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Is Pakistan facing bankruptcy?

That may have been part of the problem, but it still points to a failure of government - in either not making cheaper loans available, or failing to regulate those entitites that were making loans.

It appears however that the failure was of government across a broad range of issues:

The loans are available at very low interest rates from the govt banks. The problem is the farmers are not content with the max amount they can take from banks which is calculated from the farmer's assets. You cant just take as much money as you want that becomes disproportionate to your assets. Its not possible from any bank in the world.

So, they take extra loans from private money lenders to fullfill their needs at a very high interest. The problem is the farmers are not educated enough to understand how interest rates are calculated and end up with huge debts.

Almost 50-60% of loans from rural banks have been written off by the state n central govts to reduce their burden and also awareness camps are held to educate the farmers on loans.
 
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the Rs has touched 83 to the $
we r screwed!!!!

Its a temporary problem. Pak will not go bankrupt as easy as all the reports suggest. This is the time when the pak govt must do its utmost to bring in FDI which is easily the hardest right now. Best way is to open up your economy in a more transparent way.

It is unfortunate that the new govt was formed when this crisis started looming over our heads. The Mush govt was the best Pak has had so far in the last 50 years.

India had the same problem too during the late 80s. We did better after our own crisis and that too with negligible help from outside.
Pak is in a better position considering she has friends in china and saudi.

The people who will be most affected will be those in the import business and finances.
 
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Its a temporary problem. Pak will not go bankrupt as easy as all the reports suggest. This is the time when the pak govt must do its utmost to bring in FDI which is easily the hardest right now. Best way is to open up your economy in a more transparent way.

It is unfortunate that the new govt was formed when this crisis started looming over our heads. The Mush govt was the best Pak has had so far in the last 50 years.

India had the same problem too during the late 80s. We did better after our own crisis and that too with negligible help from outside.
Pak is in a better position considering she has friends in china and saudi.

The people who will be most affected will be those in the import business and finances.

I agree, the title suggests a rather alarming situation which I am sure is not the case.

Last eve I saw an interview of a Brit MP on BBC, he said that the disapora was not keen to remit money home as they were not confident. If that is so, then it needs to be corrected.
 
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In Scramble for Cash, Pakistan Turns to China's Deep Reserves

By Anthony Faiola and Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, October 16, 2008; Page A01

Pakistan has reached a critical new phase in its long-deteriorating financial situation, as investor flight and bleeding of national reserves force the country to scramble for international funds to shore up its economy. With the global financial crisis draining coffers in the United States and Europe, the key U.S. ally in the war on terrorism is seeking help from an old friend newly flush with cash: China.

President Asif Ali Zardari arrived in Beijing on Tuesday for a four-day state visit as concern has surged over a possible debt default by Pakistan that could cripple its economy and spark more civil unrest. While the amount of money Pakistan needs in the short term is relatively small -- $4 billion to $6 billion -- analysts say the climate of crisis and public anger over domestic bailouts in the United States and Western Europe have made even a modest infusion from its Western allies politically difficult.

Pakistan's bid for Chinese cash underscores the potential of Beijing's $1.9 trillion in foreign reserves, the largest in the world, to boost its global influence. The government is now seeking as much as $3 billion in emergency assistance from China, as well as assistance from oil-rich Gulf countries including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, according to a senior Pakistani official. Pakistan's central bank governor, Shashad Akhtar, is in Washington this week to review a draft plan for overhauling the country's finances with the International Monetary Fund, potentially paving the way for future aid.

U.S. military and intelligence officials fear that Pakistan's increasingly precarious economy will compound an already unstable political situation and undermine military cooperation. Both al-Qaeda and the Taliban leadership are located in the rugged, economically depressed region along Pakistan's western border with Afghanistan. The Bush administration and Congress have been shaping a long-term economic and military assistance package for Pakistan, but there is no indication the United States is able to step in with a short-term financial lifeline.

Pakistan is going to the Chinese now "because you go to the guys with the money," a senior International Monetary Fund official said. "And right now, the Chinese are the ones with the money."

Securing as much as $6 billion would buy the government the breathing room it needs, analysts say, to begin a desperately needed overhaul of its budget to sustain Pakistan's battered economy in the longer term.

