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Ex-pats "Now buy cars" tells PM

Pakistan's Imran Khan woos expat cash with car-buying, charity giving scheme
Initiative will help to buy cars in Pakistan and make charitable donations
View attachment 738716
Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan has announced a new payment system for expats so they can access loans, make charitable donations and invest from overseas. AFP
Pakistanis living abroad will be able to buy cars for relatives back home and make charitable donations under new digital schemes designed to tap the spending power of expatriates, Imran Khan's government said.

The prime minister said the country's diaspora, which includes about 1.6 million Pakistanis living in the UAE, was a key asset for the country and ministers were looking at innovative ways to harness their wealth.

Under two new schemes, overseas Pakistanis will be able to use newly introduced digital accounts to get financing to buy cars in Pakistan and will be able to donate to charities and the government's flagship social safety net scheme.

"Overseas Pakistanis have, over the years, kept our economy afloat," Mr Khan said after inaugurating the new scheme in the capital Islamabad on Thursday.

“We will innovate and brainstorm to tap overseas Pakistani's remittances,” the former cricketer said.

Mr Khan's ruling Pakistan Tehreeik-e-Insaf (PTI) party last year launched digital bank accounts in an attempt to plug overseas Pakistanis into the nation's banking sector.

Bank officials at the time said they hoped the launch of the Roshan digital account would cut bureaucracy for expats and boost remittance flows into a country perennially short of foreign capital.

Account holders will be able to invest in the stock market, buy government debt and conduct basic banking services, officials said.

Since the launch, about 120,000 accounts were opened from 170 countries and received more than $1 billion in deposits, the government announced.

Faisal Javed Khan, a PTI senator, called the initiative a milestone.

The scheme, he said, was "a testament to faith that non-resident Pakistanis have in Pakistan and the Prime Minister Imran Khan-led government”.

Under the car-financing scheme, account holders will be able to get vehicles “at very attractive terms" for loved ones in Pakistan.
Banks are offering conventional and Islamic modes of financing at attractive mark-up rates starting from 7 per cent, with priority delivery,” the senator said.

Another scheme will streamline donations to charities and allow account holders to pay into Pakistan's Ehsaas welfare programme, which provides cash handouts to the poorest.

Mr Khan, who for years during his cricketing career was himself Pakistan's most high-profile expatriate worker, has often tried to woo the diaspora.

Pakistan's central bank this month announced that monthly remittances exceeded $2 billion for the past 10 months and hit a record $2.7bn in March.

Remittances helped to keep many families afloat while the country is being battered by the economic fallout of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Workers in Saudi Arabia send home the most, followed by those in the UAE, UK and US, bank figures show.

Yet expat workers often complain they are neglected or badly treated by the country's overseas missions.

“Overseas Pakistanis are our asset,” the prime minister said. “Our embassies, sadly, do not appreciate them that way.

“They are very special people for us. They live far from families and work hard day and night. My message to our embassies is to take care of them, of this overseas labour class."

He said he would launch an inquiry into complaints that officials at the embassy in Saudi Arabia had been demanding bribes from workers.

“I am launching a high-power inquiry into the complaints about the Saudi mission and we will give exemplary punishments and we will take strict action,” he said.
Khalo hamko. Motay Motay industrialists ko kch mat bolna....
 
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Bit of a daft scheme - can't see too many people taking advantage of it.
 
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dont see the point of it

OPs can already buy cars , properties using non banking channels

an OP can open a local account here, easily bring money and do stuff
 
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Sorry I will not invest a single penny in a country where I have to pay BHATA on the airport for using your personal 2 - 3yrs old mobile, where internationally known corrupt traitor ex-PM comfortably living in London spreading chaos and anarchy in the country because he and his criminal daughter caught red-handed (such criminals are hanged everywhere in the world except Pakistan), where PM says on every news that directly impacting poor "oh mujhe tu apni begam say pata chala", from Govts - Mil - Jud, everyone is “Mafia”, might is right is an established “Law”
 
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Ridicilous scheme. Make the big three mafia more richer. They sell 1st generations at exorbitant prices without any safety features.

