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Q: Pakistan seems to have done well in improving the
macro-economic situation. It has also marked an increase in the
growth rate. Where do we go from here?
A: This is part of the strategy to get Pakistan back
on its original path of a 6 per cent growth rate and above, with
poverty being reduced to 20-25 per cent. For that there has to be
a sequence of events: firstly to get a handle on our external debt
problem, and that we have managed to do, by re-profiling our bilateral
stock of debt over a longer period of time. Second, by substituting
soft-term loans from the multilateral institutions and by paying
them back their non-concessional loans. The third part was to get
rid of all the expensive commercial loans, short-term debts and
the foreign currency liabilities. So from 1999, our stock of debt
and external liabilities has declined from 38 billion to 35 billion,
which for the first time, even in absolute terms, is a decline in
the external debt situation. What it has done in terms of our capacity
to surface is that in 1999, we paid close to 6.5 billion for debt
servicing. Now debt servicing has come down to 4 billion and this
accounts for only 25 per cent of our foreign exchange earnings.
In 1999, 66 per cent of our foreign exchange earnings were going
for external debt servicing, so this is a significant decline in
our external sector cash flow management. The result is that we
have a current account surplus which is equal to 7 per cent of GDP.
Q:Is this the first time we have achieved such a large
surplus ?
A: Yes. People keep saying that we have received
a lot of grand assistance and reimbursements from the US after 9/11
- even if you exclude that, we have a current account surplus of
almost 3.6 billion dollars, which is almost 5 per cent of our GDP.
Our dependence on borrowing has declined in a fundamental way. The
second part of our strategy was to provide fiscal space for development
expenditure. So monetary policy and the fiscal policy had to be
coordinated. The government fiscal deficit has been reduced from
7 per cent of GDP to 4.3 per cent of GDP. By reducing fiscal deficit
and allocating less resources towards debt servicing, those sources
can be used for development expenditure. So the monetary policy
has to be synchronised with the fiscal policy, and the weighted
average rate of the six-month table, which is what the government
is borrowing. That has now come down to 2 per cent, saving the government
a lot of money which went towards both external and domestic debt
servicing. Instead of 66 per cent of the revenues being allocated
for debt servicing, we were able to spend only 36 per cent this
year. Consequently public sector development expenditure has risen
from 100 billion rupees to 130 billion rupees. This year we are
going to have 160 billion rupees so in two years time there is an
increase of almost 60 per cent for public sector development.
Q: But this macro-economic improvement has been marred
by unemployment, while most of the investment has come in real estate
and the stock market.
A:I think we have to get the facts right. It is true
that the investment ratio has remained stagnant, and there has been
no job creation in the formal organised sector of the economy. But
don't forget that jobs were being created in the past in public
sector organisations. For instance, though the Steel Mill needed
only 10, 000 people there were 25,000 employed; if the banks needed
50,000 people there were 100,000. So this massive over-staffing
was resulting in operational losses and the government was footing
a bill of almost 100 billion rupees. The poor need education, health,
a clean water supply and sewage. They need farms to market roads
and irrigation channels. If you are spending 100 billion rupees
to offset the losses of your public sector corporations because
you have created jobs, this hardly helps poverty reduction. So,
while it is true that this government has not created any jobs in
the public sector, it is also a fact that jobs are generated through
larger economic activity - in the agriculture, SME, services and
the construction sector. Therefore, policies have to stimulate activity
in those sectors. In agriculture you have to upgrade growth rates.
Unfortunately, for three years we have had a drought, so activity
is down. In construction and housing, we have given a lot of incentives.
Budget, mortgage financing, consumer financing etc, have been given
prime importance as far as credit policies are concerned, but it
will take some time to get off the ground. The linkages between
the construction industry and housing and other industries in Pakistan
is very strong: 37 other industries are dependent on housing and
construction. This also helps the middle class because the banking
sector in Pakistan so far has concentrated only on the corporate
sector and trade financing. They have done nothing as far as the
middle class is concerned. We have created a low interest environment
in which a young couple instead of renting an apartment can now
afford to pay a mortgage instalment at about the same rental amount.
If the demand for this picks up, it will help both the middle class
as well as the construction industry. The problem in the SME sector
is that we have some regulations, which are not suitable for SME
financing. The central bank is trying to make a new set of potential
SME regulations whereby relaxation will be given to the banks to
provide financing to the SME sector. These are the building blocks
through which we hope to stimulate financing and economic activity
and that will create jobs in the economy. Our IT industry was about
to take off before 9/11 and we had started getting orders from US
companies for subcontracting and outsourcing, but after 9/11 those
companies cancelled their orders because they felt that Pakistan
was a frontline state and therefore the services might have been
affected. So that was a big setback.
Q: Would you agree that the flow of US aid and the debt
- scheduling has been quite helpful?
