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Keep the dollar flying

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Keep the dollar flying

Riaz Riazuddin Published October 9,
2021 - Updated about 13 hours ago

KEEP the dollar flying (ie keep it relatively expensive). Why? Why not keep the rupee flying (ie keep it relatively overvalued)? There are very simple reasons to prefer the former approach over the latter to keep our economy flying, rather than having a crash landing. To understand the reasons, imagine you are a businessman with two choices. The first choice is to start an import business. The second is the export business. Which one will you choose in our country? Import or export? Many will choose (and are still choosing) the import business because it requires little investment and is much easier to set up. Very few will choose the export business because it requires huge investment and is difficult to set up. Is it too difficult to see this ground reality? This is one of the primary reasons to keep the exchange rate more favourable for exporters. Keeping it consistently more favourable for exporters also helps producers, thereby promoting industrial growth.

For decades — and beginning in July 1949, hardly eight months after the death of the Quaid — our policymakers chose to deliberately keep the rupee overvalued by not devaluing it despite the UK having devalued the sterling by 30 per cent. All Commonwealth countries did so except ours. The pound sterling became cheaper in Pakistan, and import dependency began under the guise of the then fashionable ‘import substitution strategy’. Since then, our country has been on a trajectory of faster import growth, slower or stagnant export growth, mounting external debt necessary to finance the gap between imports and exports, and consequently boom-and-bust cycles of growth.

The fear of flexibility in the exchange rate has been shared by most, if not all, our finance ministers.

Our exchange rate has historically favoured importers at the expense of exporters. Yet we continue to lament our poor export performance. We seem to prefer the easier approach of lamenting rather than taking the difficult decision of keeping foreign exchange consistently expensive. Should we also congratulate ourselves on our extraordinary import growth performance? Our politicians, policymakers, bureaucrats and many economists (of national or media repute) continue to delude themselves that the expensive dollar is mostly the work of speculators, and needs to be stabilised (a euphemism for keeping the dollar from flying, or keeping it nearly fixed).

Many economists continue to provide strange arguments such as ‘depreciation leads to increase in debt’. They fail to see that by not depreciating in time, we fuelled import consumption in the first place, which was mostly financed by increasing the external debt. Many still believe that exports do not respond to the exchange rate, based on silly econometric regressions. The fact is that exports respond slowly to depreciation compared to imports because of the reasons stated in the first paragraph. Many continue to say that the import content of our exports is very high, but never question why it is high. It is high primarily because of the mostly consistent historic favourable exchange rate for imports ie the overvalued rupee.

Pakistan established a ‘managed floating regime’ in 1982. As a result, our trade balance improved between 1982 and 1998. Had the rupee shown more flexibility in the exchange rate during this period, our country would have developed a strong, diversified export base. Moreover, one would have expected a better trade balance performance when the Pak rupee was officially ‘floated’ in 2001. But soon after, the fear of floating set in ferociously in the minds of policymakers and the rupee hardly moved from about Rs60 to a dollar (from 2001 to 2007), making it a ‘de facto peg’ — putting the economy again in the pre-1982 fixed exchange rate regime.

This fear of floating, benefiting importers at the expense of exporters, played havoc with the trade deficit, and the economy crashed with the onslaught of the global financial crisis of 2007-08. Foreign exchange reserves vanished quickly. The IMF helped stabilise the economy and the rupee became somewhat flexible again from 2008 to 2013. Fear of floating set in again and the dollar was deliberately kept cheaper between Rs98 and Rs104. The story repeated itself. Trade deficit rose and reserves depleted. What was mind-boggling was how the ‘savings’ from the dramatic fall in the international price of oil (from $100 per barrel in 2012 to $40 in 2016) were wasted in supporting the rupee and increasing imports. No wonder exports declined or stagnated during 2013-2018.

The IMF helped again. The rupee showed flexibility and the economy was stabilised. The State Bank introduced a sensible mechanism of ‘market-determined exchange’. Now, as of Oct 2, 2021, the fear of floating seems to have set in again. This fear is evident in the remarks of Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin that the dollar should cost no more than Rs165, instead of the current market value of close to Rs 172. This fear of and disdain for flexibility is not new and had been shared by most (if not all) of our past finance ministers. Sadly, this fear is also reflected in the remarks of various economists of national repute.

