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Pakistan agrees to depreciate rupee In talks with IMF

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In talks with IMF, Pakistan agrees to depreciate rupee
Khaleeq KianiUpdated December 09, 2017
1046

38

ISLAMABAD: Amid a policy decision on Friday to allow rupee depreciation, Pakistan and an International Monetary Fund (IMF) delegation concluded the first round of discussions on the country’s economy. Now members of the IMF delegation and Pakistan team are taking a two-day break to prepare for the policy-level wrap-up by Dec 13-14.

A senior official told Dawn that the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) would now let the currency exchange rate to adjust to market conditions after many months, rather years, of resisting expectations. The timing of the move was planned for Friday to ensure materialisation of $2.5 billion worth of receipts from two international bonds launched last month.

This calculated move allowed the currency rate to touch Rs110 to a dollar on Friday before settling down at around Rs107 and did not go beyond official estimates. The two weekend holidays would give a breathing space instead of over-steaming the exchange rate.

Examine: Devaluation of rupee is not the answer if the root cause persists


The sources said that the IMF had concerns over the health of Pakistan’s external sector, but the government authorities had different opinions. As the two sides concluded technical talks, the IMF team will prepare a report of its assessment over the weekend and share with Pakistan officials on Monday for the feedback and discussions.

While the government team, led by secretary of finance Shahid Mehmood will review the assessment, the IMF mission to Pakistan, led by Harald Finger, will visit Lahore next week for talks with provincial authorities including Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif and independent observers and researchers from the business community and representatives of a private-sector university.

The authorities believed the currency adjustment would help shift foreign currency holdings from commercial banks currently standing at a higher level of around $6 billion back to official reserves and help divert remittances to official channels with declining gap among the official, banking and open market rates.

For the first time after many months, the central bank is reported to have noticed exporters to offload their positions. In the long run, the recent imposition or increase in the import duties and regulatory duties would make unnecessary imports expensive.

An official said that projections for CPEC-related repayments were within the range already discussed by the two sides in connection with debt sustainability analysis as $23 billion worth of projects were currently under various stages of implementation, including $17 billion in the energy sector by the private sector. About $6 billion worth of projects are in the road sector.

While a clean certificate of economic health from the IMF is useful for international financial institutions and investment sentiment, the two sides are reported to have noted that recent bond results were very positive for the fact that this was the first fund raising from international capital market without the IMF programme after many years and attracted favourable response and rates despite high twin deficits, showing confidence of international investors and good reflection of fundamentals.

The IMF director of Middle East and Central Asian Department (MCD), Jihad Azour, the former finance minister from Lebanon, will also join the final round of talks next week. While the Pakistani side will continue to be led by Mr Mehmood, a meeting of the IMF mission could also be arranged with Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi who holds the portfolio of the finance minister, depending on the gaps in policy positions, a source said.

Pakistan would continue to remain under the IMF’s post-programme monitoring (PPM) until about 2023 for borrowing significantly higher than its quota. The threshold for Pakistan to move out of the PPM is estimated at 1.4 billion special drawing rights (SDRs) of the IMF that now stand around 4.3 SDRs.

Secretary Finance Shahid Mahmood, when contacted, said that the two sides held various rounds of technical discussions over the last week and covered a host of areas including macroeconomic situation, developments in energy, financial, monetary and social sectors. He said that he shared with the IMF delegation an overview of the economy which was on track and key economic indicators were moving in the positive direction. He said that significant growth had been achieved in revenue generation in the current fiscal year.

He said that Pakistan had achieved fiscal consolidation without compromising on expenditures on development and social protection and the government had set its eyes on achieving 6pc GDP growth which was inclusive, pro-poor and sustainable. Mr Mahmood said that the recent successful launch of Sukuk and Euro Bond were also discussed briefly.

Published in Dawn, December 9th, 2017
 
In talks with IMF, Pakistan agrees to depreciate rupee
Khaleeq KianiUpdated December 09, 2017
1046

38

ISLAMABAD: Amid a policy decision on Friday to allow rupee depreciation, Pakistan and an International Monetary Fund (IMF) delegation concluded the first round of discussions on the country’s economy. Now members of the IMF delegation and Pakistan team are taking a two-day break to prepare for the policy-level wrap-up by Dec 13-14.

A senior official told Dawn that the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) would now let the currency exchange rate to adjust to market conditions after many months, rather years, of resisting expectations. The timing of the move was planned for Friday to ensure materialisation of $2.5 billion worth of receipts from two international bonds launched last month.

This calculated move allowed the currency rate to touch Rs110 to a dollar on Friday before settling down at around Rs107 and did not go beyond official estimates. The two weekend holidays would give a breathing space instead of over-steaming the exchange rate.

Examine: Devaluation of rupee is not the answer if the root cause persists


The sources said that the IMF had concerns over the health of Pakistan’s external sector, but the government authorities had different opinions. As the two sides concluded technical talks, the IMF team will prepare a report of its assessment over the weekend and share with Pakistan officials on Monday for the feedback and discussions.

While the government team, led by secretary of finance Shahid Mehmood will review the assessment, the IMF mission to Pakistan, led by Harald Finger, will visit Lahore next week for talks with provincial authorities including Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif and independent observers and researchers from the business community and representatives of a private-sector university.