A:Debt-scheduling was taking place because of our compliance
agreement with the IMF. Even if there was pressure from the US after
9/11, we would never have received the debt scheduling, because
that was a condition of the Paris Bank and this was happening even
before 9/11. The case for debt profiling was prepared before 9/11
because we had completed, without any interruption, the ten-month
standby program and we qualified for the PRGF facility of the IMF,
which is the precursor for debt re-profiling. Many people confused
debt reprofiling with 9/11, but actually it took place in December
2001 and the spade work had been done way before 9/11. The US has
provided us a billion dollars in cash and it has written off one
billion dollars of debt, but if you look at the loss of one billion
dollars in exports and the loss in the IT industry, I think we have
come out quite well.
Q:What about the increase in remittances? .
A: That is also based on a lot of misunderstandings.
When the Nawaz Sharif government liberalised the economy in 1991,
there were two channels through which remittances would come in:
one was remittances for consumption purposes which were coming from
banks, and one was the foreign currency deposits. So 3 to 3.5 billion
dollars were coming into Pakistan through the foreign currency deposits
and through remittances. On May 28, 1998, when the foreign currency
deposits were frozen, this channel dried up, and all this money
started coming in through the kerb market through money changers.
The central bank, because it was short of foreign exchange, started
purchasing from the kerb market. So we collectedtwo billion dollars
every year. We got a billion from official channels and two billion
from the money changers. Come 9/11, this money started flowing back
through banking channels instead of coming through the kerb market,
because there was action taken against the money changers in Dubai
and in the US. Yes, we got 500 million dollars more than what we
were expecting. So there is some increase, but this year our budget
for remmittances is back to 3.6 billion dollars. We got a windfall
gain of almost 700 million dollars after 9/11. But this was a one-off
thing.
Q: Despite the government's claim of improving the economic
fundamentals, foreign investment has not picked up yet and domestic
investors are also hesitant. The only major investment has come
in the textile sector. Why are investors still shy?
A:I think there are two reasons for this: the textile
industry has balanced, modernised and replaced its old machinery.
In some cases the machines are so modern that they are displacing
labour . We have 3-4 billion dollars of investment in textiles but
it has had only marginal repercussions on employment. The other
part of foreign investment is going into the oil and gas sector,
which is also very capital intensive, but does not create employment.
Cement, sugar, the automobile industry - all of them have excess
capacity. When you have excess capacity it does not make sense to
go in for new investments. The only sectors where jobs can be created
are agriculture, small and medium enterprises and housing and construction.
Hubco, which is a 1.5 billion dollar project, only employs 200 people.
Parco, an 800 million dollar project, employs less than 400 people.
Jobs will not come through these big projects. The issue is always
confused, you can have a lot refineries and power stations worth
billions of dollars, but that is not going to solve the employment
problem. For example tourism in this country, has completely dried
up after 9/11. Tourism is a highly employment-intensive industry
- people need transportation, hotels, restaurants, entertainment,
etc. However, the Northern Areas for example, which were dependent
on tourism and earned a fair amount of foreign exchange, have suffered.
These are the shortfalls of being a frontline state. The chief executives
of some companies have told me that they can't get insurances to
visit Pakistan. Many airlines have cancelled their flights to Pakistan.
These are some of the difficulties that are preventing us from reaping
full dividends from the improvement in the economic fundamentals.
Q: Why do you think the investment climate has improved
now?
A:
Domestic investment is picking up in bits and pieces. The automobile
industry has increased tremendously during the last three years.
Car production has gone up from 30,000 to 60,000. The auto parts
industry has now invested a billion rupees in expanding its capacity
and for the first time they are exporting their products. Credit
and monetary policy will push aggregate demand through consumer
goods, housing and the auto industry. This will have backward linkages
with production. The interest rate environment today is extremely
favourable: the average rate has come down from 14-15 per cent to
7 per cent. Never before in the history of Pakistan can you find
such low interest rates. There is liquidity with the banks who are
competing with each other. All the regulatory hurdles have been
removed for new products and new means of financing. We are doing
things which will stimulate domestic investment.
Q:Can the growth rate be sustained?
A: Yes, provided you have political stability,
no problems on the geo-political side and no natural calamities.
Between 1999 and 2002 we had four major external shocks: global
recession, a three-year drought, 9/11 when we became a front line
state and the mobilisation of troops with India which translated
into further expenditure on defence. Then there was the Iraq war.
Despite all this, however, we have achieved a 20 per cent growth
in exports, built up our current account surplus and achieved a
5.1 per cent growth rate. If the effects of these shocks can be
nullified, there is no reason why we cannot reach a six per cent
growth rate in two years time
Q: What are the problems in the way?
A:Three problems. One is political stability. We have
to demonstrate that the democratic form of government and good governance
are compatible. The Jamali government has continued with the same
policy as General Musharraf and if it continues for five years,
I can assure you there will be a paradigm shift in the thinking
of both Pakistani and foreign investors. Second is that for poverty
reduction, we have to depend on local governance to articulate the
needs of the people and deliver at the lowest cost. If we are not
able to nurture and sustain the capacity of the local government
and provide them with the requisite financial and administrative
powers, it will not result in poverty reduction. The third is the
geo-political situation: if we have peace in the region and our
borders are secure, I think that will give a big boost to the economy.