Pakistan's financial problems go back at least a year, with current and past administrations borrowing from the central bank to sustain generous state subsidies on gasoline and diesel. As global oil prices surged, the government of former President Pervez Musharraf curried favor with average Pakistanis by having the state absorb the shocks. Musharraf ousted a democratically elected government in 1999 and ruled until a civilian coalition was voted into office last spring, headed by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani. The government forced Musharraf from the presidency in August, electing Zardari as his replacement in September.

Analysts and IMF officials say the current government has made notable progress in lifting those subsidies in recent weeks to ease the budget. Yet the global credit crunch and concerns over security have worsened investor flight, with as much as $1.2 billion a month fleeing Pakistan during the summer. National reserves over the past year have fallen 67 percent, to $8.3 billion, leaving the country ill-prepared to deal with financial turbulence as more investors pulled out in recent weeks as the U.S. crisis spread globally.

That has fed two major fears. First, that Pakistan may not be able to secure the funds to avoid a debt default early next year. And second, that investor concern over its potential insolvency could grow into a panic in coming weeks, leading to a far broader capital pullout that could jeopardize the country's financial system.

Unprecedented inflation, political instability and the growing threat from Islamist insurgents have all had sharply negative effects on investor confidence, said Sakib Sherani, chief economist at ABN Amro Bank Pakistan.

"It is clear that Pakistan is facing challenges in its balance of payments. Without cash inflows we are losing about $1 billion a month, which is untenable," Sherani said. "On the one hand, you are paying more for imports in Pakistan; on the other, you have less cash inflows."

On Oct. 6, both Standard & Poors and Moody's downgraded Pakistani bonds. "Only Seychelles has a lower rating, and it has already defaulted on its debt," said John Chambers, managing director with Standard & Poors in New York.

To curb losses, Pakistan in recent weeks has set new rules on stock trading aimed at preventing even sharper sell-offs of Pakistani companies. Some analysts are concerned that the new government may resort to freezing foreign capital, a measure Pakistan took in the 1990s after being slapped with global sanctions for conducting a nuclear test.

The Pakistani government is seeking to ease those fears by bolstering its central bank reserves with funds from China and Gulf states. China and Pakistan have a long history of economic cooperation, based partly on decades of weapons sales, and a lifeline now, particularly so small a sum, would not be seen as unusual. "The Pakistanis like to call the Chinese their all-weather ally, and the U.S. their fair-weather friends," said Daniel Markey, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. "This kind of loan could be seen as self-serving by the Chinese, and continue that impression."

A senior Pakistani official said the government requested in July that Saudi Arabia chip in with an "oil facility" -- or an agreement that would grant Pakistan concessionary terms and delayed payments and on roughly half the oil it imports. One reason investors are more concerned about Pakistan now is that Saudi Arabia has not yet responded.

Analysts say the Pakistanis may have better luck at a meeting early next month in the United Arab Emirates of the "Friends of Pakistan" -- a group of countries including the United States and Britain that are considered close allies. They are counting, sources close to the talks said, on countries seeing the danger of an economic collapse in Pakistan and the threat that poses to the war on terror as worth the relatively small price of financial assistance.

A last option might be seeking a lifeline from the IMF, though such an agreement is seen as politically difficult for the new government. Pakistan paid off the last of several IMF loans in 2005, with Musharraf hailing the accomplishment as a breaking of the nation's beggar's bowl. By seeking IMF help now, analysts say, the new government may find itself in the difficult position of explaining to the population why it needs to glue that bowl back together.

Pakistani officials, however, are meeting with IMF officials in Washington now, seeking their "seal of approval" on the plan to rein in runaway spending threatening to bankrupt the government. Although IMF officials say the Pakistanis are not seeking a loan, IMF approval of their economic plans could pave the way for other institutions, including the World Bank and Asian Development Banks, to offer lending. It could also make approval of an IMF loan at a later date happen faster.

"What they want is an endorsement in principle," a senior IMF official said, "something that would make financial support go more smoothly if they decide they do need to ask for it."

