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Blame the IMF

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By Dr Farrukh Saleem
November 07, 2021



Petrol has gone up to Rs146. Blame the IMF. The price of wheat flour has gone up from Rs35 a kilogram three years ago to Rs70 per kilogram. Blame the IMF. The price of sugar has gone up from Rs55 a kilogram three years ago to Rs150 per kilogram. It's the IMF’s fault. The price of electricity has gone up from Rs10 a unit three years ago to Rs22 a unit. It’s the IMF’s fault. Our rupee has fallen from Rs123-to-a-dollar three years ago to Rs170 to-a-dollar. It’s the IMF’s fault. Is it really?



Question number 1: Did the IMF advise our government to lose Rs750 billion in the government’s ‘commodity operations’? Question number 2: Did the IMF advise our government to export 1.1 million metric tons of sugar (when there actually was a shortage in Pakistan)? Question number 3: Did the IMF advise the government of Punjab to pay out Rs3 billion worth of subsidies to the sugar mill owners? Question number 4: Is it under the IMF’s advice that our government is allowing Rs400 billion worth of electricity theft a year? Question number 5: Did the IMF advise our government to buy the most expensive electricity on the face of the planet? Question number 6: Is it under the IMF’s advice that we are restricting our exports to $2 billion a month and importing goods and services worth $6.5 billion a month?

Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member countries to devalue its currency. The prescription has always been ‘let the market decide’. Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member-countries to raise the electricity tariff. The prescription has always been ‘recover the full cost of production’. Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member-countries to protect cartels. The prescription has always been ‘competitive pricing’.

Yes, the IMF is both a financial entity and a political tool – a tool in the hands of its shareholders. Yes, the IMF’s largest shareholder is the United States of America with a total of 831,401 votes. Surely, the US has an agenda – and so does the IMF. To be certain, no one puts a gun to our head to go to the IMF. We go to the IMF because of our own blunders, mistakes, absurdities, follies, irrationalities and goof-ups.

Jeffrey Sachs, a noted American economist, once said that the IMF’s “usual prescription is budgetary belt tightening to countries who are much too poor to own belts.” Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, denounced the IMF as a “primary culprit in the failed development policies implemented in some of the world’s poorest countries”, adding that “many of the economic reforms the IMF required as conditions for its lending – fiscal austerity, high interest rates, trade liberalisation, privatisation, and open capital markets – have often been counterproductive for target economies and devastating for local populations.”


Pakistan has signed 23 arrangements with the IMF since we became a member in 1950. Why do we think that the IMF was created to solve Pakistan’s economic problems? Has the IMF solved any member country’s economic problems over the past 75 years? Pakistan’s problems can only be solved by Pakistan’s own leaders – and when our own leaders fail in their obligations to their voters the IMF is turned into the perfect scapegoat. Who said, “To err is human – and to blame the IMF is even more so?”



The writer is a columnist based in Islamabad.

Email: farrukh15@hotmail.com Twitter: @saleemfarrukh
 
آپ نے گھبرانا نہیں ہے فائنل راونڈ
FB_IMG_1634418995376.jpg
 
Yeh is ghundey ka plan tha- lol
you can always try that out and see how it works
Munnay pehle is ka jawab de
Tere jaison ki INSHAALLAH hamesha jalti hi rahay gi
My leader is going to come and save us
He has never put pakistan in a situation that it is forced to go into a IMF programView attachment 790879

Imran khan forced pakistan in 2018 IMF program before that everything was fine
Bhai g inko bahir kis ne janay dia?? Hum to pehle din se leh rahay hain k in kanjron ko latkana chahiye thaa. Ye sb ab bahir beth k hans rahay hai r wapsi k plans b bana rahay hain.
 
Why not completely shun IMF. Don’t recognise IMF or FATF. Completely align with China and Russia.
My leader is going to come and save us
He has never put pakistan in a situation that it is forced to go into a IMF programView attachment 790879

Imran khan forced pakistan in 2018 IMF program before that everything was fine
The grin on that woman’s face sends shivers.
 