Except gulf countries, overseas Pakistanis cannot wait to get place-of-stay passports/citizenship.

wallahi, pakistanis in Pakistan are trying their luck to leave. Unko roko ap. create jobs/opportunites for them. A livilble and clean space. Pakistani in Pakistan ke liye asani paida karo bhai. Who’d want to come back will do if they see things improve
So only Japanese junk cars?. what about kia and others?
 
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I concur with the consensus here, I too have decided to withdraw the money I had parked in Pakistan. With the current political scenario it is too much of a risk to hold money in these accounts. PTI should legislate further to give further guarantees that a change in government would not rob people of their savings.

Only way around this is if Pakistan has some powerful independent institute which looks after your investment, provides the best service, free from political/mafia interference. Will this be possible if Pti government ends up loosing power. The new government will definitely want piece of the cake.
 
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Nopes.. I am not investing in Pakistan with the current judicial system. Sorry! I don't want to benefit the rich in Pakistan getting richer.

Also, there's no guarantee when PTI's government is overthrown and my foreign currency in the digital accounts is frozen by the new government and then used in buying expensive properties abroad by politicians, bureaucrats, judges etc, and I am returned with my money in Rupees at government's fixed rates.

My sentiments exactly -- it's like one putting his hand in a viper pit.
The main issue I have there is no law and order in this country.
 
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Well its evident even from replies here that overseas dont want to invest much in Pakistan, though they do want to interfere and give their so called valuable suggestions. Id rather focus on industry, agriculture and minerals than giving such schemes to overseas. But unfortunately this PM of ours is a natural beggar and he can only think in those ways.
By the way all these overseas ppl are big supporters of imran khan, so what hapenned now? Dont trust him when it comes to ur own money?? Lolz
 
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Well its evident even from replies here that overseas dont want to invest much in Pakistan, though they do want to interfere and give their so called valuable suggestions. Id rather focus on industry, agriculture and minerals than giving such schemes to overseas. But unfortunately this PM of ours is a natural beggar and he can only think in those ways.
By the way all these overseas ppl are big supporters of imran khan, so what hapenned now? Dont trust him when it comes to ur own money?? Lolz

We have higher standards. Don't accept votes for Biriyani or "katha hai to lagata bi hai" type nonsense.

Why should people invest money which after 40 years judges can declare illegal or land grabbers can claim as thier own.

I'd advice people to not touch real estate only invest in businesses.

Don't get angry about what I said.

I've yet to see national protests in Pakistan against corruption or low education standards, police abuse, poor legal system, polluted drinking water etc.

Yet country can come to a stop for blasphemy in Denmark and France.
 
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I want to invest in Pakistan a lot. However personal family experience has been bad. Our family properties a couple of them were qabza’d by people in Karachi. Literally my uncles my family my cousins all lost property in Karachi. It’s been years and we have no way to take back our qabza’d property since death threats were given and police lowkey involved in it. My family had agriculture land in interior sindh they bought and tried renting it out but however wanted to rent it would receive death threats and at the end my uncle was forced to sell his land at extremely low price.
We work hard abroad, many of my cousins and uncles don’t even have foreign passports yet in the European countries they live in yet they send back almost everything they make. We want to invest in Pakistan but have lost many crores by doing so.
As first generation immigrants abroad, before we even bought a home in Canada, we bought property in Pakistan. But there’s no security of it. Only places we haven’t lost money in is dha and bahria town.
Even for setting up businesses they expect us to pay bribes to like 20 different institutes. For a simple business you need to go to like every institute you can think of.

Investment security and ease of business isn’t there in Pakistan.

I wonder when the day comes when all the property my family worked hard to build in Karachi, that was qabza’d by mqm and other gangs will be returned to us.
 
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Remittances.

View attachment 813268

RDA


These are the things keeping Pakistan breathing after you fucked up the exports for 5 years.


When it comes to industrialization, these 3 years have reversed the trend after being actively destroyed by the previous government. Just a couple of days ago..

View attachment 813277

When it comes to minerals finally this government will solve and salvage whatever it can of RekoDiq.
Thar coal is being worked on after deliberately imported coal IPP were setup by previous government.
Do you know how much imported coal is trading for now?

Useless ranting without any substance. Ab expats say bhi masla hai?
Pehlay imports tabah ki aur ab remittances kay pechay par jao?

