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Is Pakistan facing bankruptcy?


WASHINGTON ( October 12, 2008): The World Bank has pledged to provide $ 1.4 billion support for Pakistan in the current year which can be front-loaded to fast track investment projects and budgetary lending. The amount includes $ 600 million for investment portfolio and $ 800 million for budget support as macroeconomic stabilisation program moves forward.

The offer, first made by World Bank President Robert Zoellick at a meeting with President Asif Ali Zardari last month in New York, was reiterated Saturday as Pakistan’s Adviser on Finance met with the Bank’s Managing Director Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

Meanwhile, Department for International Development has doubled its economic assistance for Pakistan to UK pound 586 million. Minouche Shafik, Permanent Secretary of DFID told the Pakistani delegation that the Department plans to expand its development work to federally administered tribal areas and Balochistan.

The advisor to prime minister also had productive meetings with German minister for Economic Cooperation and Development Wieczorek-Zeul, United States Undersecretary of State for Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs, Reuben Jeffrey and Assistant Secretary of State for Economic, Energy and Business Affairs Daniel Sullivan.

The German minister vowed to provide support for social safety nets and also offered debt swap for HIV AIDS and Malaria Global Fund.

The U.S. officials reaffirmed Washington’s continued support for Pakistan’s economic development. Tareen also discussed bilateral cooperation with Afghan Finance Minister Anwar ul Haq Ahady.

Shaukat Tareen briefed his interlocutors about the current economic challenges and blew impact of the war on terrorism that Pakistan being the front line state has to face on its economy. He spoke of the tough and difficult measures that have been taken by the elected government. He also expanded on Pakistan’s program to deal with these challenges including social safety nets for targeted subsidies.

The Finance Adviser urged donors’ support for Pakistan’s efforts to pull itself out of the current difficult phase. He also highlighted the impact of global financial crisis on developing countries, particularly on those intending to access capital market but cannot do so because of liquidity crunch.

The World Bank, DFID, U.S. and German officials appreciated the courageous measures taken by Pakistan to correct the macroeconomic imbalances and reaffirmed their commitment to support the country in meeting its economic challenges and establishing safety nets for the poor.

The Pakistani delegation including Governor State Bank Dr Shamshad Akhtar, Finance Secretary Dr. Waqar Masood, Secretary Economic Affairs Division Farrukh Qayyum and Economic Minister at the Pakistani embassy in Washington Wajid Rana also participated in a number of events including the WB-IMF Constituency Meeting, Saarc Finance Governors Meeting and the International Monetary and Finance Committee meeting.
 
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One shouldn't preach the teachers.

Iceland and Pakistan "face" the immediate crisis - and walk your own walk, don't gloat that there are other countries out there. Yours is one of the firsts.

I thought Pakistan economy was growing so very well lately, all your newspapers and media was so jumpy and comparing it with India too. What happened to that?

Gloating? Pointing out that others are struggling in the same manner as we are is not 'gloating' rather it is pointing out a global economic downturn that is impacting several nations, not just Pakistan, as you seemed intent on 'gloating' about in your post.

As for your last question, the Pakistani economy was indeed growing and performing very well - give the other posters the courtesy of at least reading the thread, instead of ignoring everyone and barging in to post something that allows you to gloat over Pakistan's misfortune. Your question has been answered by me, and others, in detail.
 
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and yet munshi saheb himself is gloating in others misfortune ..
and by the way crisis always leads to opportunities ..
forgot 1930?
Munshi sahib's business is his own, I am not responsible for everything he says or does not say - in this particular case he made a poignant point.

Certainly crisis may lead to opportunity, have I said otherwise?

I don't think I have - perhaps the comment of 'gloating and reveling' in others misfortune cut a little too close to home.
 
