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Yes the article mentions this recording by these world institutions.

India re-based in 1998 and hence the giant leap forward in recording.

Anyway, I do acknowledge Indian economy progress. But, it doesn not mean that we dis-credit our Pakistani leadership for what it has done, envisoned and achieved! We have progressed far much under Musharraf!

There is no doubting that Pakistan's economy did well over the last few years.

The revised GDP calculation that I talked about came in 2007, so it was not mentioned in the 2004 article given by you.

Some links are:

The great fall of China - Los Angeles Times

IMF Survey: Global Growth Estimates Trimmed After PPP Revisions

This recalculation took 40 % of the GDP away from China and India and better reflect their actual economy size.

Not sure if a similar recalculation happened for Pakistan and if so what was it's impact.
 
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Vinod,

i think Pakistan has not gone under such re-valuation. Such re-valuation may not necessarily reduce the PPP (purchasing power parity) of the country, it may increase it as well.

Pakistan's PPP has increased. In Shaukat Aziz era it was $475 billion.... and now it has INCREASED to become $504.3 billion Economy of Pakistan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I checked both these sites you shared. They are primarily talking about Purchasing Power Parity, which is also called GDP PPP. The GDP economy itself has not decreased nor shrinked. But the effect of the economy's boom has not effected the large majority (maybe due to inflation) and hence Purchasing Power parity has been re-valued. To calculate how much population actually benefitted from this economic boom & hence global contribution.

Puchasing power parity (PPP) (local) is the capacity of the economy (nation) to buy & purchase. Though PPP has increased in PAkistan and India both, but yes, maybe not as much in our villages.

The ITALICS I quote form the articles you shared.

The revisions to PPP rates resulted in a substantial reduction in the PPP-based GDP of some large fast-growing economies and consequently reduced their estimated contribution to global growth.

You see, They are talking about reduction in PPP (power purchasing parity) above. They mean to show the economy's contribution towards welfare & buying power of their own country and hence global growth.


The idea is that a country's GDP adjusted for purchasing-power parity provides a more realistic measure of relative economic strength and of living standards than the unadjusted GDP numbers. The great fall of China - Los Angeles Times

As India and China are very big countries, hence this more accurate measuring - gave a better picture of Living standards of country itself. This international NEW re-valuation has varied from the country's own estimated Living Standard & Measurement.

In Pakistan, we measure it through PLSM (Pak Living & standard measurement).


New and innovative data validation tools were implemented to improve the quality of the data, which were drawn from regional surveys of prices for more than 1,000 goods and services in countries.

Now they have covered more areas & regions in India and China & included above than 1000 goods. Modernized their valuation methods.

Pakistan is slightly larger than U.P (India) - maybe our PPP would not be as effected - incase re-valued.

But, inflation has effected the country's ability to take direct benefit of this economic boom - Pkaistan of 6-7% and in India's case 9%.


India also had a sizable downward GDP adjustment in PPP terms. IMF Survey: Global Growth Estimates Trimmed After PPP Revisions

So you see, they're only talking about the purchasing power parity of the country, and not the economy as whole.


The article I gave, talks of re-basing the whole economy's measurement & its worth, not just Purchasing power (PPP).

Even if you would see in Wikipedia; they record the economy's various aspects - Pakistan: Economy of Pakistan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
GDP at PPP $504.3 billion (2008)
GDP per capita $3320.12 (2008)
GDP real growth rate (at PPP) 6.9% (2008)
GDP growth rate 6.6% (2008 est

But, the worth of Pakistan's economy is $160 billion.
www.pndpunjab.gov.pk/user_files/File/17th to 23rd December.pdf

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

This above was to best of my knowledge. Regards!
 
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Pakistan, Iran likely to conclude $7b IPI gas pipeline deal in July

30 June 2008

DUBAI — Iran will host a trilateral meeting in Teheran next month to finalise the proposed multi-billion dollar Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project.

"Iran would soon invite the Petroleum Ministers of India and Pakistan to conclude a deal on $7 billion gas pipeline project in July," a top Pakistani official told Khaleej Times yesterday.

In a recent series of meeting, Pakistan's Minister for Finance and Economic Affairs Syed Naveed Qamar met Iran's Minister for Petroleum Gholam Hossein Nozari on Saturday and discussed the proposed pipeline project.

The ministers also exchanged views to further boost cooperation in petroleum sector of the two countries.

Naveed Qamar was in Teheran to head a high level delegation to attend the 17th session of Pak-Iran Joint Economic Commission, which concluded yesterday.

The two sides already agreed that the experts had covered all aspects of the project and that Gas Sales and Purchase Agreement (GSPA) between Iran and Pakistan was now finalised and that it was time to move ahead.

India and Pakistan need natural gas from Iran to overcome energy shortages in order to maintain their economic growth. Both countries are resisting US pressure to end talks on multi-billion dollar pipeline project, which they want to build by December 2012.

The proposed pipeline would run 2,615 kilometres from Iran to India through Pakistan and initially carry 2,120 million cubic feet of gas a day.

"Pakistan is keen to move ahead and I want to see whether India is ready to engage with us fully or it would like to spend some more time thinking about it,” Qureshi said.

According to an official handout, Pakistan's Finance Minister Naveed Qamar and Iran's Minister for Petroleum Gholam Hossein Nozari also discussed matters relating to the promotion of bilateral cooperation between the two countries.

