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China to roll over $500m loan to shore up Pakistan’s reserves - Fiscal Deficit to Jump to 7% GDP

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China to roll over $500m loan to shore up Pakistan’s reserves

ISLAMABAD:

China has agreed to roll over a loan of $500 million that it has placed with the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) as the country’s official foreign currency reserves remain in a precarious position despite taking $44 billion in foreign loans in the past around five years.


The People’s Bank of China, through China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), had deposited $500 million with the SBP in June 2012. The loan is going to mature in the first week of June this year, but China has agreed to roll it over for one more year, said sources in the Ministry of Finance.

Pakistan cannot use the $500-million Chinese deposit and its only purpose is to shore up foreign currency reserves.

ECC approves fresh borrowing of Rs50b to pay circular debt

According to sources, the loan has been rescheduled at the same old terms. Since the money could not be utilised, the interest rate was only 1%, they said.

During the week ended May 18, 2018, the SBP’s gross reserves dropped $479 million to only $10.32 billion due to payments on account of external debt servicing. The reserves are barely enough for two months of imports and are below the International Monetary Fund’s adequacy levels.

The $10.32-billion gross foreign currency reserves include loans of $6.13 billion the central bank has acquired from domestic banks to inflate the reserves.

Owing to the government’s wrong policies, the external debt and liabilities swelled over 42% to $92 billion by April this year, according to central bank data.

The current government has got foreign loans of $44.2 billion to repay maturing debt, provide cushion to foreign currency reserves and finance the import bill.

Sources said in addition to the $500-million loan rollover,
China was expected to increase the SAFE deposit limit by $500 million to $1 billion. Apart from this, another $1 billion in Chinese foreign commercial loan is being negotiated.

Pakistan has already taken $2.2 billion in commercial loans from China in the current fiscal year. It is also holding negotiations to take $200 to $350 million in commercial loans from Gulf banks.

In January last year, Pakistan had returned $500 million to SAFE that had reached maturity. The loan in the form of deposits had been taken in January 2009 due to weak current account situation at the time.

This week, Pakistan and China also extended the currency swap arrangement between the SBP and People’s Bank of China for three years in respective local currencies. The swap limit has been increased from 10 billion to 20 billion Chinese yuan and from Rs165 billion to Rs351 billion.

Owing to the fast deteriorating fiscal and external accounts, the SBP on Friday increased key discount rate by 50 basis points to 6.5% after putting off the increase twice earlier.

The balance of payments picture, despite increase in exports and some deceleration in imports, has deteriorated due to a sharp increase in international oil prices and limited financial inflows, according to the central bank.

In its statement, the SBP added that twin deficits – the budget deficit and the current account deficit – were depicting elevated aggregate demand and were adversely affecting near-term macroeconomic stability.

However, it seems that the federal government is deliberately destroying the economic fundamentals. It posted a record budget deficit of Rs4.81 trillion for July-April of the current fiscal year, which is equal to 4.3% of gross domestic product (GDP).

In spite of that, Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi on Friday approved an honorarium equal to three basic salaries for federal government employees. This came despite opposition from the finance ministry that estimated its impact in the range of Rs100 billion to Rs125 billion.

The honorarium has been announced for all federal government employees and attached departments, including armed forces.

Pakistan needs to watch out as CPEC-related debt soars

A senior official of the finance ministry said the ministry would try to limit the damage and was not in a mood to fully honour the PM’s decision.
If the decision is implemented, the budget deficit for the current fiscal year would jump close to 7% of GDP. This excludes the circular debt that has been parked outside budget books.

When the PML-N government came to power in June 2013, the budget deficit was 6% of GDP excluding circular debt payments.

Published in The Express Tribune, May 27th, 2018.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1719906/1-china-roll-500m-loan-shore-pakistans-reserves/

The clock is ticking. Its ominous. Think of including the circular debt into the fiscal deficit and the figure would jump to 12% of GDP. Actual Pakistani Forex reserves 10.3 - 6.2 = 4 Billion dollars
 
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India’s Macro Picture Does Not Look Good. Here’s Why

Isha Arora

Fiscal constraints and inflationary pressures are back to haunt India as crude oil continues to rally and the rupee weakens against the dollar.

The country is likely to grapple with internal issues and possibly weaker growth if oil prices stay at current elevated levels, Kotak Securities said in a note. A weak macro environment is only adding to its troubles, it said.

Higher inflation is in the offing in the light of surging fuel prices, following the pre-Karnataka poll tariff freeze of 19 days, according to the brokerage. In the year so far, Brent crude has rallied 19.3 percent, while the rupee has depreciated 6.8 percent against the greenback.