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Man we are exploiting the WOT thing again. By the way all the countries mentioned above in the article are already facing severe crises, i think to expect them to bail out Pakistan from the current crises, it may prove to be ok for short term but definately counterproductive for the long term.
I am not an expert on economics but this is imo a bad idea again not to correct the imbalances in our trade deficit and instead rely on institutions like the WB and IMF and Friends of Pakistan or what ever that is called to bail Pakistan out everytime we see a crises. ALready our friends have started to have second thoughts on the whole thing. SaudiArabia who at one time was always the one to step up has chosen not too this time. Should be an eye opener for the economists in our country. Stop blaming the past government and think about what you are going to do otherwise we will suffer badly mostprobally will be declared a fail & a bankrupt state.
 
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FDI or foreign investment just doesn't bring in the capital. Its brings with it Management, Project development techniques, Technology, develop Human Resouces, implement Quality & Safety standards and Trains local pakistanis.

Show me the valuable "project development techniques and technology" that were brought in by the telecom industry. Was it worth it? You can send a half dozen people abroad to learn telecom--actually you don't even need to do that because there are tens of thousands of expatriate pakistanis which already have these skills. What precious intellectual commodities are being showered on Pakistan in exchange for bleeding it dry of billions in forex by importing fully assembled cellphones?


Pakistan is sufficient in Gas, Coal and Gold. But, we DO NOT have the Technology to explore and exploit it ! Pakistan can never benefit from our vast natural Resouces & reserves. We need foreign Technology and management & latest technological gadgets!

Ok so is everyone in GOP so brain dead and mentally retarded that they think the only way to get this technology is to sell the entire thar coal reserves to Indians or Australians? Or are they just bribed really well to play dumb? You can pay money for technology, hire foreign engineers and scientists, outsource R&D to places which are not as technologically underdeveloped.


FDI is NOT about money ... its all the above. Why do you have Chinese working on Subakzai Dam? Why Europeans working here?

Did GoP sell the entire Indus river to China and Europe? No they didn't. I wonder what people like you would have said if Agent Mushy had signed over the entire Indus river to Europe and China. Would you be here defending that decision and argue that because technology is so scarce it was an intelligent decision? I really wonder!

What they are doing is training as many Pakistani engineers as possible and filling up the deficit with foreigners. Now is Coal technology so precious that you have to sell the soul of the nation along with the actual coal reserves to "aquire" this technology?
 
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By investors I mean both domestic and foreign - if you go by this governments statements, they were stating in March that over 3 billion dollars in export proceeds were not being repatriated by exporters due to the declining rupee.

That bu itself is a large chunk of our foreign exchange reserves, now imagine if that trend continued.

I'm not sure I understand the issue here. Pakistani exporters were supposedly not transferring their loot from outside Pakistan to inside Pakistan? That really doesn't mean much it's just some people who didn't want to lose 10% or whatever in currency exchanges so they decided to let their cash sit in a certain currency until a more favourable exchange rate came up. These little hiccups don't matter, what matters is that the value of exports should catch up witht he value of imports so the entire pakistani ruppee economy does not go in deficit and it's value against the rest of the world's currencies does not erode. You cannot import more than you export and expect some divine power to balance the forex checkbooks. All FDI is eventually linked to forex leaving the economy and going back to the investor abroad so that is why FDI should be allowed very selectively and sparely in a trad-deficit riddled economy like Pakistan.

I can't understand why most people here have such a big problem grasping this concept and choose to step around it without addressing the issues it is intrinsically related to.
 
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Um..dude, you dont ask for ToT in making cellphones! LOL!

Why not? For instance GoP could have asked a company like Motorolla or Seimens for a TOT in signalling technology. In return for an engineer exchange and training program and some jointly funded fab/assembly plants with a tax holiday Motorolla would have been granted a $1 billion+ yearly monopoly on all cell phone and tower equipment sales in Pakistan's wireless junky market. In return there would be benefits for Pakistan

If you want to change the practice of importing cell phones You raise taxes on imported cellphones's, and provide incentives to the company to setup a factory in your country. If the demand is large enough, the company will definitely open its own factory directly in your country.

It doesn't just have to be cellphones. Depending on the diversity of the company all the cellphone towers, wifi hotspots, cablemodem equipment and even perhaps television transmission equipment sales contracts can be given to them.