As a result, the State Bank will undoubtedly come under pressure to intervene. If this happens, it will lead to depletion of reserves leading to another balance-of-payments crisis. I hope this does not happen. I wish the State Bank will be allowed to do its job independently. Our prime minister is a courageous man. He has asked all Pakistanis to not be afraid of so many things. May I now respectfully implore him to not be afraid of the rising value of the dollar? Trust the State Bank of Pakistan in managing the exchange rate independently. Very few public-sector institutions can claim a competent staff and an experienced and knowledgeable board of directors like State Bank. Let the rupee float. It requires tremendous and continuous patience to lessen dependency on imports, promote exports, enhance reserves and contain the external debt. If wishes were horses, our country would surely be an Asian Tiger now. If the wishes of the finance ministers become the horses of the State Bank, our country is unlikely to come out of the boom-and-bust cycles of economic growth.

The writer is a former deputy governor of the State Bank of Pakistan.

FF64221F-AC3A-4510-A05C-4C14DE02BCBE.png


This article is a must read for all Bughaz e Imranis out there


@FOOLS_NIGHTMARE @blueazure @Waterboy @Mav3rick @RescueRanger @muhammadhafeezmalik @fitpOsitive @El Sidd
@Patriot forever @ziaulislam @Dual Wielder @AZ1 @koolio @Verve @Imran Khan @Indus Pakistan @ghazi52 @waz
 
The battle for the Pak Rupee—II

Pakistan’s economy seems to be slipping and unless we change course quickly the quagmire may simply become too messy to escape from. One of the principal reasons for the current impasse is the rapidly declining value of the Pakistani Rupee. Unless an economy can defend its currency, the rest sooner or later becomes meaningless. Of late in our region, other than us, we have seen this phenomenon also play out in Iran, where despite being an oil rich economy its Rial has dropped more than 70 percent since 2018, as a result not only punishing the poor and an aspiring middle class, but also in the process making them increasingly alienated from the outside developed world—trivial things are turning into significant issues as we see even the Iranian middle class struggle today to keep up its basic daily coffee consumption habits, a country known for its exceptionally high per capita coffee and Qahwa intake. Pakistan’s Rupee similarly has also lost almost 70 percent over the last 4 years, but unlike Iran, with no oil income in its resource-bag! So, it does not take much imagination to ascertain the plight that an average Pakistani would be going through at the moment. Even when there was a barrage of criticism from all corners accusing Ishaq Dar of artificially maintaining a high value of the Pak Rupee, this author was consistently writing that the value at 100:1 (PKR:USD) was at best no more than 5-7 percent away from what it should be and what defined by me as the ‘desirable’ value. Pegging currencies in developing economies, especially where the national currency is not a freely tradable instrument, needs a long-term vision and a holistic approach. For any student of economic history who has closely looked at recent years successful currency management by developing economies, it is clear that the strategy in almost all cases has been identical: Start by keeping the actual currency value lower by anywhere between 20 to 40 percent than the perceived real value and thereafter just maintain the level till such time that economy starts churning out a sustainable external account surplus. This period can be anywhere between 10 to 15 years during which the exports enjoy the beginners edge and get almost a period of one and a half to two decades to shore up productivity in order to counter both, the ultimately inevitable rise in the currency value and the expected interim inflation. The very notion of supporting exports through periodic devaluations is flawed and invariably leads to a vicious debt trap stoking poverty. Rather, on the contrary, sustainable export growth comes only as a result of a stable currency.

To quote a few examples, China upon joining the WTO was accused by the West of supporting a Renminbi undervalued by as much as 40 percent, but it remained steadfast by simply maintaining a fairly consistent Yuan/Renminbi currency parity with global currencies while unleashing policies internally that supported innovation and productivity. Of late in the last 10 years or so, its currency has gained almost 20 percent against the USD without affecting its export growth. And this in-turn has resulted in its per capita increasing by almost a 100 percent in dollar terms over the last 10 years, meaning not only eradicating poverty by more than 30 percent (400 Million Chinese), but also making an average Chinese richer by manifolds. Study the currency patterns of the other Asian tigers and the story again comes out as being no different. Of late Bangladesh has followed an identical path where it has kept the Taka’s slide in check, but has still been able to almost double its exports in the last 10 years mainly on the back of policymaking, institution building and growing productivity. For Pakistan though, with the Rupee already at 170+, the consistency mantra right now may unfortunately not be an option, as in the author’s view despite the prevailing economic dynamics the PKR’s real value today is undervalued and should in effect be at 150:1 USD mark. The loss of 20+ rupees has more to do with future perception than any real denominators. In my humble opinion the government’s top priority should be to shore up the Rupee’s value and following steps if implemented immediately should help:

No less an authority than the Prime Minister should engage the public and give them confidence that he will personally be monitoring the revival of the Pakistani Rupee and envisage having it re-valued at a minimum of 150 PKR:1 USD by the end of his current term. Thereafter, it needs to be ensured that the Rupee revives by at least 20 paisas per week. Not a tall order and once the market perception changes the recovery could in fact be much faster than anticipated.