The Iranian Minister for Petroleum said that the visit of the Federal Minister for Finance of Pakistan would go a long way in promoting bilateral cooperation between the two countries in the fields of commerce, trade and energy.

Naveed Qamar praised bilateral relations between the two countries, which were rooted in common history, culture and religion.

Ambassador of Pakistan, Shafkat Saeed, and senior officials from Iran and Pakistan were also present during the meeting.

Khaleej Times Online - Pakistan, Iran likely to conclude $7b IPI gas pipeline deal in July
 
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Improving public debt management

The government plans to improve its management of the public debt. That’is good news, but the vague strategy emerging from media reports isn’t. Initially, it was reported that the federal government may shift the accounts of its ministries and public sector non-financial corporations (PSNFC) to the SBP to facilitate netting of surplus and overdrawn bank balances to limit its borrowing to the net shortfall. Later, the government denied this strategy.

The strategy seemed logical because, instead of borrowing more, credit balances in some accounts of the state could be utilised to fund shortfalls in others. But, going about achieving that objective requires visualising the consequences it may entail. A sudden move could damage the financial system that, fairly or unfairly, is benefiting from cheap surpluses in bank accounts of the state offices.

The issue requiring examination is the possible reduction in public borrowing the move could lead to. According to the ‘Analytical Accounts of Scheduled Banks’ posted on the SBP website, at the end of April 2008 the position was as shown in the table.

If these statistics are correct, they indicate a net overall surplus of nearly Rs436 billion in the accounts of federal ministries and PSNFCs, though not every federal ministry or PSNFCs had a surplus. Many of them were net borrowers; this is reflected in the overall bank borrowing (Rs378 billion) of the federation and PSNFCs, proving that banks were not only benefiting from state funds but were also funding the state’s borrowing needs.

Funds lying in saving, current, call and other deposit accounts represent liquidity that state entities consider appropriate for making their routine payments. In some, cases these balances may have been excessive but it is undeniable that the state and the entities it guarantees (conventionally assigned zero risk) can’t afford to fail in their payment commitments and therefore must carry requisite liquidity.

Of the total deposits (nearly Rs714 billion), fixed deposits of the PSNFCs amounted to Rs149.4 billion. A similar break-up of the federal government deposits has not been provided but, surely, a part of the total were fixed deposits. Given the huge federal debt, keeping funds in fixed deposits seems odd. But in that respect too the tenor of the deposits is of essence.

Based on their experience of delays in acquiring back the unutilised funds temporarily surrendered to the ministry of finance may have induced some ministries and PSNFCs to retain these funds in fixed deposits rather than surrender them. Funds placed for periods of up to three months may therefore represent their profitable investment until the funds are spent.

However, keeping surpluses in longer-term deposits was inadvisable because temporarily surrendering such funds to the ministry of finance could help contain government’s short-term borrowing – seemingly, a lapse on the part of the Debt Management Office. However, in the absence of an explanation thereof, the conclusion may be unfair, though reasons behind such deposits need looking into.

Although reducing federal debt to the extent of government’s net funding need is valid, the process of going about achieving this aim calls for a practically implement-able policy on shifting balances from one state office account to another, establishment of an authority to effect such fund transfers, and a reliable communication system that ensures timely transfers, to protect state offices against dishonour of their payment commitments.

While the government may shift the accounts of its ministries to the SBP, shifting PSNFC accounts to SBP will not be viable, firstly because, to stay connected to the markets they serve, these entities require banking services that SBP cannot provide and, secondly, many of them are net borrowers. Even while shifting ministries’ accounts to the SBP the impact thereof in terms of the demands it will create on SBP, and the convenience of the entities inter-acting with the ministries, must also be taken into account.

In the context of reducing its borrowing from the SBP, federal government moves to mobilise resources (two per cent hike in profit rates on National Saving Certificates, quarterly revision of these rates to continually align them with market rates, and flotation of short-term commercial paper for investment by the public), are significant for banks because unless they devise competing deposit products, they could lose a significant part of their deposit base to the government.

These developments have serious implications because banks that hold federal government and PSNFC deposits have used them to sustain liquidity (and credit flow) in Pakistan’s financial markets. Even if implemented partially, shifting of state accounts to SBP could substantially reduce market liquidity and credit availability to the private sector. This could also push up mark-up rates very significantly.

This impact must not be overlooked because sustained market liquidity (to meet legitimate borrowing needs of the private sector) is essential for achieving the targeted 5.8 per cent GDP growth. High mark-up rates could fuel inflation domestically, and price the export sector out of the markets it has so far held on to, with considerable difficulty. This development could escalate rather than contain trade and current account deficits.

Simultaneously, banks must re-visit their lending ratios (imprudently high in some cases) and hasten the development of innovative deposit products (not taken seriously) to hold on to their deposits. More importantly, banks that hold government deposits must jointly work on a strategy to assure the government about quick movement of funds in its various accounts to visibly reduce its borrowing, with minimum shifting of accounts to the SBP.

Finally, it wasn’t wise on the part of banks to rely for cheap liquidity on lapses in public debt management. It was unethical to use this liquidity to increase bank earnings and unwise too because it induced banks to pay scant attention to developing need-based deposit products to inculcate a saving rather than a consumption culture which is now the country’s biggest weakness.

