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Asad Umar’s economic shock therapy — crazy or genius?

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Asad Umar’s economic shock therapy — crazy or genius?
By M Bilal Lakhani
Published: April 7, 2019
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Finance Minister Asad Umar. PHOTO: PTI

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Chemotherapy makes a cancer patient feel even more sick and miserable, before it defeats cancer. Nausea, vomiting and eventually losing hair is a painful cost of the treatment, not the disease. Similarly, Asad Umar is giving chemotherapy to a sick Pakistani economy today. And the side effects of the chemotherapy — inflation, depreciation of the rupee, slowing growth — is the painful part and parcel of the treatment. Should the Pakistani people protest the disease or the medicine?

Miftah Ismail delivered the Pakistani economy on a stretcher to Asad Umar, with the economy gasping for breath in the emergency room. Like any doctor, Asad’s first job was to stabilise the patient and make sure he survives, regardless of how painful the treatment may be. This is the shock therapy we are experiencing today the side effects of which are expressing themselves as inflation, depreciation of the rupee and slowed-down growth. Is there a method to the madness in the PTI’s economic policies or are they just incompetent? In this column, I’ll unpack depreciation of the rupee, inflation and the rise in energy prices to understand whether Asad Umar is overprescribing medicine or if we need to give him more time.

Let’s take depreciation first. The PTI inherited a $19 billion current account deficit per year. This means we owe the world $19 billion in imported goods and debt liabilities every year, which we don’t have the money to pay for.

Why did this happen? Much has been said about Ishaq Dar’s fetish for keeping the dollar-rupee rate stable but the real game was subsidising elite and non-elite consumption. Here’s how this works: suppose we imported a chocolate for $1. This was sold in stores for 100 rupees last year, versus the 140 rupees at real exchange rate. The difference was subsidised by our foreign exchange reserves being used to keep the rupee artificially high, which we now have to borrow more dollars to repay. Essentially, the previous government was subsidising private consumption, with money they didn’t have!

The first sour medicine Asad Umar administered was devaluing the rupee — or bringing it closer to its real price. This helps eliminate subsidies on elite consumption like the import of cars, Swiss chocolate and pet food (yes, the PML-N government was indirectly subsidising these!). This hurts all of us because some of the goods we need like food and medicine are also imported. But the medication is working. We are learning to live within our means and imports are beginning to come down sharply (current account deficit was down to 72% in February).

Now, let’s talk about inflation, being fuelled primarily by devaluation/depreciation, which I explained above, plus the rise in energy prices. Let’s take gas as an example. Previous governments were selling gas at subsidised rates and now the PTI is removing these subsidies. Suppose gas costs 100 rupees per unit but the government was selling it at 60 rupees. Who was paying for those 40 rupees? The Pakistani taxpayer who takes on more government debt to pay for these subsidies.

Now, the PTI government is moving towards a more sustainable financial path — selling gas, petrol and electricity for their actual prices and reducing wasteful consumption. No politician wants to be the one raising prices but the pain is a sign that the medication is working. The PTI is putting the interests of the country — financial stabilisation — ahead of its own interests, which would be to keep prices artificially low and stay popular.

Even if it means they’re going to die, there’s a reason why some cancer patients choose not to get treated for cancer. The treatment is so debilitating that they prefer spending their last few weeks travelling or spending time with family. The good news is that Pakistan is a young patient and our prognosis is strong.

Once the initial shock and side effects of the chemotherapy wear off, Pakistan has a very bright future ahead. We have a young, dynamic population of 200 million and our close friend happens to be the world’s next superpower. All we have to do today is to be patient and channel our energy into fighting the disease, not the medication!

Published in The Express Tribune, April 7th, 2019.
 
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No form of chemotherapy is successful until the patient's body responds to the treatment.


In Pak those with university degree are aiming to join abba jaan's business, or sit in some shop in Saddar rather than use their intelligence and training to do something productive that produces new wealth. Those with money chose to buy plots in Bahria Town and Defense because their investment will double in a decade or so.



I think this is where the government needs to step in and get in the business of doing business. Remember the biggest companies in China are state owned. Obviously if the government is doing business then this gives corrupt governments the opportunity to induct their jiyalas or patwaris in the companies to give them jobs for votes. One solution might be that the government procures the land and the machinery and sets up the factory then hands it over to a private business party to run efficiently while the government keeps 10-30% stake in the business and conduct annual audits to keep check and balances.


The Pak economy needs electric shocks along with the chemo to atleast get back a stable heartbeat. Just my two cents.
 
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Stop importing luxuries like cars and chocolate. Also foreign baby milk powder, tissue paper and breakfast cereal should be dumped immediately and develop domestic industry as a national priority.

You are essentially a war economy but don’t get the benefit of mobilising domestic industry.

The respective ministry should have a list of non-essential item and ban these import until the deficit is halved or better.

It is a grave situation for Pakistan and tinkering little things is not enough as the interest will compound year after year very soon.
 
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Stop importing luxuries like cars and chocolate. Also foreign baby milk powder, tissue paper and breakfast cereal should be dumped immediately and develop domestic industry as a national priority.

You are essentially a war economy but don’t get the benefit of mobilising domestic industry.

The respective ministry should have a list of non-essential item and ban these import until the deficit is halved or better.