Here are the reasons why Kotak is cautious on India:

High Twin Deficits
India’s high consolidated fiscal deficit as a percentage of GDP and widening current account deficit at high oil prices makes it vulnerable to negative sentiment, said Kotak. However, the country has a low debt-to-GDP ratio and reasonable foreign currency reserves, making it less susceptible to damage, relative to other emerging markets.

The fiscal deficit ran above the government’s budgetary estimates of 3.5 percent for the financial year 2018. For the first 11 months of the year, the deficit stood at 120 percent of the revised estimate, running at 4.2 percent of the gross domestic product.

High Inflation
Retail and wholesale prices in India are on the upswing as global crude prices continue to firm up. The rising prices of fruits and vegetables and increasing housing rates add to inflationary woes.

Going ahead, Kotak estimates diesel and petrol prices to increase by Rs 4-6 per litre, as the government attempts to align domestic retail prices fully to global crude levels. It also forecast a near 50 basis points increase in consumer inflation for every $10 per barrel increase in crude oil price.

Rupee Correction
The rupee has depreciated in real effective exchange rate terms, after a period of false strength, the brokerage noted. Given a weak macro-environment, political uncertainty and high equity valuations, the rupee remains vulnerable to further correction.

Possible Rate Hikes
The Reserve Bank of India’s six-member monetary policy committee has held benchmark interest rates at 6 percent since June 2017, with a neutral stance. With inflation rising higher than expected and external vulnerabilities writ large due to a weakening currency, the central bank may need to consider a change in stance and an eventual increase in interest rates.

Mismanaged Expenditure
A sharp rise in revenue expenditure over the years and high interest payment on public debt have prevented any meaningful improvement in fiscal deficit, even in times of low oil prices, said Kotak.

Additionally, the country’s trade exports have failed to dramatically increase over the years, hinting at internal challenges, rather than external challenges of trade protectionism. Non-oil exports have hardly risen since financial year 2012, the Kotak report noted. In fiscal 2018, India also lost its competitive edge in exporting textiles and agriculture items.

https://www.bloombergquint.com/glob...as-macro-picture-does-not-look-good-heres-why

It's Only A Matter Of Time Before US Fed Raises Interest Rates Than
Tamasha Shuru
 
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Only way to get out of this debt trap is raise your exports, be it in form of products or be it in form of services. No other way Pakistan can come out of this trap. Over dependence of CPEC to magic trick, will crash rest of soverignity too. CPEC and other loan based investments are only to provide infrascructure and catalyst to jump start the economy, at the end the business houses and govt has to come in hand to hand to use this opportunity to work for upliftment of all and not just few pockets.

I see a great potential, provided the youth and energy is channelized towards building the roots for global market, instead of focusing in umma chumma, india and other neighbours. Focus in building economy, rest will fall in inline.
Focus next 10yrs on just earning money from global market and then country at large will be capable enough to run the race, else it will be get polio and will just lump form one corner to another and world will give charity on human grounds.
 
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They will not roll it for free..Pakistan has a systematic problem with economic leakages because government refuses to adopt technology and electronic payments..refuse to audit and tax agriculture sector..while tax payers bears very cost and surcharge for construction of dams..the agriculture sector gets water free of cost.
 
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Pakistan sits on the best possible location with regards to the global trade routes, the only thing the country needs to work on is the safe and stable investment environment and connectivity infrastructure.
Or someone like China who can utilize those benefits unlike pak

Interesting China don't think its right time yet, one more year.
 
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Pakistan sits on the best possible location with regards to the global trade routes, the only thing the country needs to work on is the safe and stable investment environment and connectivity infrastructure.

Solve corruption, undocumented economy, instability, terrorism
 
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China will give even 500 billion to Pakistan no questions asked. It's nothing to them.
 
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Or someone like China who can utilize those benefits unlike pak

Interesting China don't think its right time yet, one more year.

You guys perfectly showed why China has a 5 times larger economy than India. China seeks win-win result but India just wants to defeat your trade partner.

Pakistan has problems in the economy and needs help, so we help them and seeks a better future for both us.
 
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You guys perfectly showed why China has a 5 times larger economy than India. China seeks win-win result but India just wants to defeat your trade partner.

Pakistan has problems in the economy and needs help, so we help them and seeks a better future for both us.
India respects all it's trading partners.

Chinese economy is larger because you have been lucky with very good governance. Your infrastructure is excellent, and economies of scale are massive. Also, there is direct government assistance in the manufacturing and construction sector.

Once India can solve the corruption problem in government with the help of more transparency using blockchain technology, and cashless economy, we can grow quickly.
 
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PM understates debt to show ‘successes’

ISLAMABAD .:

Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi on Monday made a false claim that Pakistan’s external debt was lower than five years ago, as he tried to present old and incorrect debt statistics to prove his point and
resultantly understated external debt by $12.5 billion.