The responsible course was to voluntarily advise the state to reduce its debt by utilising surpluses available in its bank accounts; such conduct would have manifested a high sense of social responsibility that, unfortunately, the banks did not realise.

Improving public debt management -DAWN - Business; June 30, 2008
 
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Will cotton sowing target be met?

Pakistan’s cotton economy — a major source of export revenues and jobs — is in a mess. This is obvious from the failure to meet the national cotton sowing targets for the past few years now and the expanding gap between the domestic industrial demand for the silver fibre and the stagnating crop output.

The country is set to miss the cotton sowing target of 7.9 million acres by 15-20 per cent this year if unofficial estimate of sowing in Punjab and Sindh is to be believed.

“In Punjab which produces more than three-fourths of the national seed cotton output, only five to 5.3 million acres have so far been brought under cultivation against the target of 6.2 million acres for the next crop. That shows just below 17 per cent gap between the cotton sowing target and the actual achievement,” the AgriForum Pakistan chairman, Mr Ibrahim Mughal told Dawn. Similar reports have been received from Sindh, he added.

“Cotton sowing in Punjab, particularly late sowing southern districts, have faced numerous difficulties - canal water shortages until a month ago, spiking cost of tube-well water for irrigation due to higher power tariffs and rising price of diesel, and long power cuts,” says the Punjab Agriculture Extension Director General, Mr Mohammad Anjum Ali.

But he is confident that the cotton sowing target would not be missed significantly in Punjab. “We have already achieved above 88 per cent of the sowing target. We will definitely surpass the 5.99 million acres covered last year, even if we don’t meet this year’s target,” he said.

But official estimates of cotton sowing proved wrong last year and there is no guarantee that they wouldn’t this year. “Farmers have no other choice but to sow cotton. Canal water shortages and cost of running power and diesel tube-wells has prevented them from switching to rice and sugar cane this year,” Mr Ali said.

“The cotton situation changed every 15 days. It is heavily dependent on weather, which has been favourable so far. Thus it is not possible to exactly forecast crop’s future at this point of time,” he added.

Mr Mughal points out that the government’s failure to announce an intervention price had kept many farmers from sowing cotton in Punjab and Sindh. Besides, growers could not obtain sufficient quantities of proper seed for sowing. Unlike Mr Ali, he holds that growers in the cotton growing areas had switched to rice this year.

The shortfall in the cotton sowing area means that the country would again miss the production target of 14.11 million bales (each weighing 155kg) - 11 million bales from Punjab and three million from Sindh for this season like the previous year. Balochistan and the NWFP together are expected to contribute 0.110 million bales.

The total cotton crop output was 20 per cent lower to 11.655 million bales than the target of 14.2 million bales last season. Because of the substantial drop in the domestic cotton production against the industry’s need of 15.5 to 16 million bales, the textile mills spent over $1.2 billion to import 4.2 million bales cotton (of 170kg each) in the first 11 months of the current year to May to meet their consumption requirements.

The dollar value of cotton imported this fiscal is 122 per cent higher from the previous year’s $562 million. In terms of quantity too the cotton imports have more than doubled from the last financial year.

“That is a huge burden on the industry as well as on the country’s depleting foreign exchange reserves,” said a spinner in Lahore. He said the dip in the cotton output meant a spike in its prices. While early arrivals of seed cotton from Punjab are being traded at around Rs2100-2200 per maund, the lint is available at above record high rates of Rs4100 per maund (37.23kg).

“This is simple madness. The market has gone crazy over the last one year. But it was expected due to short crop and because the commodities remain strong around the globe. That said, the raw material price, which is almost 70 per cent of our total production expense, is sending our overall cost of doing business through the roof. With the domestic production likely to remain below the target this year too, there is little chance of cotton price to come down,” the spinner said.

The hiking cost of doing business on account of rising energy and credit price and other factors, and weakened demand and financial crunch in the global markets has caused 2.5 per cent drop in the textile exports to $9.59 billion from the previous year in the total textile exports during this fiscal to May. Also the share of textile exports has dropped nine per cent to 56 per cent in the total export revenue. The trade policy for the outgoing year had estimated the textile share to be around 63 per cent. Investment in textile machinery has fallen to $406 million this year from above $900 million in 2005.

“Our export sector is in a crisis and we have failed to take advantage of rising global commodity prices and our trade gap is ballooning. If we want to push our exports and narrow the trade gap we shall have to focus on the textile sector for early results. But you cannot expect the textile industry to grow without developing your cotton crop both in quality and quantity by raising per acre yield from the current level of about 22 maund per acre” the spinner said. India did it and has become a net raw cotton exporter. He said huge contamination in domestic cotton meant an average price discount of 10 per cent for the buyers.”

“As long as we remain cotton deficient textile industry we will not be able to reduce our raw material cost, expand production and enhance exports substantially,” the yarn exporter said.

Will cotton sowing target be met? -DAWN - Business; June 30, 2008
 
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Balochistan on foreign investors’ radar screen

As the world prices of all minerals, metals, industrial raw materials and commodities go on rising, Balochistan has emerged as a bright spot on the international investors’ radar screen. ‘’We are not poor but the richest province in terms of resources,’’ a beaming Mehfooz Ali Khan, the provincial finance secretary, told a post- budget conference on June 22.