So this way, even though the company makes profits, it also provides jobs and money to your country, otherwise some other contry gets the factory-the jobs and money while all you do is import the phones. And after the company sets up the factory, they also have to undertake some CSR. So its all good.

Yes that's the least that can be squeezed out of them. Right now nothing is being squeezed out of them they are just looting markup in return for nothing with ignorants in charge.
 
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If we just cut back on the bankruptcy with in our country we will get the all the money we need. But this can only be done by sincere politicians but unfortunately we have politicians who really aren't politicians but goons.
 
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The are fears that Pakistan as a country will default or go bankrupt:disagree:...............There is only doom and gloom ahead, say many, and point to the political government in power as the cause of all these troubles. For its part, the IMF has come up with a rather gloomy outlook for Pakistan, with a growth rate barely exceeding three percent in the year. All is not lost, though.

Well, lets we may take a review at overall senerio with in our country:
It has been observed as reported in news papers reveals that there have been 116 suicide bombings in the country since 2002, when the first suicide bomber struck. Over 40 suicide blasts have occurred this year alone so far, with 570 people killed. 2007 seemed to be the worst year with 57, killing 760 persons.

More worrisome for us is the fact that the militant groups have hit upon the formula of initiating attacks that will cripple our economy.

Rising terror attacks have scared away prospective investors and put foreign investors in the country in two minds. Foreign nationals have evacuated many cities and continued kidnappings have ensured that many crucial projects that are being undertaken by the government have been sabotaged. These are not random incidents. This is a well-thought-out plan to bring economic and development activities in the country to a halt.

Then, there are those who are trying to sabotage from within. The Pakistani rupee has crossed the psychological barrier of 80 to the dollar. Despite the best efforts of the State Bank to check the speculative activity, there was panic buying in the market prompted by rumours of an economic meltdown.

Panic was spread by rumours that foreign currency accounts would be frozen, as happened following the nuclear tests of 1998. There was also talk of lockers being sealed. Many a businessman and begum could be seen lining up at different bank branches and withdrawing dollars as well as emptying lockers based on these fears.

The last time there was any danger to lockers was when there were strong rumours in the 70’s that Prime Minister Bhutto would nationalise the lockers of the people. This never happened, but many took their valuables abroad or underground as a consequence.

However, the more dangerous rumours were those of some banks closing down. There was talk that banks like NIB Bank and Bank Al Falah, which both have investments by strong foreign principals, were about to shut shop. It took much persuasion and lots of armoured cars with bags full of money to assure account holders that their money was safe.

It is said that many of the rumours were started at the Karachi Stock Exchange which is pushing for a rescue package for stock brokers. So far, the government has resisted the attempts to give the stock brokers a breather, but the pressure is intense. Already some members are on the verge of bankruptcy or have defaulted. There is also talk that some of the bigger names—in particular one giant on the bourse, is about to topple over.

However, any package that the government should put together would have to keep in mind the best interests of all investors, not a select few.

The crisis of confidence so far has caused much damage. Not content with buying dollars, Pakistanis have also started to splurge in gold at home and properties in foreign countries, particularly in the Gulf.

The number of advertisements that offer properties in the UAE and other Gulf states to Pakistanis is indicative of the interest in these properties.

One wonders why these advertisements are allowed, in the first place, given that the whole process of paying for these apartments and properties is a questionable affair at best. The State Bank has warned in the past of payments made outside the banking system. But the outflow continues.

Peoples are predicting that it’s all over and that the country is about to go bankrupt. Others say that the present set of rulers have sucked the country dry of its assets and finances and it is only a matter of time before the government will stop functioning. These doom and gloom promoters do not need facts. For them, mere rumours will do...................The question for most, however, is—what is the truth?

Let us start by talking of crisis situations. In the recent past, the near-default situation following the 1998 atomic blasts comes to mind. At that time, too, there was talk of financial meltdown and of the government not being in a position to service its payment obligations.

Despite the fact that little or no help came from countries like Saudi Arabia and other “brotherly” nations, an agreement was signed with the IMF that managed to save the country from imminent default.