While addressing a news conference at his office, the prime minister also reiterated his announcement to give three basic salaries to all federal government employees in honorariums. But immediately after his presser, Finance Minister Dr Miftah Ismail again showed reluctance to honour the PM’s commitment.

“As a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP), Pakistan’s external debt was 20.5% by the end fiscal year 2016-17, which was lower than 21.4% recorded in the last year of the PPP government,” claimed PM Abbasi while addressing a press conference three days before the end of his term in office.

The only way to make economic progress is by taking loans, claimed the prime minister.

However, the PM not only presented one-year-old figures despite fresh statistics being publicly available, he also gave the wrong figures. The move was apparently aimed at deflecting growing criticism over the country’s indebtedness during the third tenure of the PML-N government (June 2013- May 2018).

The external debt figures presented by Abbasi were lower by 4% of GDP or $12.5 billion when compared with statistics that are available on the website of the State Bank of Pakistan. The prime minister also deliberately understated the overall public debt.

Actual figures versus claims

The PM claimed that external debt to GDP ratio was 20.5% by June 2017. However, the SBP data showed that even in June 2017, the external debt-to-GDP ratio was 21.7%. When PM was challenged in the press conference that he was presenting wrong figures, he insisted that the SBP and his figures were the same.

The Public external debt was 24.5% of GDP or $73 billion as of March 2018, according to SBP. This was $12.5 billion higher than the figure claimed by the prime minister.

The prime minister also claimed that the total debt of the government was equal to 61.4% of GDP or Rs21.4 trillion.
However, this figure is also incorrect. The total debt of the government was equal to 70% of GDP or Rs24 trillion at the end of March this year, according to the SBP.

In June 2013, the government’s public debt was equal to 60.4% of GDP or Rs14.3 trillion.

Due to growing indebtedness, over 30% of the budget is now consumed for debt servicing, leaving very little for social and economic development.

Overall, during the PML-N tenure, Pakistan’s external debt and liabilities have soared to a record $91.8 billion, showing an increase of over 50% or nearly $31 billion in the past four years and nine months, the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has reported.

The prime minister admitted that low exports and high imports remained a challenge for his party’s government. The International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s first post-programme monitoring report shows Pakistan’s gross external debt in terms of exports was 193.2% in 2013, which is projected to deteriorate to an alarming 316% in June this year.

Finance Minister Ismail claimed that Rs8 trillion additional debt was incurred during past five years to pay for provinces shares under the federal divisible pool and for infrastructure development. However, the provinces shares are not paid by taking debt, as their share is given from the federal tax collection.

The PM said that the PML-N has made a significant improvement in the economic conditions. By the end of the government’s tenure, the economic growth rate is high while inflation is low, said PM Abbasi.

The prime minister also said that a delay in offshore assets cases before the Supreme Court was creating uncertainty and the people were waiting for the court verdict before availing the tax amnesty scheme. The government has announced the tax amnesty scheme for domestic and offshore assets, but so far the response has been lukewarm.

The prime minister also said that the intervention by the judiciary and NAB in executive affairs has made it difficult to run the government efficiently.

Employees’ honorarium

To a question, the prime minister said that he has approved honorariums equal to three basic salaries for all the federal government employees to bring uniformity, unlike the previous practice when selected people would get the honorarium.

However, the Ministry of Finance is reluctant to implement the decision, arguing that it would cost a minimum of Rs100 billion.

The Finance Ministry would on Tuesday present a summary to the Economic Coordination Committee, as three honorariums cannot be given to all the federal government employees, said Ismail immediately after the PM’s press conference.

Without taking the name of Fawad Hassan Fawad who signed the letter on PM’s behalf,
the Finance Minister said that it appeared as if the officer that signed the letter was fasting and was unable to comprehend the original summary’s content.

The finance minister said that his ministry had sent the summary for giving honorariums up to six basis salaries to the employees of Finance Ministry, FBR, Planning Division, Board of Investment etc.


https://tribune.com.pk/story/1721349/1-pm-understates-debt-show-successes/
 
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India respects all it's trading partners.

Chinese economy is larger because you have been lucky with very good governance.
Many Indains here claime we have the worst monstrous dictatorship equalling Nazi Germany.

Haven't Pakistan started collecting tolls yet
Toll fee is the smalleset benefit that connectivity infrastructure brings, some Chinese HSR, subways even highways are susidized by the government, but they brought huge development opportunities to the local business and overall economy, that's why in China we have a decades old slogn but still works like magic even today 要致富先修路。
 
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Many Indains here claime we have the worst monstrous dictatorship equalling Nazi Germany.
Chinese government has been very effective. Your cities are excellent, your industrial output is mind boggling. Really massive scale.

India will replicate your success in manufacturing. Corruption is holding us back. But we are trying.

要致富先修路
 
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