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Can PM Imran Khan Make Pakistan A Welfare State

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Imran Khan envisions a Pakistani welfare state. Is it possible?
Shahrukh WaniUpdated August 28, 2018
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Pakistan has a new leader at the helm who, if his first address to the nation is to be considered at face value, is set to make a radical departure from the conventional trajectory we have taken as a nation to create what he describes as a Scandinavian-style Islamic welfare state.

Keeping aside the intellectual ambiguity of coupling liberal Scandinavia with Islamic theology, if Pakistan is to soberly contemplate such a goal, it is useful to critically engage the feasibility and the implications of such a proposal.

What makes a welfare state?
While welfare states vary in characteristics, the term is used to indicate a type of social contract under which the state undertakes extensive intervention in the society to protect or assist those it considers to be disadvantaged or going through some form of a shock.

In other words, providing a form of social protection.

In practice, this could be through a number of interventions. Providing free or subsidised education and healthcare is a common one. So is unemployment insurance for people who get laid off or providing pensions for the elderly.

Most countries, including Pakistan, already have some welfare policies. For example, the Benazir Income Support Program is a welfare programme for those living in poverty.

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What makes the Scandinavian states unique is the breadth of these interventions. For example, Denmark spends 29 percent of its GDP on social welfare spending (this does not include education), while South Korea spends about 10pc.

The countries which make up the European Union generally have a high welfare spending. Cumulatively, they dedicate about one-third of their GDP on social welfare — the largest chunk on pensions and other forms of old-age benefits.

Here, most people spend their work life contributing to the welfare state, and once they retire or go through a shock, they benefit from it.

By whatever means you measure, this is a lot of investment.

What will it take to turn Pakistan into a welfare state?
The first thing which is common among the Scandinavian welfare states is they collect a large proportion of their GDP in taxes.

Norway collects 38pc, Denmarkabout 45pc, and Sweden about 44pc. This means that these states have a large and extensive tax infrastructure — and people pay a large proportion of their income in taxes. The rich pay more: in Denmark, the top marginal tax rate is about 60pc.

Compare this with Pakistan — we collect only 12pc of our GDP in taxes. Denmark spends over twice as much of its GDP on social welfare alone. After recent tax reforms in Pakistan, the top marginal tax rate is just 15pc — significantly lower than Scandinavian countries.

This means that, if we were to make a move towards becoming a welfare state, we would need to radically expand the tax system — not only taxing more people but also taxing more the (higher income) people who do pay taxes.

As welfare states require significant redistribution and government provision of public services, these tax revenues would be used to finance the growth in the size of the state, both by spending more on welfare services but also hiring more people to manage such a far-reaching infrastructure.

This is the opposite of austerity.

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But, as those who have been at the helm before know very well, raising taxes is hard everywhere, but significantly harder in Pakistan.

This is because we have a cash-based economy with a large informal sector which makes it hard for the government to know how much exactly people owe. So, a large number of people are able to evade taxes, and evidence suggeststhat they do.

One way to solve could be to bank on some form of intrinsic motivation for them to voluntary comply. However, the evidence is unclear on how much taxes can be raised from the voluntary channel alone.

What is clear is that many people in developed countries, including most welfare states, do not have the opportunity to evade taxes.

This is because of third-party reporting of income thanks to high formalisation of the economy and a strong paper trail which makes getting caught likely, and costly.

So, in order to become a welfare state, Pakistan will need to raise a lot more taxes – which can be achieved in part by making it harder for people to evade them.

Along with taxes, what makes Pakistan different from Scandinavia is that they are significantly wealthier than us. The per capita income in Pakistan is about $1,500. In Norway, it is over $70,000.

Now, you can make the argument that what makes Scandinavia rich is its welfare infrastructure, or that Scandinavia being rich allows it to have a welfare infrastructure.

But, what is clear that their economy is far more productive and people are far wealthier than us which allows them to spend heavily on social welfare.

And, if Pakistan wants to have public services on par with theirs, it would need to drastically expand the size of its economy.

Take the southern European nations, for example. They set up extensive welfare systems, promising people gangrenous pensions, but their economies were not robust enough to back such a system. History is a witness to what happened next.

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But setting up a welfare state is also more than taxes and income. It is about establishing a social contract. A contract between a person living in a farmhouse in Islamabad and a person living in a chaunra in Tharparkar.

It is about convincing people that their national identity trumps their affiliations with social class, creed or kin.

Consider this. Norway, Denmark and Sweden are by and large ethnically homogenous countries. That means most people share the same ethnicity which, evidence suggests, feeds into the social preference for redistribution.

People tend to be willing to help other people who look like them.

Pakistan is not a homogenous country, and has, perhaps as a consequence of that, strong informal networks. For instance, if a villager suffers from an illness they are often helped by people of that kin group – biradari.

It means that even when there is no formal welfare infrastructure, people tend to create pockets of an informal support network to help each other out.

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But to convince people that a formal institutionalised welfare state is the goal would require to build an overreaching identity which triumphs local ties.

Demography, broadly, is also important. In many welfare states, an aging population is a big challenge — too few working-age people contributing to the state with taxes, and too many old people taking pensions and healthcare.

A Pakistani welfare state, however, is likely to have the opposite problem. We do not have an aging population but have a very young one.