In all this, the lesson to learn is that things are not as bad as they are made out to be. The problems are not that Pakistan will go bankrupt.....................The problems are that Pakistanis will continue to suffer while the government looks for quick-fix solutions.
Any entourage with Prime Minister Gilani or President Zardari belies the impression that our country is facing a financial crisis.................. The question to ask is whether the government is in a position to make the right moves.

The appointment of Shaukat Tarin as de facto finance minister may not be the answer to our problems............but in fact......... how serious is the government in solving the economic problems of the country?
Till the last day before a team departed for the IMF meetings, we were not sure who would go on behalf of Pakistan—Finance Minister Naveed Qamar or Advisor Shaukat Tarin.

Shaukat Tarin—another banker who started his career in Citibank:smokin:
If he really has come to reform the state of the economy, he will need more than the good wishes of all concerned.
It is always a problem to understand whether an advisor has the teeth:D.........to follow up on his agenda.

The fate our country’s economy is also in our hands. It is time the government tried to assure people that all is not as bad as is portrayed. But at the same time, the government should also come up with an economic plan that makes sense and put into place some capable heads who can run this plan in a fair and forceful manner.

So far, the possibility of this happening is slim. The names that we see do not inspire much confidence..........
What is worse is that the president and prime minister seem oblivious to the larger picture.......?
We still have a long way to go...............We can only hope for the best.
:pakistan:
 
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AFP: Security fears over Pakistan bankruptcy threat

Security fears over Pakistan bankruptcy threat


ISLAMABAD (AFP) — Already nearly broke when the global financial crisis took hold, Pakistan now faces further woes that could take the nuclear-armed nation's security situation closer to the edge, experts said.
The country, a frontline ally in the US-led campaign against Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants, has been forced to seek 10 billion dollars from western backers to stave of the threat of going bankrupt as early as February 2009.
As the world financial system nears meltdown, the situation is perhaps the biggest challenge yet for Pakistan's new government as it tries to replace former president Pervez Musharraf's outdated economic and security policies.
The administration here denies that the country is facing a balance of payments crisis -- but admits that outside help is necessary to stabilise a crucial nexis of fears over Islamic extremism and atomic proliferation.
"We are not going to go bankrupt, no way," senior government minister Naveed Qamar told AFP.
"The present economic situation is a difficult challenge for us but we'll certainly overcome it soon," added Qamar, who was finance minister until Friday, when he was moved to the shipping and privatisation portfolios.
Qamar said the government had adopted a "multi-pronged strategy", adding that it was benefiting from the recent fall in oil prices and was also getting record remittances from Pakistanis living abroad.
"But Friends of Pakistan are also helping us," Qamar said, referring to a group of major donors who pledged development aid in September to stabilise the South Asian country, in particular its border with Afghanistan.
Pakistan's tribal regions along the frontier are a bolt-hole for Islamic extremists from across the world. A spate of US missile strikes in recent weeks have raised public anger.
In a bid to speed up any potential cash injection, Shaukat Tareen, the finance adviser to Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, and state bank governor Shamshad Akhtar have travelled to Washington to secure the 10 billion lifeline.
Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves are at the root of the problem.
Until recently buoyed with US aid to Musharraf, they fell to 8.135 billion dollars this month from 9.129 billion on September 4, putting Pakistan at risk of defaulting on foreign loans.
Pakistan saw years of rapid growth after Musharraf seized power in a coup in 1999, with former Citibank executive-turned-premier Shaukat Aziz overseeing an apparent turnaround in the country's finances.
But after Musharraf's allies were defeated in elections in February, the new civilian government quickly found itself facing gaping holes in the economy and public anger over rising prices.
The largely impoverished population of 168 million is suffering from inflation that hit a 30-year-high in June, the last available figure, of 25.33 percent, making staple foods and fuel unaffordable.
Meanwhile the Pakistani rupee has plummeted 23 percent against the US dollar since the start of the year. At one point last week it hit a record low of 80.5 rupees to the dollar.
"To tackle the trade gap, Pakistan needs at least 10 billion dollars from the 'Friends of Pakistan' or other sources," Qaiser Bengali, a leading Pakistani economist, told AFP.
Bengali said Pakistan may soon be unable to pay its creditors or get further loans, forcing it to pay for imports such as oil in cash -- slowing down the economy rapidly.
The biggest impact of Pakistan's economic problems could be on its battle against extremism near the Afghan border.
The country is still reeling from the bombing last month of the Islamabad Marriott Hotel, one of the few remaining symbols of foreign investment.
"Economic hardship and the militancy are directly linked," Talat Masood, a retired Pakistan army general and now a leading security analyst, told AFP.
"People become more vulnerable to exploitation by militant forces, who always take advantage of public deprivation," he said.
The timing is terrible for the government, coming as it makes unprecedented attempts to win public support for tackling extremism, including the funding of tribal anti-Taliban militias, he said.
"Also, for Pakistan's huge army, economic problems make it impossible to sustain and upgrade the necessary equipment to wage counter-insurgency and counter-terrorism operations," Masood said.
 
