Devil Soul
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2010
- Messages
- 22,931
- Reaction score
- 45
- Country
- Location
IMF says Pakistan ready to go it alone when programme ends
REUTERS — PUBLISHED 31 MINUTES AGO
WHATSAPP
2 COMMENTS
PRINT
Pakistan will be ready to go it alone when its $6.7 billion three-year International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme ends in September, a senior fund official said on Wednesday.
Masood Ahmed, director of the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia department, told Reuters substantial progress had been made in repairing the economy and that the government was right in saying it does not need another package.
"I think that is a very sensible approach at this stage," Ahmed said. "They have built up their reserves, they have halved their budget deficit, their growth rate is pretty much the highest of all the countries in the region broadly defined."
"Therefore they have completed to a large measure the stabilisation agenda that this programme was supporting."
A total of $1.1bn of the $6.7bn package is due to be disbursed before the programme ends in September.
This year has seen some behind-the-scenes grumbling from IMF officials when the government shelved plans to privatise its main power companies.
This month it also shied away from privatising Pakistan International Airlines but with growth expected to be 4.5 per cent this year, neither have caused enough alarm for a formal IMF rebuke.
"The next phase [once the programme ends] is to continue with the reforms that they have on structural measures that will sustainably raise their growth rate and particularly raise their exports," said Ahmed.
"The current level of exports they have, which is about $25bn, for an economy of over $280bn it needs to be double that."
REUTERS — PUBLISHED 31 MINUTES AGO
2 COMMENTS
Pakistan will be ready to go it alone when its $6.7 billion three-year International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme ends in September, a senior fund official said on Wednesday.
Masood Ahmed, director of the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia department, told Reuters substantial progress had been made in repairing the economy and that the government was right in saying it does not need another package.
"I think that is a very sensible approach at this stage," Ahmed said. "They have built up their reserves, they have halved their budget deficit, their growth rate is pretty much the highest of all the countries in the region broadly defined."
"Therefore they have completed to a large measure the stabilisation agenda that this programme was supporting."
A total of $1.1bn of the $6.7bn package is due to be disbursed before the programme ends in September.
This year has seen some behind-the-scenes grumbling from IMF officials when the government shelved plans to privatise its main power companies.
This month it also shied away from privatising Pakistan International Airlines but with growth expected to be 4.5 per cent this year, neither have caused enough alarm for a formal IMF rebuke.
"The next phase [once the programme ends] is to continue with the reforms that they have on structural measures that will sustainably raise their growth rate and particularly raise their exports," said Ahmed.
"The current level of exports they have, which is about $25bn, for an economy of over $280bn it needs to be double that."