball their property prices. Also, if you dont pay your property tax, for 3 years, you cant sell your property till the balance is cleared. Once balance = to the value of the property, you loose the property.

This takes care of Land/Tax reforms.

Then comes the Monetary policy - Default on External debt. Withdraw from IMF. Dump your dollar holdings and buy SILVER/Gold to back your currency. Get rid of this so-called Modern Money theory of Central Banking. Convert money from debt to equity. Govt pays nothing to the central bank on issued notes/treasuries. Also for your exports, demand your own currency to provide it a market support.

I have written about Govt administration here.
http://blogs.thenews.com.pk/blogs/2012/02/the-great-provincial-divide/

About the export/Monetary Policy
http://blogs.thenews.com.pk/blogs/2011/12/we-make-it-the-‘mighty’-dollar/



There's more which I will be writing about in terms of taxation.

@AsifAmeer waiting for your expert opinion as this is not our field
 

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