By Dr Farrukh Saleem
November 07, 2021



Petrol has gone up to Rs146. Blame the IMF. The price of wheat flour has gone up from Rs35 a kilogram three years ago to Rs70 per kilogram. Blame the IMF. The price of sugar has gone up from Rs55 a kilogram three years ago to Rs150 per kilogram. It's the IMF’s fault. The price of electricity has gone up from Rs10 a unit three years ago to Rs22 a unit. It’s the IMF’s fault. Our rupee has fallen from Rs123-to-a-dollar three years ago to Rs170 to-a-dollar. It’s the IMF’s fault. Is it really?



Question number 1: Did the IMF advise our government to lose Rs750 billion in the government’s ‘commodity operations’? Question number 2: Did the IMF advise our government to export 1.1 million metric tons of sugar (when there actually was a shortage in Pakistan)? Question number 3: Did the IMF advise the government of Punjab to pay out Rs3 billion worth of subsidies to the sugar mill owners? Question number 4: Is it under the IMF’s advice that our government is allowing Rs400 billion worth of electricity theft a year? Question number 5: Did the IMF advise our government to buy the most expensive electricity on the face of the planet? Question number 6: Is it under the IMF’s advice that we are restricting our exports to $2 billion a month and importing goods and services worth $6.5 billion a month?

Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member countries to devalue its currency. The prescription has always been ‘let the market decide’. Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member-countries to raise the electricity tariff. The prescription has always been ‘recover the full cost of production’. Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member-countries to protect cartels. The prescription has always been ‘competitive pricing’.

Yes, the IMF is both a financial entity and a political tool – a tool in the hands of its shareholders. Yes, the IMF’s largest shareholder is the United States of America with a total of 831,401 votes. Surely, the US has an agenda – and so does the IMF. To be certain, no one puts a gun to our head to go to the IMF. We go to the IMF because of our own blunders, mistakes, absurdities, follies, irrationalities and goof-ups.

Jeffrey Sachs, a noted American economist, once said that the IMF’s “usual prescription is budgetary belt tightening to countries who are much too poor to own belts.” Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, denounced the IMF as a “primary culprit in the failed development policies implemented in some of the world’s poorest countries”, adding that “many of the economic reforms the IMF required as conditions for its lending – fiscal austerity, high interest rates, trade liberalisation, privatisation, and open capital markets – have often been counterproductive for target economies and devastating for local populations.”


Pakistan has signed 23 arrangements with the IMF since we became a member in 1950. Why do we think that the IMF was created to solve Pakistan’s economic problems? Has the IMF solved any member country’s economic problems over the past 75 years? Pakistan’s problems can only be solved by Pakistan’s own leaders – and when our own leaders fail in their obligations to their voters the IMF is turned into the perfect scapegoat. Who said, “To err is human – and to blame the IMF is even more so?”



The writer is a columnist based in Islamabad.

Email: farrukh15@hotmail.com Twitter: @saleemfarrukh
As I wrote before, and I am repeating again, we need to shoot almost 20000 people within Pakistan and around the globe.
After that, Pakistan will be on right track.
Khail bna lia Hai Pakistan.
 
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Why not completely shun IMF. Don’t recognise IMF or FATF. Completely align with China and Russia.

The grin on that woman’s face sends shivers.
You do know that China and Russia both are members of FATF. Russia didn't support your position there. What is aligning with China and Russia, have they constituted separate financial mechanisms?
 
The attack on Pakistan's Economy is from multifront

1- IMF , started to demand that all affairs of State Bank of Pakistan should be autonomous , no scrutiny

2- IMF , and various affiliates who now hold position in Pakistan's economic forum insisted to remove
Protective barriers which control devaluation of currency in Pakistan

3- There are on going demands to grant "Immunity" to all such consultants who got involved in practices to advice government of Pakistan to wrongly lift control over their own National Currency

4- USA withholding 13 Billion in Afghanistan Dollar , created a void and demand for Dollar Rose dramatically for border trader between Pakistan-Afghanistan , this Dollar reserves in Pakistan started to dwindle as Traders rushed to buy currency for trade purpose creating a massive shortage for notes this further stressing the Economic System

5- UK launched a indirect attack on Pakistan when it allowed to release funds to Shabaz Sharif Family which were frozen over Pakistan Government's request in order to recuperate the lost money and bring back fugitive Nawaz Sharif back to Jail