Atleast think before start typing with your feet.
As I said elsewhere, fortune/fate has more to do with these developments than the competence of the government. Covid-19 froze the production of our competitors in the area we are reasonable producers/exporters i.e. textiles. In textiles (I am a textile engineer myself), a customer seldom leaves you after coming to you unless you commit a big eff up. The orders that were diverted to us after ages would now stay with us until the next political/namoos e rasalat dharna that chokes North-South transportation and leave our clients high and dry. Our competitors would find it very hard otherwise to take these clients from us. Then under the garb of covid relief/stimulus package, one of the largest (perhaps the largest) stimuli was injected into the economy. This included an extension of cheap credit to the manufacturing sector, abolition of import duties on raw materials and machinery, TERF facility of SBP which further financed the expansion of production capacity in the export-oriented manufacturing industry (mainly textiles). Both electricity (to reduce capacity charges and increase vacant surplus power utilization from the system) and gas were given at competitive rates to the industry which made our products more competitive compared to peers. If the memory does not betray me, I think non-duty-related tax breaks were also announced. So, in effect, you were subsidizing industry expansion, its competitiveness, as well as its day-to-day running expenses from public resources. To top everything, your currency lost its value massively which was bound to make exports more lucrative as well as competitive. The credit this government deserves is in the release of tax refunds to the manufacturers that have improved their liquidity situation and improved freedom of business operations.

Then the travel disruptions resulted in workers being forced to send their monies through legal channels, many people also began freelancing whose proceeds are received in Pakistan as remittances; hence your sizable hike in remittances. There are moments in nations history where various elements align to break vicious cycles. Covid might prove to be one for Pakistan where we finally broke free of our chronically low export growth problem. Here's to hope. BTW, interloop is a really progressive business entity, has dynamic leadership as well.

Pakistan's Imran Khan woos expat cash with car-buying, charity giving scheme
Initiative will help to buy cars in Pakistan and make charitable donations
View attachment 738716
Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan has announced a new payment system for expats so they can access loans, make charitable donations and invest from overseas. AFP
Pakistanis living abroad will be able to buy cars for relatives back home and make charitable donations under new digital schemes designed to tap the spending power of expatriates, Imran Khan's government said.

The prime minister said the country's diaspora, which includes about 1.6 million Pakistanis living in the UAE, was a key asset for the country and ministers were looking at innovative ways to harness their wealth.

Under two new schemes, overseas Pakistanis will be able to use newly introduced digital accounts to get financing to buy cars in Pakistan and will be able to donate to charities and the government's flagship social safety net scheme.

"Overseas Pakistanis have, over the years, kept our economy afloat," Mr Khan said after inaugurating the new scheme in the capital Islamabad on Thursday.

“We will innovate and brainstorm to tap overseas Pakistani's remittances,” the former cricketer said.

Mr Khan's ruling Pakistan Tehreeik-e-Insaf (PTI) party last year launched digital bank accounts in an attempt to plug overseas Pakistanis into the nation's banking sector.

Bank officials at the time said they hoped the launch of the Roshan digital account would cut bureaucracy for expats and boost remittance flows into a country perennially short of foreign capital.

Account holders will be able to invest in the stock market, buy government debt and conduct basic banking services, officials said.

Since the launch, about 120,000 accounts were opened from 170 countries and received more than $1 billion in deposits, the government announced.

Faisal Javed Khan, a PTI senator, called the initiative a milestone.

The scheme, he said, was "a testament to faith that non-resident Pakistanis have in Pakistan and the Prime Minister Imran Khan-led government”.

Under the car-financing scheme, account holders will be able to get vehicles “at very attractive terms" for loved ones in Pakistan.
Banks are offering conventional and Islamic modes of financing at attractive mark-up rates starting from 7 per cent, with priority delivery,” the senator said.

Another scheme will streamline donations to charities and allow account holders to pay into Pakistan's Ehsaas welfare programme, which provides cash handouts to the poorest.

Mr Khan, who for years during his cricketing career was himself Pakistan's most high-profile expatriate worker, has often tried to woo the diaspora.

Pakistan's central bank this month announced that monthly remittances exceeded $2 billion for the past 10 months and hit a record $2.7bn in March.

Remittances helped to keep many families afloat while the country is being battered by the economic fallout of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Workers in Saudi Arabia send home the most, followed by those in the UAE, UK and US, bank figures show.