In Scramble for Cash, Pakistan Turns to China's Deep Reserves - washingtonpost.com
 
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In Scramble for Cash, Pakistan Turns to China's Deep Reserves

By Anthony Faiola and Karen DeYoung

Washington Post
Thursday, October 16, 2008

Pakistan has reached a critical new phase in its long-deteriorating financial situation, as investor flight and bleeding of national reserves force the country to scramble for international funds to shore up its economy. With the global financial crisis draining coffers in the United States and Europe, the key U.S. ally in the war on terrorism is seeking help from an old friend newly flush with cash: China.

President Asif Ali Zardari arrived in Beijing on Tuesday for a four-day state visit as concern has surged over a possible debt default by Pakistan that could cripple its economy and spark more civil unrest. While the amount of money Pakistan needs in the short term is relatively small -- $4 billion to $6 billion -- analysts say the climate of crisis and public anger over domestic bailouts in the United States and Western Europe have made even a modest infusion from its Western allies politically difficult.

Pakistan's bid for Chinese cash underscores the potential of Beijing's $1.9 trillion in foreign reserves, the largest in the world, to boost its global influence. The government is now seeking as much as $3 billion in emergency assistance from China, as well as assistance from oil-rich Gulf countries including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, according to a senior Pakistani official. Pakistan's central bank governor, Shashad Akhtar, is in Washington this week to review a draft plan for overhauling the country's finances with the International Monetary Fund, potentially paving the way for future aid.

U.S. military and intelligence officials fear that Pakistan's increasingly precarious economy will compound an already unstable political situation and undermine military cooperation. Both al-Qaeda and the Taliban leadership are located in the rugged, economically depressed region along Pakistan's western border with Afghanistan. The Bush administration and Congress have been shaping a long-term economic and military assistance package for Pakistan, but there is no indication the United States is able to step in with a short-term financial lifeline.

Pakistan is going to the Chinese now "because you go to the guys with the money," a senior International Monetary Fund official said. "And right now, the Chinese are the ones with the money."

Securing as much as $6 billion would buy the government the breathing room it needs, analysts say, to begin a desperately needed overhaul of its budget to sustain Pakistan's battered economy in the longer term.

Pakistan's financial problems go back at least a year, with current and past administrations borrowing from the central bank to sustain generous state subsidies on gasoline and diesel. As global oil prices surged, the government of former President Pervez Musharraf curried favor with average Pakistanis by having the state absorb the shocks. Musharraf ousted a democratically elected government in 1999 and ruled until a civilian coalition was voted into office last spring, headed by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani. The government forced Musharraf from the presidency in August, electing Zardari as his replacement in September.

Analysts and IMF officials say the current government has made notable progress in lifting those subsidies in recent weeks to ease the budget. Yet the global credit crunch and concerns over security have worsened investor flight, with as much as $1.2 billion a month fleeing Pakistan during the summer. National reserves over the past year have fallen 67 percent, to $8.3 billion, leaving the country ill-prepared to deal with financial turbulence as more investors pulled out in recent weeks as the U.S. crisis spread globally.

That has fed two major fears. First, that Pakistan may not be able to secure the funds to avoid a debt default early next year. And second, that investor concern over its potential insolvency could grow into a panic in coming weeks, leading to a far broader capital pullout that could jeopardize the country's financial system.

Unprecedented inflation, political instability and the growing threat from Islamist insurgents have all had sharply negative effects on investor confidence, said Sakib Sherani, chief economist at ABN Amro Bank Pakistan.

"It is clear that Pakistan is facing challenges in its balance of payments. Without cash inflows we are losing about $1 billion a month, which is untenable," Sherani said. "On the one hand, you are paying more for imports in Pakistan; on the other, you have less cash inflows."

On Oct. 6, both Standard & Poors and Moody's downgraded Pakistani bonds. "Only Seychelles has a lower rating, and it has already defaulted on its debt," said John Chambers, managing director with Standard & Poors in New York.

To curb losses, Pakistan in recent weeks has set new rules on stock trading aimed at preventing even sharper sell-offs of Pakistani companies. Some analysts are concerned that the new government may resort to freezing foreign capital, a measure Pakistan took in the 1990s after being slapped with global sanctions for conducting a nuclear test.