Declare an import emergency where all non-essential imports fully or partially should either be stopped or rationed for the next two years. Now this does not merely mean luxury imports, but also ones that are needless or have a compound effect on overall imports per se. For example, no need to import any category of cars and the ones being assembled locally should be given 6 months to at least halve their imported components while capping each plant’s overall import values; likewise, for motorcycles—as it is the pace of increase of per capita fuel consumption for personal use in Pakistan is not just amongst the highest in the region, but also in the world,

And additionally it will also check the undesirable and damaging pace of urbanisation in the country; and similarly the same steps in footwear, food, FMCG, construction and other sectors that rely heavily on imported inputs; in essence the imported input threshold should be fixed to ensure substitution with local ingredients or raw materials.

All deletion programmes should be strictly implemented.

Re-negotiation of IPP contracts, especially for paid off plants and the ones high on oil consumption.

Tap the airline and shipping sectors with operating levies in foreign exchange. For example, time slots in Lahore and Karachi are not even a tiny fraction of what for example are applicable in Frankfurt. Similarly, a token issuance fee of $100 per bill of lading could earn huge revenues. Shipping rates of late have gone up by more than 600 percent and shipping lines can very well afford to pay this small charge. A small special-limited-period passenger tax in USD on all foreign airlines operating from Pakistan could be introduced.

Last but not least, during this period of 2 years, we must not allow any further investments involving imports or exchange outflows.

The above are just generic ideas to highlight the urgency of the situation. These will of course need detailed brainstorming, refining and a SWOT analysis, once the government does decide to move in this direction. The important thing is that whatever steps the government decides on should be implemented post haste since there is no time to waste. If in the meantime the Rupee stumbles to 180, the requirements could become very different.

 
Policy rate hike-weak rupee can be 'deadly' combination

Five global central banks, including State Bank of Pakistan, will be making policy announcements this week. The other four are Bank of Japan (BoJ), Bank of England (BoE), Federal Reserve (FED) and Swiss National Bank (SNB).

Decisions on interest rates will surely have a profound impact on the financial market, especially in the current condition when inflation is creeping up like a monster due to ample supply of emergency stimulus provided to fight against the pandemic. Russia, Brazil, Turkey, Czech Republic and Mexico have already hiked their rates earlier. South Korea was the first developed economy to do so in August this year while others are mulling withdrawing their stimulus support.

However, two major global central banks, BoJ and European Central Bank (ECB), have made their intentions very clear; they have already announced that inflation is transitory due to Covid-19 factor.

This week, it is expected that the other four central banks (CBs) too are also likely to adopt a cautious stance and may wait and watch, as the threat of stretching and spreading of delta variants probability has sharply increased.

But FED's action will be keenly watched as it may not hike interest rates in September; it is the size of FED tapering that would matter and give a hint at future interest rate direction. Delay in its quantitative easing tapering will put the Doves on the back foot, which could possibly hold up US interest rate hike until 2023, unless inflation goes out of control. In other words, it's the tapering and its size that will provide the clue.

Pakistan Monetary Policy announcement

It will be too early for SBP to turn hawkish; it should still wait until 1st quarter of 2022, as the next 6-months are very crucial for Pakistan's economy. SBP's message through its last policy announcement has been clear about maintaining an accommodative stance. More importantly, SBP's new Forward Guidance Monetary Tool is very clear about providing future direction and therefore we haven't yet come close to hiking the policy rate.

How is it possible that SBP will make a preemptive hike when inflation is within its targeted range? It is a fact that despite pressures caused by higher global commodity prices, CPI inflation has been fairly tame so far.

Any premature tightening will threaten recovery. Though economy is showing growth in some areas, pressure on the balance of payments position is mounting despite extraordinary support from remittances and the much-needed stimulus acquired from donors. Job conditions are not keeping pace with the population growth.

