well brother if economically 2006-2008 was the worst than what is it now??
ou cant blame every thing on shauqat, he was not a corrupt man, all corrupt were sitting in the parliment, he is very educated and a perfect person to deal with economics of the country
just like today zardari has installed all irrelevent people in the minitry like 2 class pass as defence minister or interior minister
shauqat cant be termed as incompetent as some people might because he is the best guy to handle our economics
So you want to replace corrupts with another corrupt, the economy will stay the same, there was no miracle in musharraf-pml-q era, I am still looking for my darn post its somewhere in economy section so i can list you the failures of the previous government. By the way shaukat aziz is just a general banker not economic specialist saint.
Here is musharraf era lead by
mushy and aziz no thankyou we don't want suckers:
Musharraf’s regime broke all records in borrowing and pushed the country into a debt trap, well now that has been equally over taken by PPP. State Bank reports showed the government had borrowed a staggering amount of over $15 billion in the four years to 2006, as the country’s total debt and liabilities reached $40 billion by 2007. Such debt apart from additional borrowing was also composed of rescheduled debt as the Musharraf government continued borrowing to fund basic government duties and the inability to generate sufficient wealth from the domestic economy. Such amounts of debt never existed in the history of Pakistan. By the end of 2004, the total external debt was $33 billion. If the government had stopped borrowing as it claimed, the country’s total debt would have declined to $23 billion, based upon Pakistan’s regular yearly payments by the end of June 2007.
With the absence of basic industry in Pakistan, imports became critical and continued to rise. Due to this Pakistan faced an all time high trade deficit. Pakistan borrowed over $3 billion during 2006-2007. The figures reveal that the huge borrowing was made to pay debt and continuous current account deficits. This is because the Pakistani government had been unable to provide for the basic needs of the country, and was forced to import more and more from abroad, to the point where exports were exceeded and this resulted in a trade deficit. Average annual payment of debt servicing reached $3.3 billion in 2007. The current account deficit for the fiscal year ending on June 30, 2007 had increased by 41% reaching $7 billion. Instead of reducing dependency on imports by building a strong domestic industrial base and refining abundant local raw materials the Musharraf government relied on unreliable sources like foreign direct investment (FDI) and privatization to meet the gap.
This clearly shows the Musharraf regime’s lack of vision failed to develop the foundations of a productive economy. During Musharraf’s tenure the Pakistan economy became reliant upon the service sector, real estate, and the stock market. The real productive sectors of the economy, both industry and agriculture, were ignored. The infrastructure in Pakistan was not upgraded and as a result the country today faces a serious energy crisis. The social sectors continued to be neglected with expenditure for education and health sectors much lower than those of previous governments.