The Pakistani government is seeking to ease those fears by bolstering its central bank reserves with funds from China and Gulf states. China and Pakistan have a long history of economic cooperation, based partly on decades of weapons sales, and a lifeline now, particularly so small a sum, would not be seen as unusual. "The Pakistanis like to call the Chinese their all-weather ally, and the U.S. their fair-weather friends," said Daniel Markey, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. "This kind of loan could be seen as self-serving by the Chinese, and continue that impression."

A senior Pakistani official said the government requested in July that Saudi Arabia chip in with an "oil facility" -- or an agreement that would grant Pakistan concessionary terms and delayed payments and on roughly half the oil it imports. One reason investors are more concerned about Pakistan now is that Saudi Arabia has not yet responded.

Analysts say the Pakistanis may have better luck at a meeting early next month in the United Arab Emirates of the "Friends of Pakistan" -- a group of countries including the United States and Britain that are considered close allies. They are counting, sources close to the talks said, on countries seeing the danger of an economic collapse in Pakistan and the threat that poses to the war on terror as worth the relatively small price of financial assistance.

A last option might be seeking a lifeline from the IMF, though such an agreement is seen as politically difficult for the new government. Pakistan paid off the last of several IMF loans in 2005, with Musharraf hailing the accomplishment as a breaking of the nation's beggar's bowl. By seeking IMF help now, analysts say, the new government may find itself in the difficult position of explaining to the population why it needs to glue that bowl back together.

Pakistani officials, however, are meeting with IMF officials in Washington now, seeking their "seal of approval" on the plan to rein in runaway spending threatening to bankrupt the government. Although IMF officials say the Pakistanis are not seeking a loan, IMF approval of their economic plans could pave the way for other institutions, including the World Bank and Asian Development Banks, to offer lending. It could also make approval of an IMF loan at a later date happen faster.

"What they want is an endorsement in principle," a senior IMF official said, "something that would make financial support go more smoothly if they decide they do need to ask for it."

Correspondent Candace Rondeaux contributed to this report.

washingtonpost.com - nation, world, technology and Washington area news and headlines
 
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Pakistan seeks $10bn from expats to avoid bankruptcy

Pakistan has turned towards its expatriate community for help in a desperate bid to stave off bankruptcy as negotiations in Washington over an emergency aid package continue.

By Isambard Wilkinson in Islamabad
Last Updated: 6:26PM BST 13 Oct 2008

The government is urgently seeking $10 billion from its diaspora to avoid defaulting on its debts that are dragging the country towards insolvency.

Pakistan's newly-appointed financial chief, Shaukat Tareen, who is in Washington on a mission to persuade international groups to stump up billions of dollars to bolster Pakistan's fast depleting foreign reserves, has said that a fund will be set up for expatriate investors to buy stocks.

"We are looking at creating a fund for non-resident Pakistanis to consist of government stocks," said Mr Tareen. "The values are very good so we want to create a bouquet to offer to non-resident Pakistanis this month."

Pakistanis working overseas sent a record $6.45 billion home in the year ended June 30. There are about three million Pakistanis living overseas, mostly in the US, UK, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates, according to the Overseas Pakistanis Foundation in Islamabad.

Pakistan is facing multiple crises as the country's security forces battle pro-Taliban militants in the tribal areas near the Afghan border and its financial indicators have plummeted.

President Asif Ali Zardari is struggling to garner credibility for his government. He has tried to rally confidence in his government by insisting that the country is "not going bankrupt".

He has summoned a rare parliamentary session in an attempt to galvanise broad support for his government's role in the US-led 'war on terror'.

Pakistan has twice imposed trading restrictions, bailed out individual investors, and promised an earlier fund to buy equities in failed measures to support a market that lost a third of its value this year.

The Karachi Stock Exchange will meet today to review six-week-old rules that prevent stocks from falling below their Aug 27 closing prices after rejecting calls from brokers to shut the exchange.

Police officers were deployed at the Karachi Stock Exchange yesterday and security at the gate was tightened in anticipation of protests by investors.

"There are no longer any small investors left in the stock market, they have all been destroyed," said Kausar Qaimkhani, chairman of the Small Investors Association, who was leading a group of about 50 shareholders outside the exchange. "The market should be closed till funds are arranged."

The exchange first imposed the trading restrictions Aug 28 and extended them on Sept 25 after a suicide bomber destroyed the capital's Islamabad Marriot Hotel and economic conditions deteriorated.