Yet expat workers often complain they are neglected or badly treated by the country's overseas missions.

“Overseas Pakistanis are our asset,” the prime minister said. “Our embassies, sadly, do not appreciate them that way.

“They are very special people for us. They live far from families and work hard day and night. My message to our embassies is to take care of them, of this overseas labour class."

He said he would launch an inquiry into complaints that officials at the embassy in Saudi Arabia had been demanding bribes from workers.

“I am launching a high-power inquiry into the complaints about the Saudi mission and we will give exemplary punishments and we will take strict action,” he said.
It is going to swell the import bill further. However, car sales are already slumping now due to the withdrawal of all the perks and cheap commercial credit to the buyers in the automobile sector. In the short term, cars would become inaccessible for purchasing to common Pakistani middle classiyas, so in order to keep the automobile industry chugging along somewhat, proceeds from expats could offer some assistance, but this could be problematic once the economic situation improves and the localization of parts in the automobile industry remains pathetically low.
 
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As I said elsewhere, fortune/fate has more to do with these developments than the competence of the government. Covid-19 froze the production of our competitors in the area we are reasonable producers/exporters i.e. textiles. In textiles (I am a textile engineer myself), a customer seldom leaves you after coming to you unless you commit a big eff up. The orders that were diverted to us after ages would now stay with us until the next political/namoos e rasalat dharna that chokes North-South transportation and leave our clients high and dry. Our competitor would find it very hard otherwise to take these clients from us. Then under the garb of covid relief/stimulus package, one of the largest (perhaps the largest) stimuli was injected into the economy. This included an extension of cheap credit to the manufacturing sector, abolition of import duties on raw materials and machinery, TERF facility of SBP which further financed the expansion of production capacity in the export-oriented manufacturing industry (mainly textiles). Both electricity (to reduce capacity charges and increase vacant surplus power utilization from the system) and gas were given at competitive rates to the industry which made our products more competitive compared to peers. If the memory does not betray me, I think non-duty-related tax breaks were also announced. So, in effect, you were subsidizing industry expansion, its competitiveness, as well as its day-to-day running expenses from public resources. To top everything, your currency lost its value massively which was bound to make exports more lucrative as well as competitive. The credit this government deserves is in the release of tax refunds to the manufacturers that have improved their liquidity situation and improved freedom of business operations.

Then the travel disruptions resulted in workers being forced to send their monies through legal channels, many people also began freelancing whose proceeds are received in Pakistan as remittances; hence your sizable hike in remmitances. There are moments in nations history where various elements align to break vicious cycles. Covid might prove to be one for Pakistan where we finally broke free of our chronically low export growth problem. Here's to hope. BTW, interloop is a really progressive business entity, has dynamic leadership as well.


It is going to swell the import bill further. However, car sales are already slumping now due to the withdrawal of all the perks and cheap commercial credit to the buyers in the automobile sector. In the short term, cars would become inaccessible for purchasing to common Pakistani middle classiyas, so in order to keep the automobile industry chugging along somewhat, proceeds from expats could offer some assistance, but this could be problematic once the economic situation improves and the localization of parts in the automobile industry remains pathetically low.

I think

1) Currency ( this was the hardest one)
2) Covid response
3) TERF ( last LC to my knowledge was issued in Jan and even with the tough situation they did not stop it and completed it)
4) Tax Refunds
5) Duty structure

everything has to do with government and their decisions at the right time. Do you even remember the pressure and the critique on the government at the peak of Covid.

Thank you for highlighting everything the government has done ( missed alot but this will do).

The reason why our textiles or for that matter exports did not grew was because previously imports were susbsidized, our industry was uncompetitive even in the local market ( not talking just about textiles). This was the period when every other country registered impressive growth in their exports and diversified their industries.
You hear more about textiles only because exports are discussed more, the industrialization trend happening is across the spectrum from construction finishing materials to consumables, petrochemical, pharmaceuticals etc.

Asfar as corona package was concerned it was the most well designed and comprehensively laid package ever to heavily not promote direct consumption rather than to protect our industries and businesses so that they can keep paying their employees during lock down. Commercial electricity connection bills even for ordinary businesses were waived. TERF is also a part of the figure. The direct rollout was just a small portion of it I think around 200b which was distributed as cash through Ehsas. That too without SBP printing.
The way we managed to preserve our economy and the fragile recovery during covid was impressive. This was the most thorough plan among all our competitors and was one of the major reasons why our economy was the quickest to rebound.