“The provincial government should have its own petroleum and gas policy with a high level technical board to manage this area (mineral exploitation and investment) of vital interest’’, he said.

“The price of chrome from local mine in Muslim Bagh was Rs3,500 a ton in 1998. It is now quoted at Rs38,000 a ton’’, Ghulam Sabir Khan, President of the Balochistan Miners Association said. He said the prices of almost all minerals were on the rise and mining was attracting huge investment the world over.

“The 1995 Mineral Policy is outdated’’, Mr Tahir, a coal miner in Macch, said pleading for a new mining policy at the federal and provincial levels. Miners in Balochistan argue that provincial governments will have to play a key role in developing necessary facilities and enabling environment to attract investment for mineral exploitation.

While the Balochistan government was presenting its Rs71 billion budget for the year 2008-09 with a big deficit of Rs8.30 billion, it was also playing host to eight top diplomats from Europe and Asia eyeing investment potential in their province.

The diplomats were apparently lured by investment potential but their key question was about, ‘’Balochistan government’s jurisdiction on decision- making on investment, business operations, pricing, infrastructure and other allied matters’’.

“Their question was valid and relevant,’’ Ahmad Buksh Lehri, the Additional Chief Secretary Development and Planning of Balochistan remarked at a meeting. He recalled an unfortunate incident in which a German investor who landed at Gwadar airport sometimes ago to make some initial enquiries, was forced to leave.

“The German was hauled up at the airport and the security officers wanted to know from him whether he had obtained a prior permission from the relevant authorities to visit Gwadar. The German said he was given a visa to visit all parts of Pakistan. His reply did not convince security officials and he was deported back to Karachi from where he flew back home. His company abandoned plans to take up any project.

While meeting with politicians and officials of the Balochistan government, one can notice a bitter feeling about their helplessness in taking vital decisions on economic progress of their province.

Because of excessive intervention from Islamabad, even at the micro level, Saindak project took more than 30 years to make a beginning. The much talked about fifth biggest copper deposit Rekodiq project took more than 15 years and has yet to take off.

Saindak and Rekodiq projects and their products-- copper, gold and silver-- will introduce Pakistan for the first time in the international metal market.

“We have a 25 per cent equity share in Rekodiq and in addition we will get two per cent royalty,’’ the Finance Secretary informed. He expects about $1 billion income from the project out of which the provincial government’s annual share will be around Rs18-19 billion.

Enquiries revealed that the remaining 75 per cent shares of Rekodiq are with two companies--a Chilean company, Antoflagasto and a Canadian company, Barrings. Many are not happy over the arrangements which make their province’s share 25 per cent in investment of developing huge infrastructure for laying down of about 300-400 miles road for connecting the plant site in Chagai to Gwadur or may be to Pasni, construction of about 100 megawatt electric power plant, developing logistics for supplying fuel to electric generation plant and a host of ancillary facilities that would be needed for making this copper-gold plant work.

Quite a few politicians feel convinced that Balochistan will be made to share 25 per cent of big investment required for developing the infrastructure and ancillary facilities and the province will get pea nuts in return, while the two investor companies--Chilean and Canadian-will make big money. After 19 years of operation, the Rekodiq will be left with empty holes as all copper and gold will be extracted.

‘’The previous government promised on three occasions to provide detailed information about Rekodiq project to the assembly but never did it’’ Mr Aslam Bhotani, Speaker of Balochistan Assembly said. He was speaker in the last assembly also.

In November 2007, the federal government constituted a 14-member steering committee headed by federal minister for natural resources. The committee included four members from Balochistan but it never met. None of the Baloch politician or bureaucrat was ever taken into confidence on vital mineral projects at a time when there is a growing feeling among people of Balochistan that, ‘’we are the owners of provincial resources and we should take decisions about their use’’.

Ghulam Sabir Khan, President of Balochistan Miners Association in a telephonic conversation from Quetta on Thursday quoted a media report based on a reply given by government on the floor of the assembly. According to the government, 176 persons have been employed in Rekodiq of which 159 are from Chagai district where the project is located. There are seven employees from Sindh, six from Punjab and four from NWFP. But there is no information on number of Balochs who might have gained experience in mining engineering, geological surveys, plant operators and in various technical fields or in management positions.

‘’A friendly co-ordination and exchange of information between federal government and provinces on vital matters is alright but intervention and that too to the extent it renders provincial authority redundant will be resisted,’’ a senior bureaucrat remarked.

‘’We have not been even paid land lease rent of all these projects for last several years’’, the Balochistan Finance Secretary disclosed. He is preparing a Rs1.8 billion claim on this account on the federal government. Many say that late Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti’s tiff with the government centred around his demand for recovery of land lease rent and related issues. Eeventually he lost his life.

In the midst these controversies, the mineral sector offers a hope for Balochistan’s prosperity and progress.

The province has remained the biggest coal producer for the last more than a century. It still produces about two million tons of coal that is mostly used by kiln operators from Punjab and NWFP. “Chamalong coal field has become operational and has provided 10,000 jobs,’’ the provincial finance secretary said. It will increase coal production to about 4.5 million to half a million tons a year.

Saindak has been commissioned under the management of a Chinese company and it generates a revenue of Rs200 million. In the next few weeks, a lead-zince mine at Duddar will be commissioned. The province has 12.5 per cent equity in this project and will get a two per cent royalty.