Since the curbs were imposed Pakistan's credit rating has been cut to the world's second-lowest.

The World Bank has pledged to provide $1.4 billion this year to help narrow the Pakistan's budget deficit, which is at a 10-year high.

Regulators had banned short-selling and narrowed the limit on declines in measures announced late on June 23.

Hundreds of investors stoned the exchange and shouted anti-government slogans in July.

Mr Zardari is due to fly to China on Tuesday to seek financial support for his country.

http://www.telegraph.co/uk
 
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Hmmmmmmm isn't this the same song Nawaz was singing. lets see politicians put up there money first then ask the rest to help out.:azn:
 
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Pakistan seeks $10bn from expats to avoid bankruptcy

Pakistan has turned towards its expatriate community for help in a desperate bid to stave off bankruptcy as negotiations in Washington over an emergency aid package continue.

By Isambard Wilkinson in Islamabad
Last Updated: 6:26PM BST 13 Oct 2008

The government is urgently seeking $10 billion from its diaspora to avoid defaulting on its debts that are dragging the country towards insolvency.

Pakistan's newly-appointed financial chief, Shaukat Tareen, who is in Washington on a mission to persuade international groups to stump up billions of dollars to bolster Pakistan's fast depleting foreign reserves, has said that a fund will be set up for expatriate investors to buy stocks.

"We are looking at creating a fund for non-resident Pakistanis to consist of government stocks," said Mr Tareen. "The values are very good so we want to create a bouquet to offer to non-resident Pakistanis this month."

Pakistanis working overseas sent a record $6.45 billion home in the year ended June 30. There are about three million Pakistanis living overseas, mostly in the US, UK, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates, according to the Overseas Pakistanis Foundation in Islamabad.

Pakistan is facing multiple crises as the country's security forces battle pro-Taliban militants in the tribal areas near the Afghan border and its financial indicators have plummeted.

President Asif Ali Zardari is struggling to garner credibility for his government. He has tried to rally confidence in his government by insisting that the country is "not going bankrupt".

He has summoned a rare parliamentary session in an attempt to galvanise broad support for his government's role in the US-led 'war on terror'.

Pakistan has twice imposed trading restrictions, bailed out individual investors, and promised an earlier fund to buy equities in failed measures to support a market that lost a third of its value this year.

The Karachi Stock Exchange will meet today to review six-week-old rules that prevent stocks from falling below their Aug 27 closing prices after rejecting calls from brokers to shut the exchange.

Police officers were deployed at the Karachi Stock Exchange yesterday and security at the gate was tightened in anticipation of protests by investors.

"There are no longer any small investors left in the stock market, they have all been destroyed," said Kausar Qaimkhani, chairman of the Small Investors Association, who was leading a group of about 50 shareholders outside the exchange. "The market should be closed till funds are arranged."


The exchange first imposed the trading restrictions Aug 28 and extended them on Sept 25 after a suicide bomber destroyed the capital's Islamabad Marriot Hotel and economic conditions deteriorated.

Since the curbs were imposed Pakistan's credit rating has been cut to the world's second-lowest.

The World Bank has pledged to provide $1.4 billion this year to help narrow the Pakistan's budget deficit, which is at a 10-year high.

Regulators had banned short-selling and narrowed the limit on declines in measures announced late on June 23.

Hundreds of investors stoned the exchange and shouted anti-government slogans in July.

Mr Zardari is due to fly to China on Tuesday to seek financial support for his country.

http://www.telegraph.co/uk



WTF, Pak has still not closed the stock exchange. Wats goin on??????
The brokers are right, u have to shut down the stock exchange.
 
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^^Why are you so sentimental about Pakistani stockexchange?
I don't think we have answers to your query.
Please, don't use provocative and derogatory words.
Care to explain, what is the basis of your claim?
 
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qarz utaro, mulk sawaro...another elaborate scheme to swindle hard working expatriate Pakistanis.
 
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These goons are not capable of saving this country. We are on the verge of bankruptcy of the President says. we are not. I guess this is why we need an educated President, not someone with a fake degree.
 