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I hope Agnostic Muslim and Munshi read Kumar's article above

"Already broke pakistan.... "

"and then came the economic crisis..."
 
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I hope Agnostic Muslim and Munshi read Kumar's article above

"Already broke pakistan.... "

"and then came the economic crisis..."


It says "Already nearly broke..." and it is an article from AFP a pretty decent source. While I regret that Pak economy is like this at the moment, I have no doubts that we will prevail over it.

I reiterate, the article only said "Already nearly broke.." which is not "Already broke.." so please do not skew the sentences. We have been here before and we have tided out of the crisis like this. No reason why we wont do it again.
 
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Peace for all, well that was just to stress so people face the reality - I felt they were not doing so.

but anyway, I am just as sure about it as you, that it will never come to that. Thanks to your nuclear arsenal and wild miscreants who need to be tamed, Pakistan will get money for the good of global stability.

I was just surprised that pakistan economy was touted to be doing so great by people here - that it landed in what, close-to-bankruptcy? astonishing

I am not gloating on that, though if you say you're good in something and then later get naked in public - audience like me deserves a laugh or two.

BTW, on a serious note - I just read that India economy maybe doing all that great as it seems like - but we still lag behind, rated lower than even pak on hunger index. Kind of sad, but true. India is VAST and hopefully the wealth will permeate all sections of the society...
 
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=maqsad;206191]

Maqsad this post also presented NO figures and just grumbling & complaints enumerating 'Buts & If's'

Show me the valuable "project development techniques and technology" that were brought in by the telecom industry. Was it worth it? You can send a half dozen people abroad to learn telecom--

This should be enough for you, to know, that EVERY developing industry of the world is supported by imports from around the world. Otherwise, market leader China who exports goods worth $1,216.1 billion WOULD NOT be importing goods worth $953.9 billion annually.

e.g: The total contribution of Pakistan Auto industry to national GDP is 2.8%. Auto sector presently contributes 16% to the Manufacturing sector. This demand is met by IMPORTS which caters 22% while the remaining 78% is supplied by the local manufacturers. (Source)


Which in return, vehicles' manufacturers directly employ over 192,000 people.

Halt your imports .... effect your manufacturing ... and go for jobs cuts!

actually you don't even need to do that because there are tens of thousands of expatriate pakistanis which already have these skills.

And, what incentives do you offer, to attract those expatriates BACK to Pakistan? Empty slogans?

Only multi-national corporations offer attractive packages & facilities that can attract back any human being.


What precious intellectual commodities are being showered on Pakistan in exchange for bleeding it dry of billions in forex by importing fully assembled cellphones?

Get off your obsession and one-dimensional talk considering cell-phones responsible for bleeding forex.

Pakistan's Imports for the period 2007-08 amounts to total $39.97 billion out of which the Telecom sector imports (including Cell phones) were $2.2 billion. Which total stands as NEGLIGIBLE 5.5%

Oil import bill surges by 55pc to $11.38 billion -DAWN - Top Stories; July 18, 2008

In 2006-07, Telecom equipment cost $1 billion and cell phones $506 million.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan



Ok so is everyone in GOP so brain dead and mentally retarded that they think the only way to get this technology is to sell the entire thar coal reserves to Indians or Australians?