You need to ask yourself with the state bank printer on why didn't the previous government do all those things?

Remittances did not grew just because of less air travel (a valid reason but not the only reason) rather fair value of currency, optimising transfer through bank ( Raza Baqir has done an excellent at that) so that the flow can be preserved. This is the reason why Bangladesh remittances dropped after Covid when air travel opened and our kept the pace.
I have worked in UK and I know the feeling when you get 130 for a pound rather than 200 ( which is fair value) there is a reason why remittances were stagnant for 4 years ( yes the same 4 years when rupee was kept artificially inflated by choice to control local inflation).


Do you really believe that we would start manufacturing car components without the allied industries in a matter of 3 years? It will at least take a decade with the right policies.
We had big 3 for decades now we have 7 in just 3 years. Why do you think they came now?
Another thing the taxes on cars are fiscal policy to control CAD. Had we not done it we would be seeing a runaway CAD like in 2018.
 
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I think

1) Currency ( this was the hardest one)
2) Covid response
3) TERF ( last LC to my knowledge was issued in Jan and even with the tough situation they did not stop it and completed it)
4) Tax Refunds
5) Duty structure

everything has to do with government and their decisions at the right time. Do you even remember the pressure and the critique on the government at the peak of Covid.

Thank you for highlighting everything the government has done ( missed alot but this will do).

The reason why our textiles or for that matter exports did not grew was because previously imports were susbsidized, our industry was uncompetitive even in the local market ( not talking just about textiles). This was the period when every other country registered impressive growth in their exports and diversified their industries.
You hear more about textiles only because exports are discussed more, the industrialization trend happening is across the spectrum from construction finishing materials to consumables, petrochemical, pharmaceuticals etc.

Asfar as corona package was concerned it was the most well designed and comprehensively laid package ever to heavily not promote direct consumption rather than to protect our industries and businesses so that they can keep paying their employees during lock down. Commercial electricity connection bills even for ordinary businesses were waived. TERF is also a part of the figure. The direct rollout was just a small portion of it I think around 200b which was distributed as cash through Ehsas. That too without SBP printing.
The way we managed to preserve our economy and the fragile recovery during covid was impressive. This was the most thorough plan among all our competitors and was one of the major reasons why our economy was the quickest to rebound.

You need to ask yourself with the state bank printer on why didn't the previous government do all those things?

Remittances did not grew just because of less air travel (a valid reason but not the only reason) rather fair value of currency, optimising transfer through bank ( Raza Baqir has done an excellent at that) so that the flow can be preserved. This is the reason why Bangladesh remittances dropped after Covid when air travel opened and our kept the pace.
I have worked in UK and I know the feeling when you get 130 for a pound rather than 200 ( which is fair value) there is a reason why remittances were stagnant for 4 years ( yes the same 4 years when rupee was kept artificially inflated by choice to control local inflation).


Do you really believe that we would start manufacturing car components without the allied industries in a matter of 3 years? It will at least take a decade with the right policies.
We had big 3 for decades now we have 7 in just 3 years. Why do you think they came now?
Another thing the taxes on cars are fiscal policy to control CAD. Had we not done it we would be seeing a runaway CAD like in 2018.
Automobile policy was the work of the last govt. They did not get time to reap its "fruits". I am not talking about low parts localization in this govt. This has been a problem plaguing the auto sector for years. it is not going to change in these 3 or 5 years (no policy incentive/pressure to localize). Other governments could not have dreamed of the latitude IMF gave in terms of fiscal relaxation due to the onset of Covid. In fact, IMF released 3 billion USD (was it or 1.5 billion) to Pakistan as part of its drive to pump liquidity in the global economy to keep it afloat in the early days of the pandemic (other countries also received this monetary injection proportionate to their credit share in IMF portfolio. The stimulus government gave in Pakistan came from that money (hence no need to print additional money). Regardless, the money in circulation increased drastically (how did it happen if no new/extra currency was printed). That extra money in circulation is one of the drivers of the inflation you see today. Stimulus-induced inflation is also raging in the US (this phenomenon is separate from the global commodity supercycle-induced inflation).
 
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