  • Various disruptive protest started in Pakistan once the Money was released overseas allowing such protest to be financed from overseas, (the protestor's demand for removal of French ambassador ), which of course is not the most important item in Pakistan's politics

6- FATF is yet another front where attack on Pakistan was launched at economic level when we are not even member of this particular body at United Nation Level or any other forum



  • LET THE MARKET DECIDE = Does not flows, because Pakistan is better off to not ship cheap food supplies , better to keep food in storage and feed local people first

 
Last edited:
Why not completely shun IMF. Don’t recognise IMF or FATF. Completely align with China and Russia.

The grin on that woman’s face sends shivers.
Look what happened to countries like Iran, Venezuela, North Korea that completely shun US
 
Why not completely shun IMF. Don’t recognise IMF or FATF. Completely align with China and Russia.

The grin on that woman’s face sends shivers.
The current economic realities give the buyer much higher negotiating power as compared to the seller.

To be completely independent, GoPs exports cannot be dependent on western markets for revenue.

So long as favourable western immigration and trade policies are in demand in Islamabad, GoP has little room to maneuver.
 


By Dr Farrukh Saleem
November 07, 2021



Petrol has gone up to Rs146. Blame the IMF. The price of wheat flour has gone up from Rs35 a kilogram three years ago to Rs70 per kilogram. Blame the IMF. The price of sugar has gone up from Rs55 a kilogram three years ago to Rs150 per kilogram. It's the IMF’s fault. The price of electricity has gone up from Rs10 a unit three years ago to Rs22 a unit. It’s the IMF’s fault. Our rupee has fallen from Rs123-to-a-dollar three years ago to Rs170 to-a-dollar. It’s the IMF’s fault. Is it really?



Question number 1: Did the IMF advise our government to lose Rs750 billion in the government’s ‘commodity operations’? Question number 2: Did the IMF advise our government to export 1.1 million metric tons of sugar (when there actually was a shortage in Pakistan)? Question number 3: Did the IMF advise the government of Punjab to pay out Rs3 billion worth of subsidies to the sugar mill owners? Question number 4: Is it under the IMF’s advice that our government is allowing Rs400 billion worth of electricity theft a year? Question number 5: Did the IMF advise our government to buy the most expensive electricity on the face of the planet? Question number 6: Is it under the IMF’s advice that we are restricting our exports to $2 billion a month and importing goods and services worth $6.5 billion a month?

Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member countries to devalue its currency. The prescription has always been ‘let the market decide’. Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member-countries to raise the electricity tariff. The prescription has always been ‘recover the full cost of production’. Never has the IMF ever asked any of its member-countries to protect cartels. The prescription has always been ‘competitive pricing’.

Yes, the IMF is both a financial entity and a political tool – a tool in the hands of its shareholders. Yes, the IMF’s largest shareholder is the United States of America with a total of 831,401 votes. Surely, the US has an agenda – and so does the IMF. To be certain, no one puts a gun to our head to go to the IMF. We go to the IMF because of our own blunders, mistakes, absurdities, follies, irrationalities and goof-ups.

Jeffrey Sachs, a noted American economist, once said that the IMF’s “usual prescription is budgetary belt tightening to countries who are much too poor to own belts.” Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, denounced the IMF as a “primary culprit in the failed development policies implemented in some of the world’s poorest countries”, adding that “many of the economic reforms the IMF required as conditions for its lending – fiscal austerity, high interest rates, trade liberalisation, privatisation, and open capital markets – have often been counterproductive for target economies and devastating for local populations.”


Pakistan has signed 23 arrangements with the IMF since we became a member in 1950. Why do we think that the IMF was created to solve Pakistan’s economic problems? Has the IMF solved any member country’s economic problems over the past 75 years? Pakistan’s problems can only be solved by Pakistan’s own leaders – and when our own leaders fail in their obligations to their voters the IMF is turned into the perfect scapegoat. Who said, “To err is human – and to blame the IMF is even more so?”



The writer is a columnist based in Islamabad.

Email: farrukh15@hotmail.com Twitter: @saleemfarrukh
Peele graphs wala peela lifafa is the author. I rest my case.
 

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