Total Coal Proven Reserves: 185 Billion Tonnes
Productions: 4.9 Million
Consumptions: 7.71 Million Tonnes (Source)


It sure shows how retarded and helpless we are. China generates 80% of its electricity requirements from Coals. We have reserves of 185 billion tonnes and we produce ONLY 4.9 million? And, we are seeking to import electricity from Iran?

NO! Musharraf has NOT sold the entire Thar coal to anyone! Any proves?

Thank your democratic goverment that intends to do so with Qadirpur Gas field in Gothki. (Source)



Or are they just bribed really well to play dumb? You can pay money for technology, hire foreign engineers and scientists, outsource R&D to places which are not as technologically underdeveloped.

And, where will you bring that money from? Beg from IMF or ADB or WB? Talk realistic.


Did GoP sell the entire Indus river to China and Europe? No they didn't. I wonder what people like you would have said if Agent Mushy had signed over the entire Indus river to Europe and China. Would you be here defending that decision and argue that because technology is so scarce it was an intelligent decision? I really wonder!

Nothing like this happened. Its a waste of time to go into illussions and argue over 'IF mush had signed over Indus river'.

Musharraf had foreign companies conduct feasibility reports and drill & mine to recover our reserves - for us.

What they are doing is training as many Pakistani engineers as possible and filling up the deficit with foreigners.

NAVTEC (National Vocational Training & Education) visioned by Musharraf and implemented in his era. NAVTEC plans to increase the capacity to train one million people annually by 2010 from the present annual capacity of 320,000.

Now is Coal technology so precious that you have to sell the soul of the nation along with the actual coal reserves to "aquire" this technology?

Yes, coal technology is precious. No, Musharraf didn't sell off the soul of nation.

Care to share the link which you are talking about? Kindly be specific.
 
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Pakistanis worry they're at risk in global crisis

Pakistanis worry they're at risk in global crisis - Los Angeles Times

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN -- Take a restive, nuclear-armed nation with an untested new government, an escalating Islamic insurgency, long-standing tensions with its neighbors and an economy in free fall for months.

Then add in a global financial crisis. Some analysts and diplomats fear Pakistan could come to exemplify a perilous new phenomenon: a strategic but unstable state at risk of being pushed to the breaking point by external economic factors.

Government officials insist that Pakistan's economic fundamentals, while weakened, are holding steady. But this politically volatile country of 165 million people, a crucial U.S. ally in the fight against the Taliban and Al Qaeda, can ill afford more upheaval.

Pakistan's creditworthiness rating is the second worst among nations ranked by Standard & Poor's, superior only to that of the Seychelles. Last week, the country's new president, Asif Ali Zardari, felt compelled to offer assurances that "Pakistan is not going bankrupt."

On Monday, armed police surrounded the Karachi stock exchange to prevent a recurrence of the stone-throwing rioting by investors that occurred in July.


"The global crisis has really added fuel to the fire," said market analyst Muhammad Suhail. "There was a time window earlier this year to address all this, and we missed it."

At the onset of the current mayhem in markets worldwide, Pakistan -- a relative economic success story for much of the last decade -- was already undergoing a punishing reversal of fortune.

In the last six months, its main stock exchange has lost more than half its value. The national currency, the rupee, stands at historic lows, even with propping up last week by the state bank, which also intervened to improve market liquidity. Foreign-exchange reserves are depleted, the budget deficit is at a 10-year high, inflation is running about 24% annually, and debt obligations are looming large.

From the poorest of the poor to the wealthy elite, Pakistanis are frightened. Some say the wretched state of the economy scares them more than the threat of terrorist attacks.

"You know, I can wake up any morning and say to myself, 'OK, God willing, I don't think a suicide bomber is going to find me or my family today,' " said Zeeshan Qadir, a merchant. "But I know for certain it is going to get harder that day to pay my bills."