The authorities believed the currency adjustment would help shift foreign currency holdings from commercial banks currently standing at a higher level of around $6 billion back to official reserves and help divert remittances to official channels with declining gap among the official, banking and open market rates.

For the first time after many months, the central bank is reported to have noticed exporters to offload their positions. In the long run, the recent imposition or increase in the import duties and regulatory duties would make unnecessary imports expensive.

An official said that projections for CPEC-related repayments were within the range already discussed by the two sides in connection with debt sustainability analysis as $23 billion worth of projects were currently under various stages of implementation, including $17 billion in the energy sector by the private sector. About $6 billion worth of projects are in the road sector.

While a clean certificate of economic health from the IMF is useful for international financial institutions and investment sentiment, the two sides are reported to have noted that recent bond results were very positive for the fact that this was the first fund raising from international capital market without the IMF programme after many years and attracted favourable response and rates despite high twin deficits, showing confidence of international investors and good reflection of fundamentals.

The IMF director of Middle East and Central Asian Department (MCD), Jihad Azour, the former finance minister from Lebanon, will also join the final round of talks next week. While the Pakistani side will continue to be led by Mr Mehmood, a meeting of the IMF mission could also be arranged with Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi who holds the portfolio of the finance minister, depending on the gaps in policy positions, a source said.

Pakistan would continue to remain under the IMF’s post-programme monitoring (PPM) until about 2023 for borrowing significantly higher than its quota. The threshold for Pakistan to move out of the PPM is estimated at 1.4 billion special drawing rights (SDRs) of the IMF that now stand around 4.3 SDRs.

Secretary Finance Shahid Mahmood, when contacted, said that the two sides held various rounds of technical discussions over the last week and covered a host of areas including macroeconomic situation, developments in energy, financial, monetary and social sectors. He said that he shared with the IMF delegation an overview of the economy which was on track and key economic indicators were moving in the positive direction. He said that significant growth had been achieved in revenue generation in the current fiscal year.

He said that Pakistan had achieved fiscal consolidation without compromising on expenditures on development and social protection and the government had set its eyes on achieving 6pc GDP growth which was inclusive, pro-poor and sustainable. Mr Mahmood said that the recent successful launch of Sukuk and Euro Bond were also discussed briefly.

Published in Dawn, December 9th, 2017
No problem with that. Keeping exchange rate in Rupee's favor has cost us 5+ billion dollars in exports in the past 4 years.

If and when it touches 125, their economy in dollar value terms will crash by 20%. Lets see how they'll avoid that.
Are you an economist my friend?
 
No problem with that. Keeping exchange rate in Rupee's favor has cost us 5+ billion dollars in exports in the past 4 years.


Are you an economist my friend?

They should deeply devalue PKR for extreme boost to exports and to also take advantage of China industrial shifting to Pakistan..
 
No problem with that. Keeping exchange rate in Rupee's favor has cost us 5+ billion dollars in exports in the past 4 years.
Hearing rumors that rupee may loose value by least 20% not sure what figure is that if it happens so the question is whats bigger the 5bil usd or the rumors of 20% ??
 
export increase is good but debt repayment will become more expensive and also inflation can increase
 
Slowly but surely it'll be time to go towards the Gold Standard as China, Iran and Russia initiate the process.
 
BD will over take Pak in terms of per capita figure if this happens and Nepal will have a new competitor to catch up to
No worries, many Pakistanis grow their own crops and eat it, the government has no track record of where the produce is.

even pakistani economists don't know what is happening
The ones who don't understand sh*t about exchange rate dynamics.

export increase is good but debt repayment will become more expensive and also inflation can increase
Inflation isn't that much a problem now. It's not 2008-9 anymore. The public certainly has capability to absorb some shocks, State Bank will hedge the bigger ones. Debt servicing could be an issue but earning the trust of international financial institutions will be important in that case.
 
No problem with that. Keeping exchange rate in Rupee's favor has cost us 5+ billion dollars in exports in the past 4 years.


Are you an economist my friend?

Yes, but you don't need one to understand it. Your supposed gdp in dollar terms is a function of the conversion rate. Lower the conversion rate lower the GDP. I hope this is basic even for you.
 
Yes, but you don't need one to understand it. Your supposed gdp in dollar terms is a function of the conversion rate. Lower the conversion rate lower the GDP. I hope this is basic even for you.

Only if it was that simple. What happens is that imports become expensive, hence more focus on local products by consumers helping local economy.
Then, exports become cheaper and therefore increase, again helping local economy and industry.
Exchange rate is a world of it's own in economics. A multi-tasking tool essentially.
 
Only if it was that simple. What happens is that imports become expensive, hence more focus on local products by consumers helping local economy.
Then, exports become cheaper and therefore increase, again helping local economy and industry.
Exchange rate is a world of it's own in economics. A multi-tasking tool essentially.

Devaluation takes immediate toll on GDP in dollar terms. Export may or may not raise depending on local industry capabilities and their marketing capabilities. With 2/3rd's of your exports being textiles, you'll struggle even with devaluation. Also devaluation doesn't raise exports magically overnight, market takes its own time to assess competitiveness of Pakistani produce but its effect on GDP is immediate and instantaneous.
 

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