It is a grave situation for Pakistan and tinkering little things is not enough as the interest will compound year after year very soon.
You will be surprised to know that most of what we import is also produced domestically. Obviously there are exceptions to certain cars, machinery and petroleum, but most consumables like chocolates, toilet paper, baby powder etc etc are all produced in Pak.


The issue is the mentality of the people, they will even prefer to buy an inferior quality imported product over a local product.
 
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I think this is where the government needs to step in and get in the business of doing business. Remember the biggest companies in China are state owned. Obviously if the government is doing business then this gives corrupt governments the opportunity to induct their jiyalas or patwaris in the companies to give them jobs for votes. One solution might be that the government procures the land and the machinery and sets up the factory then hands it over to a private business party to run efficiently while the government keeps 10-30% stake in the business and conduct annual audits to keep check and balances.

State capitalism..The East Asian Model:enjoy:

In Pak those with university degree are aiming to join abba jaan's business, or sit in some shop in Saddar rather than use their intelligence and training to do something productive that produces new wealth. Those with money chose to buy plots in Bahria Town and Defense because their investment will double in a decade or so.

Every society has some unproductive elites...But in western society's hard working innovative people get rewarded....Jeff Bezos and Amazon... for example. That's not the case in Pakistan...This defiantly needs to be changed. Financial systems need to reformed so hard working innovative people are given venture capital in small amounts to start export oriented start ups. Many will fail. But some will succeed.
 
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You will be surprised to know that most of what we import is also produced domestically. Obviously there are exceptions to certain cars, machinery and petroleum, but most consumables like chocolates, toilet paper, baby powder etc etc are all produced in Pak.


The issue is the mentality of the people, they will even prefer to buy an inferior quality imported product over a local product.

That is shocking. I believed the reason for importing breakfast cereal and tissue was because of lack of domestic manufacturers.

I think this is where the government must step in and ban or tax away these imports out of reach of domestic made goods. Only they can do it because it seems large section of population has been beset by laziness and lack of care of how bad the deficit situation is.

Until you sort out this deficit you are basically at mercy of the US war machine and its tentacles like the IMF
 
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Pakistanis are importing almost everything oil, cars, food, clothes, shoes, grocery stuff, even vegetables. Wth?

What is our 220 million people doing? Why do they depend on govt or even parents?
 
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Pakistanis are importing almost everything oil, cars, food, clothes, shoes, grocery stuff, even vegetables. Wth?

What is our 220 million people doing? Why do they depend on govt or even parents?

Terrible. No wonder your deficit situation is so bad, this will only change if the mindset of the population changes. There should be social media campaign and news to encourage people to buy domestic.
 
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Because importing stuff is cheaper due to unrealistic overvalued rupee

I don't get your post. I don't see any neccessety in buying imported cars, food, clothing, grocery stuff and vegetables. Especially when Pakistan has capacity and cheap labor both inside Pakistan.

Should buy the cars locally assembled or manufactured, buying clothes made in Bangladesh, China, Vietnam, Thailand, etc is squeezing the blood out of Pakistani textile industry, why need to import milk powders/purified water/cookies/candies/etc from Europe or any other such stuff from anywhere else for a poor country like Pakistan? Vegetables - I thought we were an agriculture base country and here we are dependent on india for vegetables...?
 
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I don't get your post. I don't see any neccessety in buying imported cars, food, clothing, grocery stuff and vegetables. Especially when Pakistan has capacity and cheap labor both inside Pakistan.

Should buy the cars locally assembled or manufactured, buying clothes made in Bangladesh, China, Vietnam, Thailand, etc is squeezing the blood out of Pakistani textile industry, why need to import milk powders/purified water/cookies/candies/etc from Europe or any other such stuff from anywhere else for a poor country like Pakistan? Vegetables - I thought we were an agriculture base country and here we are dependent on india for vegetables...?

It seems the govt over time have not tackled the root cause and basically allowed rampant import to keep the bellies full of the middle class and to keep them quiet while they loot public funds and buy property and investment abroad.

What each Pakistani resident on this forum should do is buy domestic where you can, check the ‘made in...’ labels and encourage neighbours and family member to do similar.

This can be coupled with a social media campaign to ‘buy in Pakistan’ or similar and can catch on over time and pressure the political class out if their laziness and short termism.
 
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Pakistan needs to work with China to establish a manufacturing base. I guess they are doing it already. Thanks to your exam Nawaz Sharif they have cpec model .
If pak can bottle up is urge to bring in religion into everything then it cam aspire to be a Malaysia else there is no saying what can happen.
 
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I think large proportion of our population living in poverty not buy such imported items ,only rich people consume imported goods and ordinary poor public is already adapted to live without imports
 
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I don't get your post. I don't see any neccessety in buying imported cars, food, clothing, grocery stuff and vegetables. Especially when Pakistan has capacity and cheap labor both inside Pakistan.

Should buy the cars locally assembled or manufactured, buying clothes made in Bangladesh, China, Vietnam, Thailand, etc is squeezing the blood out of Pakistani textile industry, why need to import milk powders/purified water/cookies/candies/etc from Europe or any other such stuff from anywhere else for a poor country like Pakistan? Vegetables - I thought we were an agriculture base country and here we are dependent on india for vegetables...?
Why would somwone produce a car in Pakistan with all taxes..oil produced in Pakistan will be more expensive due to rupee valuation
 
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