Sui was commissioned way back in early fifties with a gas reserve of 8.6 trillion cubic feet. It is now fast depleting. Pakistan owes much of its industrial progress to Sui. Gas exploration work at Pir Koh, Loti, Uch and Dera Bugti are going on in full swing.

‘’Unfortunately in the past, neither did we train our manpower nor did we lure potential investors’’, the finance secretary remarked. He also complained that the provinces’ rights were not safeguarded. But now the provincial governments, not only of Balochistan but others also want to have a greater role in development of mining, industry, agriculture and in the services sector.

Balochistan on foreign investors’ radar screen -DAWN - Business; June 30, 2008
 
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Opting for coal-fired fertiliser plants

THE demand for urea far exceeds the domestic production capacity and the country has to import the rest. The main buyers of urea are wheat growers, followed by cotton, rice and sugarcane cultivators.

Fertiliser production is one of the most energy intensive processes. Energy is consumed in the form of natural gas as feedstock and as fuel for generation of electricity and steam. An energy efficient plant takes around 24 MMBTU of natural gas to produce one ton of urea.

There are six urea manufacturers in the country. The Fauji Fertiliser is the largest in this sector with a 59 per cent market share, while Engro, as the second largest urea manufacturer, has about 20 per cent.

Ever since the first fertiliser plant was set up, the government provided subsidy to fertiliser manufacturers by selling feedstock gas, which is around 80 per cent of the raw material cost, at subsidised rate to increase indigenous production and ensure smooth and timely supply of fertiliser to farmers. However, domestic fertiliser production declined during the last fiscal year.

The government provides an indirect subsidy to fertiliser manufacturers by selling feedstock gas at rates ranging up to $1.36 against commercial rates of $4.28 per MMBTU which results in subsidy of around $459.98 million on 157.528 billion cubic feet (BCF) of natural gas consumed by the fertiliser sector.

Due to uneven geographic distribution and difficulties in transportation for long distances, natural gas prices vary across countries. Pakistan is negotiating with Iran for the purchase of natural gas that will cost around $7 per MMBTU.

A barrel of crude oil has a heat value of 5.8 million BTU. This means the crude oil at current price of $135 per barrel is worth roughly $23.5 per MMBTU. On the other side, Henry Hub spot market price of natural gas in New York Stock Market is currently around $12 per MMBTU.

In Pakistan, natural gas is being sold to the fertiliser industry at subsidised rate at a time when the demand for gas is quite competitive since it serves as a major input to electricity generation and provides the preferred fuel input to many other industrial processes.

Because of its importance as an alternative and relatively cheaper fuel, the share of gas in total energy is on the rise. During the last fiscal year, the consumption of gas in transport sector had increased by 27.8 per cent, while household consumption grew by 11.6 per cent followed by fertiliser with 3.5 per cent.

Due to non-availability of natural gas most of dual-fire power plants are currently being run on costly imported furnace oil. Despite present power crises, the government is not allowing any new power plant based on natural gas. The setting of gas power plant takes only one year.

The return on paid-up capital in the fertiliser industry is about 80-100 per cent per annum. Unfortunately, both leading local fertiliser manufacturers while enjoying subsidy on feedstock gas are diverting their profit to other sectors and the country has to import costly urea from international markets creating substantial burden on the national exchequer.

In the last five years the price of urea has grown at an average rate of 6.7 per cent. At present a 50kg bag of urea costs about Rs610 to the farmer. On the flip side, imported urea costs at least Rs1,200/bag. As a result, the farmers get the subsidy of $894 million on five million tons urea produced by local manufacturers, while the heavy burden of imported urea’s cost is being borne by the government.

According to the national fertiliser policy 2001 natural gas subsidy was for five years. The government should bring the prices of natural gas sold to fertiliser units to international level of $7 per MMBTU which Pakistan will pay to Iran. The additional revenue generated can be used to subsidise the farmers by increasing the support prices of farm products.

The government can ensure that the fertiliser usages do not fall by providing the easy credit facilities to farmers and early announcing the support prices of agricultures products. Commercial and industrial natural gas consumers are also demanding removal of subsidy for fertiliser industry.

Removing the subsidy will also motivate the manufacturer to improve the energy efficiency. Most fertiliser units are second hand or old and less efficient, resulting more energy waste. Balancing, modernising and replacement carried out on the some of old plants have improved energy efficiency; still these plants are less energy efficient and environmentally harmful.

As a result, our fertiliser industry consumes more energy than the world average per unit of production. Unfortunately Fertiliser Policy 2001 has also allowed import of second hand plants for the manufacture of fertiliser. The industry can reduce energy consumption by employing advance process technology and catalysts, better stream sizes of urea plants and increased capacity utilisation.

About 77 per cent of ammonia production capacity world over is currently based on natural gas while five to 10 per cent on oil or coal where mostly partial oxidation is used.

In India, about 49 per cent of the total existing urea capacity is based on natural gas while naphtha fuel oil and others sources mainly coal account for 30 per cent, 10 per cent and 11 per cent respectively.

Pakistan can use locally available coal which is cheap for production of fertiliser and more economical through partial oxidation process. While the country continues to face mounting shortage of urea for the next couple of years, the government should encourage investment in fertiliser sector based on locally available coal as feedstock to lessen dependence on imported petroleum products and to increase share of coal in energy mix. Dual technology both for natural gas and coal are also available.

