As for the loss of life:
Extract:
Militants intensified their campaign in 2009, specifically targeting Pakistans urban centres, according to the interior ministrys National Crisis Management Cell. Officials recorded 1,906 terror attacks in the country, resultng in 1,835 deaths and 5,194 injuries, from January 2009 to April 2010.
Pakistan has become an epicentre of terrorist activity since late 2001. At least 8,141 terrorist attacks have killed 8,875 civilians and law-enforcement personnel, and injured 20,675, between the end of 2002 and April 2010.
Pakistans economy hit hard by war on terror
By Sohail Ahmed
For CentralAsiaOnline.com
2010-06-18
ISLAMABAD -- Terrorism in Pakistan cost the nation 6% of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2009-10, and has killed nearly 9,000 Pakistanis in the past eight years.
Terrorism has taken a heavy toll on Pakistans economy since 2001, according to Pakistans 2009-2010 economic survey report released earlier this month by the Ministry of Finance.
Militants intensified their campaign in 2009, specifically targeting Pakistans urban centres, according to the interior ministrys National Crisis Management Cell. Officials recorded 1,906 terror attacks in the country, resultng in 1,835 deaths and 5,194 injuries, from January 2009 to April 2010.
Pakistan has become an epicentre of terrorist activity since late 2001. At least 8,141 terrorist attacks have killed 8,875 civilians and law-enforcement personnel, and injured 20,675, between the end of 2002 and April 2010.
Casualty tolls do not capture the cumulative effects of terrorism on the country, however.
Lives, homes and incomes have been disrupted, and education jeopardized for virtually a whole generation of school-age children in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the Federally Administered Tribal, according to the report.
Terrorism cost Pakistan more than US $43 billion between 2001 and 2010, the ministry reported. Its impact on the economy has greatly increased since 2007-08, according to the report, as the Pakistani army has begun large-scale military operations in the countrys tribal areas.
A decline in GDP growth, reductions in investment, lost exports, unemployment and the depreciation and inflation of incomes and exchange rates are the most affected areas of Pakistans economy.
The price of security-related and civil relief operations, for instance, demonstrates the magnitude of terrorisms direct costs: Pakistan has spent an additional US $4 billion since 2007, the ministry reports, or 2.4% of the average GDP.
The government has also spent US $600m during this fiscal year to help the more than 3m people displaced by terrorism and counter-terrorism operations.
Pakistan may face a permanent degree of welfare loss due to the diversion of development spending toward the security budget, capital flight and brain drain, and due to the trade diversion it has suffered since 2001, according to the report.
Total energy consumption declined 5.2% in 2009 versus 2008, and consumption in the industry sector fell by 11.7%, as a result of the energy crisis, according to the report.
Electricity use in the industrial sector fell by 6.5% while gas consumption by the industrial sector declined by 8.2%.