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By Anthony Faiola and Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, October 16, 2008; Page A01

Pakistan has reached a critical new phase in its long-deteriorating financial situation, as investor flight and bleeding of national reserves force the country to scramble for international funds to shore up its economy. With the global financial crisis draining coffers in the United States and Europe, the key U.S. ally in the war on terrorism is seeking help from an old friend newly flush with cash: China.

President Asif Ali Zardari arrived in Beijing on Tuesday for a four-day state visit as concern has surged over a possible debt default by Pakistan that could cripple its economy and spark more civil unrest. While the amount of money Pakistan needs in the short term is relatively small -- $4 billion to $6 billion -- analysts say the climate of crisis and public anger over domestic bailouts in the United States and Western Europe have made even a modest infusion from its Western allies politically difficult.

Pakistan's bid for Chinese cash underscores the potential of Beijing's $1.9 trillion in foreign reserves, the largest in the world, to boost its global influence. The government is now seeking as much as $3 billion in emergency assistance from China, as well as assistance from oil-rich Gulf countries including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, according to a senior Pakistani official. Pakistan's central bank governor, Shashad Akhtar, is in Washington this week to review a draft plan for overhauling the country's finances with the International Monetary Fund, potentially paving the way for future aid.

U.S. military and intelligence officials fear that Pakistan's increasingly precarious economy will compound an already unstable political situation and undermine military cooperation. Both al-Qaeda and the Taliban leadership are located in the rugged, economically depressed region along Pakistan's western border with Afghanistan. The Bush administration and Congress have been shaping a long-term economic and military assistance package for Pakistan, but there is no indication the United States is able to step in with a short-term financial lifeline.

Pakistan is going to the Chinese now "because you go to the guys with the money," a senior International Monetary Fund official said. "And right now, the Chinese are the ones with the money."

Securing as much as $6 billion would buy the government the breathing room it needs, analysts say, to begin a desperately needed overhaul of its budget to sustain Pakistan's battered economy in the longer term.

Pakistan's financial problems go back at least a year, with current and past administrations borrowing from the central bank to sustain generous state subsidies on gasoline and diesel. As global oil prices surged, the government of former President Pervez Musharraf curried favor with average Pakistanis by having the state absorb the shocks. Musharraf ousted a democratically elected government in 1999 and ruled until a civilian coalition was voted into office last spring, headed by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani. The government forced Musharraf from the presidency in August, electing Zardari as his replacement in September.

Analysts and IMF officials say the current government has made notable progress in lifting those subsidies in recent weeks to ease the budget. Yet the global credit crunch and concerns over security have worsened investor flight, with as much as $1.2 billion a month fleeing Pakistan during the summer. National reserves over the past year have fallen 67 percent, to $8.3 billion, leaving the country ill-prepared to deal with financial turbulence as more investors pulled out in recent weeks as the U.S. crisis spread globally.

That has fed two major fears. First, that Pakistan may not be able to secure the funds to avoid a debt default early next year. And second, that investor concern over its potential insolvency could grow into a panic in coming weeks, leading to a far broader capital pullout that could jeopardize the country's financial system.

Unprecedented inflation, political instability and the growing threat from Islamist insurgents have all had sharply negative effects on investor confidence, said Sakib Sherani, chief economist at ABN Amro Bank Pakistan.

"It is clear that Pakistan is facing challenges in its balance of payments. Without cash inflows we are losing about $1 billion a month, which is untenable," Sherani said. "On the one hand, you are paying more for imports in Pakistan; on the other, you have less cash inflows."

On Oct. 6, both Standard & Poors and Moody's downgraded Pakistani bonds. "Only Seychelles has a lower rating, and it has already defaulted on its debt," said John Chambers, managing director with Standard & Poors in New York.

To curb losses, Pakistan in recent weeks has set new rules on stock trading aimed at preventing even sharper sell-offs of Pakistani companies. Some analysts are concerned that the new government may resort to freezing foreign capital, a measure Pakistan took in the 1990s after being slapped with global sanctions for conducting a nuclear test.

The Pakistani government is seeking to ease those fears by bolstering its central bank reserves with funds from China and Gulf states. China and Pakistan have a long history of economic cooperation, based partly on decades of weapons sales, and a lifeline now, particularly so small a sum, would not be seen as unusual. "The Pakistanis like to call the Chinese their all-weather ally, and the U.S. their fair-weather friends," said Daniel Markey, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. "This kind of loan could be seen as self-serving by the Chinese, and continue that impression."