In a country with a tradition of educating many of its best and brightest in the West, an Islamabad society matron -- who did not want her name used because she feared her remarks would reflect badly on her husband's quietly beleaguered construction firm -- bemoaned the now-ruinous cost of overseas tuition for her college-age sons.

"I really dread telling them they may have to come home," she said, distractedly twisting the rings adorning her delicate fingers. "But I don't see how we can continue to afford it."

Those at the lowest economic rung, meanwhile, say they can no longer count on the balm of charity to see to their basic needs.

"Before, the people who saw me every day would give me enough rupees to buy bread," said a crippled beggar named Mangal, who seeks alms from motorists in the city of Rawalpindi. "Now they only give the smallest kind of coin and say, 'Sorry, brother, I don't have much to spare.' "

Even before the global credit crunch began, Pakistan was a tough sell to international investors whose television screens are regularly filled with gruesome images from here, such as the Sept. 20 truck bombing of the five-star Marriott Hotel in Islamabad, the capital.

The last 12 months have also seen an upsurge in suicide bombings by Islamic militants, a six-week bout of martial law, the assassination of the country's best-known politician, Benazir Bhutto, and a wrenching transition away from the nearly nine-year military rule of Pervez Musharraf.

Now, the government is desperate for an infusion of foreign cash; it is seeking $10 billion in emergency funds from overseas to avoid default. But in light of everyone else's troubles, a bailout may not be forthcoming -- or may not be on the scale that Pakistani officials had hoped.

Among Western observers, there is general agreement that a broad financial collapse in Pakistan could paralyze its government and potentially trigger widespread unrest, imperiling efforts to contain Islamic militants in the tribal areas and, by extension, complicating the war in Afghanistan. Then too, Pakistan's nuclear arsenal is always a point of concern at times of turmoil, though during past crises, senior Pakistani officials had insisted that it was secure.

Zardari's newly appointed financial advisor, Shaukat Tarin, traveled to Washington for last weekend's gathering of bankers and finance ministers. High hopes are also being pinned on a meeting in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, later this month of an ad hoc group known as the Friends of Pakistan, which includes Western governments and international organizations.

But the deterioration appears to be accelerating. The Karachi stock market, until this year one of the world's most robustly profitable exchanges, has instead become a barometer of growing economic distress.

Only six months ago, with share prices at record highs, the exchange's main floor was a sweaty hubbub of deal-making and profit-taking. On a recent day, traders sat listlessly, leaning back in their chairs and chatting into their phones, and only glancing now and then at price displays. A few simply rested, head in hands.

After the worldwide collapse of share prices late last week, authorities considered closing the Karachi exchange for two weeks. But it was open for business Monday, albeit with the same strict price controls that have been in place since late August to prevent a further plunge -- and dozens of police officers with guns and batons patrolling outside.

In attempting to weather the storm, Pakistan has some significant advantages, including a fairly well diversified economy. Three million citizens working abroad send home about $6.5 billion in annual remittances. Few bank assets are tied up in mortgages. The government has begun to move away from subsidies that are a drag on the economy.

Some help is already on the way. Pakistani officials have said the World Bank will provide $1.4 billion this year, mainly earmarked for paying down the budget deficit, and the Asian Development Bank last month approved a $500-million loan.

In some respects, Pakistani financial officials see themselves as having been ahead of the regulatory curve. For example, they had banned "short selling" before the global market turmoil broke out.

"The rest of the world is discovering it will have to remake its financial systems," said Karachi-based economic analyst Haris Gazdar.

"Here, we have already realized that."

But consumer confidence has eroded steadily. In Karachi, Islamabad and other major cities, there has been a run in recent days on foreign-currency accounts held in Pakistani banks. On Monday, small-business owner Ayoub Assaf was crestfallen after his bank told him it did not have sufficient funds on hand for the large withdrawal he had hoped to make from his dollar account. Nervously fingering his BlackBerry, he shook his head.

"I left it too late," he said.

laura.king@latimes.com
 
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