Spending on education is likely to take a large chunk of social investment, and an increasing size of the population means that the welfare state would need continuous expansion to cater for a growing population.

This could be managed if the move towards a welfare state is combined with measures to control population growth.

So, is Welfare-istan possible?
Yes, if we can build an extensive tax infrastructure, a significantly more productive economy, a stronger national identity with preferences of redistribution and control rapid population growth to make this all feasible.

The pitfalls are also clear – if you expand welfare spending without improving the tax system, you might end up in a budgetary crisis (and end up taking debt to manage it).

If you fix the tax system, but the economy does not grow fast enough, you would not raise enough revenue and would end up promising people something you cannot afford.

This, as our new leader will learn soon, is easier said than done.



https://www.dawn.com/news/1429481
 
its impossible. he cant change the psyche of 20 crore people who have trained to do corruption. our food, water, air, medicines, education, politics, law and order,emotions , religion etc everything is corrupted.corruption is part of our genes now.
 
Don't expect a European style welfare state in 5 years, think more 20-50 years. What we certainly can do is start working towards it.

Welfare can only be given to the poor if there is wealth to give it from. This means firstly generating wealth and secondly taxing wealth (and income) to give the states the means to give out welfare.

We should target free education, free healthcare and income support for the most needy, and then slowly build upwards.
 
Stunted growth of brain is problem . When we overcome this issue by increasing funds in health & care department then why not we can do anything .
It will take time but Imran khan can do it. He never give up even if he is Alone.
Nothing is impossible .
Just need right direction, consistency and nation support.
 
No, he can't.
If he manages to give relief in everyday utility prices, it would be enough.
 
Free milk and free school meals! This is something a lot of African countries focus on. it helps with the early development of children and incentivises people sending their kids to school.
 
Don't expect a European style welfare state in 5 years, think more 20-50 years. What we certainly can do is start working towards it.

Welfare can only be given to the poor if there is wealth to give it from. This means firstly generating wealth and secondly taxing wealth (and income) to give the states the means to give out welfare.

We should target free education, free healthcare and income support for the most needy, and then slowly build upwards.
Agreed. There are differant grades of welfare states. Scandavians are the gold standard. However there are poorer versions of these. For instance Cuba is a poor country but it's health service can give some European countries run for their money.

At the moment Pakistan social indices are even lower then it's GDP would suggest. And the basic moorings are below Bangladesh which of late has been catching up fast. So lot can be done in Pakistan right now even if it will decades to get where Scandanavia is.

Can Pakistan become a welfare state if Scandanavia is used as the benchmark. The answer is no. But Pakistancan still lay the foundations of a welfare state.

Free milk and free school meals! This is something a lot of African countries focus on. it helps with the early development of children and incentivises people sending their kids to school.
And it helps the economy. Pakistan has vast agriculture potential. There is no good reason why every child is not provided free school meal/milk every day. It would address stunting and improve general education/health of the nation.
 
Free milk and free school meals! This is something a lot of African countries focus on. it helps with the early development of children and incentivises people sending their kids to school.


knowing our people they will do 2 numbriii in that too
 
Free milk and free school meals! This is something a lot of African countries focus on. it helps with the early development of children and incentivises people sending their kids to school.
Yea but in Pakistan even milk is suspicious!

In sha ALLAH
Best reply...Thats all we can say...He can work towards it with integrity and honesty....
 
Agreed. There are differant grades of welfare states. Scandavians are the gold standard. However there are poorer versions of these. For instance Cuba is a poor country but it's health service can give some European countries run for their money.

At the moment Pakistan social indices are even lower then it's GDP would suggest. And the basic moorings are below Bangladesh which of late has been catching up fast. So lot can be done in Pakistan right now even if it will decades to get where Scandanavia is.

Can Pakistan become a welfare state if Scandanavia is used as the benchmark. The answer is no. But Pakistancan still lay the foundations of a welfare state.
Naah, that's not gold standard ...but I would say silver or bronze and as we are going into elections, in fact, we can already cast the votes... We are having the debates how to improve it.
The gold standard or rather platinum standard is the Madina State model which is the ideal system to achieve and all modern social welfare systems reflect many aspects of it but none grasps the complete spectrum. How 5 years is too little and that is why I suggest at least 20 years continuous without the break as first 5 years will be spent in clearing the mess and stabilising the economy so only a basic system can be initiated but in the next 15 years it will gradually reach the ideal if the policies stay consistent.
 
He has done it in KPK province, some semblance of a welfare, egalitarian state, a pluralist one...and KPK has a population of about 3.5 crore, this can be done in Pakistan as well, a country of 21-22 crore plus population.

- Improve the education system, the government school tertiary, primary/secondary schools system need improvement, funds.


-In KPK about 80,000 teachers were hired on merit through NTS system, no wonder about 2 lacs student shifted from private schools to govt. schools, this was unprecedented. Huge increase in Education budget.

-Health sector reforms, like changing the government hospitals maladministration and getting them out of the diff. mafias, by doctors who were doing private practices at the cost of poor patients in govt. hospitals.

- Insurance cover of 0.6 million rupees for about 70% of KPK households.

- Police reforms and this is a biog success story, now out of any political interference and is world class.
 

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