The indigenous coal with very high sulphur and ash contents can be used effectively for co-production of electricity and fertiliser through gasification technology. The local coal can be used more effectively if mining sector is re-organised and mining is developed in the Thar region.

Opting for coal-fired fertiliser plants -DAWN - Business; June 30, 2008
 
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Political economy of poverty reduction

Poverty reduction has been a major official development objective for most developing countries since the 1970s, when it dethroned growth from the high pedestal of development policy.

In Pakistan, the economic discourse on poverty did not receive serious attention until much later, although it entered the political discourse with the populist politics in the wake of the backlash against Ayub Khan’s growth-centred and elitist policies, which were partly responsible for Pakistan’s dismemberment in 1971. The PPP’s “roti, kapra, makan”, echoing the “gharibi hatao” slogan of Indra Gandhi in India, brought poverty to the fore of the political agenda. However, the issue did not enter the academic and research mainstream until much later, save a few pioneering efforts to focus on a subject which – along with other issues of distributive justice – was largely considered a taboo to discourage distraction from more fundamental development issues, centred around the neoclassical shibboleth of economic efficiency.

The political discourse on poverty, however, remained confined largely to rhetoric and as a means for putting down political rivals in electoral politics – occasions for which were few and far between in the case of Pakistan. Politics remained dominated by powerful groups, including the large landlords, the emerging capitalists, the influential bureaucrats and, increasingly, the upper echelons of the military – none of whom had an intrinsic interest in the removal of poverty, except of those who were close to them in economic or social terms.

It was, therefore, even harder for poverty removal to be considered as a serious political issue than it was for it to be meriting attention as an economic and social objective. Its main access to the corridors of power and policy making was principally through the foreign donors – who, in the pursuit of their own global vision of development, found poverty reduction as a necessary sweetener for swallowing the bitter pill they had designed to cure under-development.

Once again, poverty reduction has been catapulted to the forefront of development policy through a confluence of domestic and global factors which have made it an urgent and non-deferrable item on the development agenda. External shocks have often caused massive increases in global poverty. The first oil shock of the 1970s, the debt crisis of the 1980s, the dismantling of the social security system in the former Soviet Union in the early 1990s and the East Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s were among the most cataclysmic episodes which caused enormous increase in poverty incidence in various parts of the globe.

The third oil shock, whose full force has yet to be unleashed, along with the steep rise in the price of food grains and other essential items consumed by the poor, is going to cause a much more severe increase in poverty, jeopardising the achievement of the already threatened defaults in the upbeat MDG programme aimed at halving poverty by 2015, launched at the beginning of the new century at the initiative of the Bush administration. The new US President will have a job on his hands if he wants to fulfil the promise of perhaps the only laudable global initiative of the outgoing administration.

Nearer home, the debate on poverty has been re-ignited with the return to democracy and the return to competitive populist politics in which each party (including the king’s) claims to be doing more for poverty reduction than the rest. This has elevated the status of poverty research from a cottage industry in the past to that of rocket science (no fun intended) involving a bureaucratic ***-race in which numbers are constantly churned out to show which party’s regime had performed better in terms of poverty alleviation. Since the political situation itself is fluid, the numbers are often used with a view to climbing the bureaucratic hierarchy through manipulating them in favour of those who are likely to be important in the ultimate contest for power.

A particularly eerie situation seems to have developed in the Planning Commission – which has been a rudderless ship with an inept crew at the helm for almost a decade and the recent changes are hardly uplifting – where earlier a Chief Economist was fired reportedly for producing poverty numbers which were too high to make the claim of strident growth in the economy less than credible. More recently, the author of the poverty chapter of the government’s Economic Survey, published just before the new budget, was fired by the Planning Commission for reporting too low a poverty number, which the government has since disowned. In both cases, the abrupt administrative actions seem to have been the result of in-fighting about jobs and seniority, in which substantive or methodological issues have been used as a smoke screen.

However, there seems to be more than meets the eye and the events seem to be connected with a World Bank loan of $4.5 billion with substantial policy conditionalities which would become more palatable if poverty incidence was seen to be falling – which was the main conclusion of the poverty chapter in the Economic Survey. Such a conclusion, despite its usefulness attracting substantial foreign capital inflow, however, is in conflict with the ground reality of high inflation of essential food and fuel items, which is pushing millions of people below the poverty line. The new mandarins in the Planning Commission are not ready to lose their shirts so early in the game and have settled on making the author of the report a scapegoat.

These recent incidents need to be viewed in the context of the chequered history of the political arithmetic of poverty and its role in the economic discourse and management. The poverty incidence, along with growth performance, which in Pakistan’s case have tended to move in opposite directions, have often been juxtaposed with the dichotomous periods of civilian or military rule which the country has experienced in the last six decades. Admittedly, any such analysis is likely to be broad-brush in character and does not stand detailed scrutiny. Nonetheless, the temptation to use these numbers in a political debate will remain as long as the political environment is heavily charged.

The stylised facts about poverty reduction are generally well-documented and by now there is a high degree of consensus about the broad pattern along with sharp differences on details, even though there is discontinuity in the household data series, which makes inter-temporal comparisons problematic.

It is generally recognised that people living in the areas that now constitute Pakistan benefited a great deal from the partition in terms of rise in per capita incomes and decline in poverty incidence – more by default than by design – in the first two decades of a united Pakistan, although those living in areas which are now part of Bangladesh shared this experience to a much lesser extent.