A senior Pakistani official said the government requested in July that Saudi Arabia chip in with an "oil facility" -- or an agreement that would grant Pakistan concessionary terms and delayed payments and on roughly half the oil it imports. One reason investors are more concerned about Pakistan now is that Saudi Arabia has not yet responded.

Analysts say the Pakistanis may have better luck at a meeting early next month in the United Arab Emirates of the "Friends of Pakistan" -- a group of countries including the United States and Britain that are considered close allies. They are counting, sources close to the talks said, on countries seeing the danger of an economic collapse in Pakistan and the threat that poses to the war on terror as worth the relatively small price of financial assistance.

A last option might be seeking a lifeline from the IMF, though such an agreement is seen as politically difficult for the new government. Pakistan paid off the last of several IMF loans in 2005, with Musharraf hailing the accomplishment as a breaking of the nation's beggar's bowl. By seeking IMF help now, analysts say, the new government may find itself in the difficult position of explaining to the population why it needs to glue that bowl back together.

Pakistani officials, however, are meeting with IMF officials in Washington now, seeking their "seal of approval" on the plan to rein in runaway spending threatening to bankrupt the government. Although IMF officials say the Pakistanis are not seeking a loan, IMF approval of their economic plans could pave the way for other institutions, including the World Bank and Asian Development Banks, to offer lending. It could also make approval of an IMF loan at a later date happen faster.

"What they want is an endorsement in principle," a senior IMF official said, "something that would make financial support go more smoothly if they decide they do need to ask for it."

Correspondent Candace Rondeaux contributed to this report.
 
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double post mate - kindly merge it in national news (i think)
 
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WASHINGTON, Oct 16: The international community has agreed to provide $4 billion that Pakistan needs to avoid bankruptcy, but in return Islamabad will have to undertake a series of painful economic reforms. US and diplomatic sources in Washington told Dawn that Pakistan had started negotiating various arrangements with international financial institutions and friendly nations soon after it realised that it might have to default on its payments if not helped.

The United States played a key supporting role in these negotiations, remaining engaged with the Pakistani Embassy in Washington.

“There was a real panic in the Pakistani camp,” said a US official familiar with the talks. “Last month, Pakistani diplomats made 10 visits to the (US) Treasury.”

The negotiations were finalised during Financial Adviser Shaukat Tareen’s visit to Washington to attend annual meetings of the World Bank Group.

During these talks, the World Bank, Asian Development Bank, Islamic Development Bank and other IFIs discussed various plans for providing short-to medium-term support to Pakistan.

During the current financial year, the World Bank will provide $1.4 billion. If Pakistan’s programmes are approved, its IDA share will also be front-loaded. This includes a total $3 billion of international development assistance over three years, from 2008-2011.

The Asian Development Bank is negotiating assistance of another billion dollars. The Islamic Development Bank is negotiating a proposal to raise its trade facility from $500 million to one billion.

This brings the total pledges to about four billion dollars.

Pakistan is also negotiating further assistance with the Friends of Pakistan group, formed in New York last year to help rescue Pakistan from the current financial crisis. The group meets in Abu Dhabi next month.

“All we can get,” said a Pakistani diplomat familiar with the negotiations when asked what Pakistan expected to get from the group.

“We are certain that the financing gap of four to $4.5 billion will be bridged,” he said. “It will ease pressure on foreign exchange reserves and foreign exchange rate.”

Besides the four billion dollars already pledged, a separate amount of $900 million of US assistance is in the pipeline during the current US financial year, which starts on Oct 1.

However, to qualify for this generous international assistance, Pakistan has pledged to undertake a series of painful but necessary economic reforms.

During its negotiations with the World Bank and other IFIs, Pakistan pledged to reduce its fiscal deficit from 7.7 per cent of the GDP last year to 4.3 per cent of the GDP this year.

Pakistan agreed to reform its tax policy and tax administration with the aim to mobilize additional revenue. The tax to GDP ratio is to be reduced to 15 percent of the GDP over the next five to seven years. Pakistan promised to tighten monetary policy as and when needed.

Pakistan also pledged to reduce State Bank borrowing.
 
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