Under the current situation it is expected of the SBP that through its forward guidance it would first convey a message and then will make a shift towards a neutral stance before making any move. The banking system is already clogged and is struggling, which is why SBP is forced to expand its sterilisation action (usage of its monetary tools) to manage its cash flows by successfully using several heads (domestic/external entries) - tools that were also used by previous governments in the past. Unlike the past, however, we are now on the FATF Grey List. No doubt, SBP is using its monetary tools efficiently, but at current pace it may have reached the high point.

Adding to the problem is the spillover factor caused by unrest and unsettled conditions in Afghanistan. It is important to note that the hike in prices of commodities globally has nothing to do with our domestic demand. Food inflation is because of weakness/flaws, which are caused by policy failure. A relatively complacent approach to the agriculture sector is purely an administrative issue. Wheat can be harvested twice a year and sugar 2 times in 18-20 months period. Rice which is planted in May-June is harvested between October and December. Our policymakers will have to realise that real growth is sluggish and the economy still demands an expansionary policy. Therefore, any policy rate hike in presence of a weak rupee can become the cause of destabilization. Our fragile economy demands further soft funding with more space for recovery.

 
Policy rate hike-weak rupee can be 'deadly' combination

Five global central banks, including State Bank of Pakistan, will be making policy announcements this week. The other four are Bank of Japan (BoJ), Bank of England (BoE), Federal Reserve (FED) and Swiss National Bank (SNB).

Decisions on interest rates will surely have a profound impact on the financial market, especially in the current condition when inflation is creeping up like a monster due to ample supply of emergency stimulus provided to fight against the pandemic. Russia, Brazil, Turkey, Czech Republic and Mexico have already hiked their rates earlier. South Korea was the first developed economy to do so in August this year while others are mulling withdrawing their stimulus support.

However, two major global central banks, BoJ and European Central Bank (ECB), have made their intentions very clear; they have already announced that inflation is transitory due to Covid-19 factor.

This week, it is expected that the other four central banks (CBs) too are also likely to adopt a cautious stance and may wait and watch, as the threat of stretching and spreading of delta variants probability has sharply increased.

But FED's action will be keenly watched as it may not hike interest rates in September; it is the size of FED tapering that would matter and give a hint at future interest rate direction. Delay in its quantitative easing tapering will put the Doves on the back foot, which could possibly hold up US interest rate hike until 2023, unless inflation goes out of control. In other words, it's the tapering and its size that will provide the clue.

Pakistan Monetary Policy announcement

It will be too early for SBP to turn hawkish; it should still wait until 1st quarter of 2022, as the next 6-months are very crucial for Pakistan's economy. SBP's message through its last policy announcement has been clear about maintaining an accommodative stance. More importantly, SBP's new Forward Guidance Monetary Tool is very clear about providing future direction and therefore we haven't yet come close to hiking the policy rate.

How is it possible that SBP will make a preemptive hike when inflation is within its targeted range? It is a fact that despite pressures caused by higher global commodity prices, CPI inflation has been fairly tame so far.

Any premature tightening will threaten recovery. Though economy is showing growth in some areas, pressure on the balance of payments position is mounting despite extraordinary support from remittances and the much-needed stimulus acquired from donors. Job conditions are not keeping pace with the population growth.

Under the current situation it is expected of the SBP that through its forward guidance it would first convey a message and then will make a shift towards a neutral stance before making any move. The banking system is already clogged and is struggling, which is why SBP is forced to expand its sterilisation action (usage of its monetary tools) to manage its cash flows by successfully using several heads (domestic/external entries) - tools that were also used by previous governments in the past. Unlike the past, however, we are now on the FATF Grey List. No doubt, SBP is using its monetary tools efficiently, but at current pace it may have reached the high point.

Adding to the problem is the spillover factor caused by unrest and unsettled conditions in Afghanistan. It is important to note that the hike in prices of commodities globally has nothing to do with our domestic demand. Food inflation is because of weakness/flaws, which are caused by policy failure. A relatively complacent approach to the agriculture sector is purely an administrative issue. Wheat can be harvested twice a year and sugar 2 times in 18-20 months period. Rice which is planted in May-June is harvested between October and December. Our policymakers will have to realise that real growth is sluggish and the economy still demands an expansionary policy. Therefore, any policy rate hike in presence of a weak rupee can become the cause of destabilization. Our fragile economy demands further soft funding with more space for recovery.

What part of free floating exchange rate did you not understand in the first post?
7F30C527-6109-446D-9F8F-2251E9EA85B3.png
 
US tapering is near, Pakistan has already get difficulties to pay their debt, how come you want Rupee get lower again ?