Despite the absence of detailed studies on growth, income distribution and poverty incidence for the period before 1971, it is generally surmised that in areas which now form Pakistan poverty decreased quite rapidly in the 1950s, despite high population growth. It was in 1960s, when Ayub Khan’s aggressive industrialisation strategy, with substantial aid from the US, was carried out that problems of poverty and income distribution arose, both within West Pakistan, as well as between East and West Pakistan. Most narratives of poverty reduction in the 1970s and 1980s agree on a substantial reduction in poverty, although the causes and extent of such reduction differ.

The 1990s and 2000s are periods where the greatest controversies about poverty reduction are located. While space limitations do not permit a detailed evaluation, it needs to be pointed out that official sensitivity about the poverty numbers increased in this period as a result of two major factors.

First, despite strong official commitment to the goal of poverty reduction objective, there was an increasing realisation that its pursuit was inevitable for political survival and public perception of the achievement of this goal played an important part in gaining public approval and legitimacy.

Second, the foreign donors/lenders, while espousing the cause of poverty reduction, were much more sanguine about carrying out their agenda of economic reforms and were often willing to sacrifice the former objective at the latter’s altar. This increased the temptation to interfere with the production and dissemination of poverty data and analysis. The World Bank, with its vast resources and experience in this area, continued parallel research on Pakistan’s poverty situation, whose results were often at variance with those of the government.

In an apparent attempt to meet the criticism against such official interference and to give some semblance of respectability and credibility to official figures, the government established, with the help of UNDP and other donors, a Centre for Research in Poverty and Income Distribution (CRPID) in the Planning Commission in 2002. However, the result has been almost the opposite and, in effect, it has “nationalised” the poverty research industry.

From the outset, the centre was turned into a handmaiden of the Planning Commission’s officialdom, defeating the very purpose of conducting “independent research” for which it was created. Its first director was a retired Chief of the Nutrition and Health Section, with little expertise in poverty analysis. His successor, was a macroeconomist, with little familiarity of detailed analysis of statistical data.

The centre lacks enough resources and competent staff to do the kind of comprehensive research needed for understanding and remedying the complex problem of poverty reduction.. Much more than all this, the centre lacked the environment in which basic and independent research could be undertaken, such as a university or a research institute. It would have been much better if the centre had played a co-ordinating role to provide research facilities to various institutions engaged in poverty research and help them draw a comprehensive and continuing agenda of research, including periodic reporting on the current poverty situation.

It is unlikely, however, that such radical changes will take place unless the new government can put its act together in mapping out a comprehensive long-term strategy for economic and social development.

syed.naseem@aya.yale.edu

Political economy of poverty reduction -DAWN - Business; June 30, 2008
 
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Pakistan and Iran sign four agreements

TEHRAN (June 30 2008): Pakistan and Iran signed four documents of co-operation at the 17th session of their Joint Economic Commission (JEC) which concluded here on Sunday. Federal Minister for Finance and Economic Affairs Syed Naveed Qamar led Pakistan's delegation in the meeting while Iranian side was led by Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki.

The four documents included MoU of 17th session of JEC between Pakistan and Iran; MoU between Iran Chamber of Commerce, Industries and Mines and Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI); agreement between two sides on international transport of passengers and goods; and an MoU between Pakistan Television Corporation (PTV), Pakistan Broadcasting Corporation (PBC) and Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB).

The Federal Minister for Finance while speaking on the occasion said that Pakistan-Iran Joint Economic Commission is a useful institutional framework to regulate the economic relations and identify new areas of co-operation.

Referring to changing global economic trends, the Minister highlighted that Pakistan and Iran needed to take positive steps towards greater economic integration. Both countries also need to take initiatives in order to open up their economies and explore possibilities of enhancing trade, the Minister added.

He said, "we look forward to starting the bus service between the two countries by the middle of August which will facilitate travel of Zaireen and other visitors."

The Minister highlighted the investment friendly environment in Pakistan which had facilitated foreign direct investment of over $4 billion in the country during 2007-08. He appreciated Iran's co-operation in the power project sectors of Pakistan. Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki in his speech commended the recent economic and industrial achievements of Pakistan and underlined that the potential of economic co-operation between the two countries was far more than the present volume of trade between them which is $500 million annually.

He said the leadership of the two countries is determined to increase the level of bilateral trade up to US dollar one billion in the near future.

The Iranian Foreign Minister said that the two countries were co-operating on the gas pipeline project and expressed hope that the peace pipeline will benefit not only the two countries but other countries in the region as well.

Naveed Qamar expressed the hope that the volume of bilateral trade between the two countries will be more than US dollar one billion by the next session of JEC.

He said the present democratic government in Pakistan was devising policies of good governance in accordance with the vision of Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto who gave the ultimate sacrifice by laying her life for the cause of democracy and socio-economic development of the people of Pakistan.

The Iranian Minister expressed sympathies on behalf of the government and people of Iran on the assassination of Benazir Bhutto. The signing ceremony of the agreements and MoUs was attended by the Ambassador of Pakistan Shafkat Saeed and senior officials from both countries.