Q: The poverty level has increased substantially in the
past decade. What is the government doing to deal with this?
A:
What is required is a focus on agriculture. If we do not provide
infrastructure , social services and the right prices to our farmers,then
we will never be able to achieve meaningful poverty reduction. You
also need some social safety nets for those who have no assets,
land or skill. We need Bait-ul-Maal, Zakat, Khushali programmes
and Khushali banks which give micro credit. If we do not provide
safety nets for the poorest of the poor, or do not concentrate on
the agricultural sector, and if we do not have a high growth rate,
we will never be able to reduce poverty. We have to get back on
the path which we have drifted away from.
Q: Pakistan says it has done a lot to eliminate the hawala
system. But the recent increase in the gap between the kerb and
the interbank rates indicates a resurgence in hawala.
A: By June 2004, we want all the money changers
to organise themselves either in the form of an exchange company
which the central bank will be regulating, or become the franchisees
of those exchange companies for which we originally issue licenses.
They are trying to create problems for these exchange companies
and that is the reason why in July and August, you saw an increase
in the spread between the interbank. Today, it has come down to
almost the same levels. The message is very clear: we are quite
determined to eliminate money changers because it's not possible
for us to regulate 480 money changers all over Pakistan. It is easy
for us to regulate 15 to 20 exchange companies and these exchange
companies can have branches and money changers as their franchisees.
There are elements within the money changers community who want
to defeat our endeavours but we have made it very clear that we'll
go ahead by June. We have taken steps on the freezing of accounts.
Pakistan is the largest contributor to frozen accounts and we have
reported this all over the world. Second is money-laundering. We
are going to put in a stringent law, but even now there are regulations
for knowing your customers, opening new accounts and reporting of
suspicious transactions. Regulations have become very tough and
we are training our bankers in money laundering activities. So we
are way ahead of many other countries. It's one thing to have a
law and another thing to implement it, and you can implement it
only if you have trained manpower.
Q: How effectively have we utilised the foreign aid
which came in post-September 11 and the debt scheduling?
A: I think we have utilised it to completely waive off our debt
to the US and we will continue to press for the remaining 1.8 or
1.9 billion to be completely waived in the next appropriation, which
Pakistan will get after Camp David. Our debt situation will improve,
and debt stock will go down. We are taking care of the fundamental
structural problem. It is not something that will come back and
this is the best use for the assistance we have received.
Q: Pakistan has large foreign exchange reserves. Does
the State Bank have any plans to invest it?
A: We were always borrowing in order to build our reserves so we
didn't have the in-house capacity in the central bank to manage
this large amount. The first thing that we have done is to engage
an international consultant who is helping us build our own capacity.
We will allocate these funds with international fund managers, who
will be given a benchmark of what we expect them to earn for us.
We have selected the international consultant firm and they have
started working on the business plan. Once our board approves it,
we will go for the placement of these funds with the international
fund managers.
Q: One of the major tasks the government had undertaken
was to reform the banking system. How successful has that been?
A: I think if you read the international financial institutions
reports, they're all unanimous that the major success story of Pakistan
have been the banking sector reforms. This has been a long continuous
process which was started some time ago. The idea is to have a managed
banking sector with a healthy competitive environment, but regulated
very strongly by the central bank. We have a two track approach.
We were successful in privatising Habib Bank which is just around
the corner. Eighty per cent of the banking assets in Pakistan will
be in the hands of the private sector. There are very few developing
countries that can boast of this particular achievement. Ten years
ago 90 per cent of banking assets were in the hands of the public
sector in Pakistan, so within a decade we have been able to transform
the banking sector from a public sector monopoly to a healthy, competitive
private sector industry. Secondly, we have an autonomous central
bank which has developed the competence, expertise, technology and
the know-how to regulate the banks so that they are performing according
to the rules of the game. We had to change the ownership of two
commercial banks,suspend the board of directors, de-bar some bankers
from lifetime banking and merge a major financial institution with
another bank. Today a family, even with 100 per cent ownership,
can have only 25 per cent membership on the board of directors.
Seventy-five per cent of membership will be made up of independent
professionals. We have a proper criteria for the board members and
for the chief executive. For example, if you are a stock market
broker, a money changer, or you are doing any other business, then
you cannot become a board director, because there is a conflict
of interest. We are forcing owners to give up their ownership of
the banks and hand over to professionals who fulfill those criteria.
Then there are the risk management guidelines. There have been no
political loans given in Pakistan for the last five years. Every
loan has been given on merit and that's why the performance of the
banking sector has improved to the extent that only five per cent
of loans are non-performing and 95 per cent recovery has taken place.
Q: When did this begin?
A: From 1997 onwards, almost all new loans are being paid on time.
So the NPL ratio, which used to be 25-30 per cent is down to five
per cent. The international norm is five per cent and above. So
this is a big change. If you look at all the banks, today they are
being managed by professionals of the highest integrity. They have
not been inducted on the basis of sifarish. And this is a huge change
in the banking culture in Pakistan. Recruitment is taking place
on merit alone.
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