There is condition to implement policy to devalue the currency, but Pakistan doesnt have such luxury
 
US tapering is near, Pakistan has already get difficulties to pay their debt, how come you want Rupee get lower again ?

There is condition to implement policy to devalue the currency, but Pakistan doesnt have such luxury
We don't want rupee to get lower or higher. We want rupee to find its own market value under free floating exchange rate.
 
We don't want rupee to get lower or higher. We want rupee to find its own market value under free floating exchange rate.

So you are not on free floating system ? Indonesia Rupiah is in 14. 200 per USD, it is strengthening from 14.500 in early 2021. We have some kind of understanding that Rupiah should not cross 15.000 per USD, it is because we dont want to see another Asian Financial Crisis happening again, there is psychological position in Rupiah not to cross 15.000 per USD or people in financial sector will start betting to make it even lower. This can harm both Government who hold foreign debt around 40 % of GDP and also private sectors who issues foreign denominated bonds.

We cannot make the currency getting lower while in the process of doing it we can make both our government and private sector ( the big ones ) bankrupt
 
So you are not on free floating system ? Indonesia Rupiah is in 14. 200 per USD, it is strengthening from 14.500 in early 2021. We have some kind of understanding that Rupiah should not cross 15.000 per USD, it is because we dont want to see another Asian Financial Crisis happening again, there is psychological position in Rupiah not to cross 15.000 per USD or people in financial sector will start betting to make it even lower. This can harm both Government who hold foreign debt around 40 % of GDP and also private sectors who issues foreign denominated bonds.

We cannot make the currency getting lower while in the process of doing it we can make both our government and private sector ( the big ones ) bankrupt
you forgot comma (,)
 
@Norwegian I'm not able to pull my Forex chart for some reason on my trading platform due to weekend update. Can you get the USD pair that was better able to weather the storm during the 08/09 financial crisis?
 
We cannot make the currency getting lower while in the process of doing it we can make both our government and private sector ( the big ones ) bankrupt
In Pakistan it's the opposite. Pakistan keeps getting itself into periodic financial crisis because of continues overvalued exchange rate policy
87FE5787-9EDE-40F2-B01D-686F2DF65E6A.png

@Norwegian I'm not able to pull my Forex chart for some reason on my trading platform due to weekend update. Can you get the USD pair that was better able to weather the storm during the 08/09 financial crisis?
4B4E1F4A-9510-48DB-B0BA-3DCC0E6D70E7.jpeg
 
Keep the dollar flying

Riaz Riazuddin Published October 9,
2021 - Updated about 13 hours ago

KEEP the dollar flying (ie keep it relatively expensive). Why? Why not keep the rupee flying (ie keep it relatively overvalued)? There are very simple reasons to prefer the former approach over the latter to keep our economy flying, rather than having a crash landing. To understand the reasons, imagine you are a businessman with two choices. The first choice is to start an import business. The second is the export business. Which one will you choose in our country? Import or export? Many will choose (and are still choosing) the import business because it requires little investment and is much easier to set up. Very few will choose the export business because it requires huge investment and is difficult to set up. Is it too difficult to see this ground reality? This is one of the primary reasons to keep the exchange rate more favourable for exporters. Keeping it consistently more favourable for exporters also helps producers, thereby promoting industrial growth.

For decades — and beginning in July 1949, hardly eight months after the death of the Quaid — our policymakers chose to deliberately keep the rupee overvalued by not devaluing it despite the UK having devalued the sterling by 30 per cent. All Commonwealth countries did so except ours. The pound sterling became cheaper in Pakistan, and import dependency began under the guise of the then fashionable ‘import substitution strategy’. Since then, our country has been on a trajectory of faster import growth, slower or stagnant export growth, mounting external debt necessary to finance the gap between imports and exports, and consequently boom-and-bust cycles of growth.

The fear of flexibility in the exchange rate has been shared by most, if not all, our finance ministers.

Our exchange rate has historically favoured importers at the expense of exporters. Yet we continue to lament our poor export performance. We seem to prefer the easier approach of lamenting rather than taking the difficult decision of keeping foreign exchange consistently expensive. Should we also congratulate ourselves on our extraordinary import growth performance? Our politicians, policymakers, bureaucrats and many economists (of national or media repute) continue to delude themselves that the expensive dollar is mostly the work of speculators, and needs to be stabilised (a euphemism for keeping the dollar from flying, or keeping it nearly fixed).

Many economists continue to provide strange arguments such as ‘depreciation leads to increase in debt’. They fail to see that by not depreciating in time, we fuelled import consumption in the first place, which was mostly financed by increasing the external debt. Many still believe that exports do not respond to the exchange rate, based on silly econometric regressions. The fact is that exports respond slowly to depreciation compared to imports because of the reasons stated in the first paragraph. Many continue to say that the import content of our exports is very high, but never question why it is high. It is high primarily because of the mostly consistent historic favourable exchange rate for imports ie the overvalued rupee.

Pakistan established a ‘managed floating regime’ in 1982. As a result, our trade balance improved between 1982 and 1998. Had the rupee shown more flexibility in the exchange rate during this period, our country would have developed a strong, diversified export base. Moreover, one would have expected a better trade balance performance when the Pak rupee was officially ‘floated’ in 2001. But soon after, the fear of floating set in ferociously in the minds of policymakers and the rupee hardly moved from about Rs60 to a dollar (from 2001 to 2007), making it a ‘de facto peg’ — putting the economy again in the pre-1982 fixed exchange rate regime.

This fear of floating, benefiting importers at the expense of exporters, played havoc with the trade deficit, and the economy crashed with the onslaught of the global financial crisis of 2007-08. Foreign exchange reserves vanished quickly. The IMF helped stabilise the economy and the rupee became somewhat flexible again from 2008 to 2013. Fear of floating set in again and the dollar was deliberately kept cheaper between Rs98 and Rs104. The story repeated itself. Trade deficit rose and reserves depleted. What was mind-boggling was how the ‘savings’ from the dramatic fall in the international price of oil (from $100 per barrel in 2012 to $40 in 2016) were wasted in supporting the rupee and increasing imports. No wonder exports declined or stagnated during 2013-2018.

The IMF helped again. The rupee showed flexibility and the economy was stabilised. The State Bank introduced a sensible mechanism of ‘market-determined exchange’. Now, as of Oct 2, 2021, the fear of floating seems to have set in again. This fear is evident in the remarks of Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin that the dollar should cost no more than Rs165, instead of the current market value of close to Rs 172. This fear of and disdain for flexibility is not new and had been shared by most (if not all) of our past finance ministers. Sadly, this fear is also reflected in the remarks of various economists of national repute.

As a result, the State Bank will undoubtedly come under pressure to intervene. If this happens, it will lead to depletion of reserves leading to another balance-of-payments crisis. I hope this does not happen. I wish the State Bank will be allowed to do its job independently. Our prime minister is a courageous man. He has asked all Pakistanis to not be afraid of so many things. May I now respectfully implore him to not be afraid of the rising value of the dollar? Trust the State Bank of Pakistan in managing the exchange rate independently. Very few public-sector institutions can claim a competent staff and an experienced and knowledgeable board of directors like State Bank. Let the rupee float. It requires tremendous and continuous patience to lessen dependency on imports, promote exports, enhance reserves and contain the external debt. If wishes were horses, our country would surely be an Asian Tiger now. If the wishes of the finance ministers become the horses of the State Bank, our country is unlikely to come out of the boom-and-bust cycles of economic growth.

The writer is a former deputy governor of the State Bank of Pakistan.

View attachment 783246

This article is a must read for all Bughaz e Imranis out there


@FOOLS_NIGHTMARE @blueazure @Waterboy @Mav3rick @RescueRanger @muhammadhafeezmalik @fitpOsitive @El Sidd
@Patriot forever @ziaulislam @Dual Wielder @AZ1 @koolio @Verve @Imran Khan @Indus Pakistan @ghazi52 @waz
The simplest way of stating this is a follows -

Pakistan does not and never has had any real industry. The word industry is root from 'industrious' or hard work.
  • Instead Pakistan has exported it's labour to the West and later the oil rich Gulf for dollars.
  • Pakistan has pawned off it's strategic position to the West meaning primarily USA for few doillars more.
This provided the hard dollars that flowed into the country from these two sources. Then those dollars paid for the vast imports making so called industrial and business lazy elite of Pakistan rich. In effect Pakistan's business elite live of by prostituting the country and workers.

This is akin to lazy father turfing out lots of his kids as cheap labour and renting his homestead to make a living while praying five times a day and giving few rupees as alms to feel good about himself.

If I am wrong I ask anybody to give me name of one product made in Pakistan that has global brand standing? 220 million people we are talking about.
 
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