Business Recorder [Pakistan's First Financial Daily]
 
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Islamabad may earn $15 billion through export of marbles: Pasdec chief

ISLAMABAD (June 30 2008): Pakistan could earn $ 15 billion annually through export of world's best class marble, onyx and granite, found in Pakistan alone. Ihsanullah Khan, Chairman, Pakistan Stone Development Company (Pasdec) said this during an interview with Business Recorder.

Pakistan is fortunate in having a string of high mountains abundant with world's best quality marble. It is even better than Brazil, China or India. There is a huge demand for our marbles, he also said. He further said export quality marble must have good finish and gloss. His organisation Pasdec, a subsidiary of the industry ministry.

Ihsanullah Khan has invited the Prime Minister to see the new method of yanking slabs of marbles at Khuzdar mountain quarry. To achieve better result, his organisation, Pasdec, has imported state of art machinery from Italy to introduce economical and safe methods of removing marble slabs of marbles and granites from mountain ranges through blasting.

Later, Ihsanullah Khan planned to assemble similar kind of equipment and machinery at home with the help of Pakistani engineers. With the help of government support as well as from local industry and media he promised to turn around the trade deficit in favour of Pakistan, by exporting more and more of the stuff. 'We could earn more than $ 15 billion through export of granites, marbles, and onyx alone, Ihsanullah added.

THESE ARE THE FOLLOWING EXCERPTS OF THE INTERVIEW:

BR: What are your plans to market marbles and stones? We are told that Pakistan's marble export could be raised by $ 2 billion annually to compete Brazil?

IK: Our mountains range in the north, at Lasbela in Balochistan, as well as Nagrarparkar in Sindh are full of the world's best quality of marbles and granite materials.

We could do better than Brazil, and earn much more than $ 15 billion through exports of this stuff. We got huge demand for our materials, when we displayed them at exhibitions.

BR: What was the main reason for this huge demand?

IK: Pakistan is promoting enterprise household models to support entrepreneurs to produce high value products of mosaics and handicraft craving. In foreign countries, for instance, China and the USA, we were told to sell all the exhibit materials we brought, and they asked for more because we had the best and the purest variety of marble.

BR: Tell us more about your marketing plans?

IK: we are also planning to promote works within the country, by training women entrepreneurs in handcraft carving, inlay and mosaics such as table tops of exquisite beauty and design.

We have established masonry and mosaic training workshops to develop entrepreneur skills in women to provide them self-employment. Through this method of capacity building we create value-added market for marble products. We also help women entrepreneurs to establish links with foreign agencies interested in importing finished marble products from Pakistan.

BR: Tell us more about this demonstration quarry at Khuzdar.

IK: We will demonstrate to the Prime Minister of Pakistan the scientific quarry practice of extracting square block. This method will have immense trickle down effect, and have tremendous impact on quarry workers who now employ century old method of blasting and thus damage mountain quarries.

Due to lack of technology, trained manpower and precise equipment the country is incurring losses to about 73 percent in cutting marbles and granites out of mountain ranges.

We intend to reduce the loss of our valuable natural resources. Pasdec will now embark on a number of sector development projects to do business based on international practice, and we will create a skilled work force of quarry masters, quarry technicians, machine operators and helpers.

Thus, Pasdec projects are aimed at creating a direct employment work force in rural areas by opening up 10-mountain quarry to show in extracting square blocks. We also intend to establish five Marble Cities.

BR: But isn't Khuzdar in tribal area, where is law and order situation problem? How do you get to work there?

IK: No we don't have kind of this problem. The tribes, who are all locals, they don't bother us. We are creating job opportunities for the local people who would get benefit from our projects, he added.

Business Recorder [Pakistan's First Financial Daily]
 
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Argentina investors urged to invest in different sectors

ISLAMABAD (June 30 2008): Pakistan is an attractive destination for foreign investors and Argentina investors should take advantage of this opportunity by investing in different sectors of Pakistan's economy, stated Muhammad Ijaz Abbasi, President, Islamabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ICCI) while exchanging views with Eduardo Bustamante, First Secretary, Argentine Embassy on Pak-Argentina trade and economic relations at ICCI.

He informed that in 2006-07, total trade between Pakistan and Argentina stood at 106.398 million dollars out of which Pakistan's exports were 42.07 million dollars and imports from Argentina were 64.328 million dollars showing a trade balance in favour of Argentina of 22.258 million dollars.

Muhammad Ijaz Abbasi said that more than 50 percent population of Pakistan is quite young which is emerging as a thriving middle class and is an attractive market for foreign investors. He said that Argentina has expertise in cooking oil, iron, steel, CNG & organic chemicals and Pakistan offer lot of investment potential in these sectors.

He said that Pakistan is the second largest user of CNG products in the world while government is focusing more on diverting its transportation system from oil to gas, which is more environment-friendly, and Argentina can reap rich benefits by investing in CNG sector of Pakistan.

President ICCI said that new government has shown its intentions to formulate business friendly and growth oriented policies and foreign investors should benefit from it by bringing in their capital and technology to Pakistan.

He said that Pakistan offers quite cheap manpower as compared to other countries and this can be a plus point for foreign investors.

He said that many foreign companies have invested in Pakistan's telecom, pharmaceutical, banking, construction and other industries and are earning high returns here with the contribution of our cheap, but highly talented manpower.

Muhammad Ijaz Abbasi emphasised for regular exchange of business delegations between the two countries to explore more business opportunities. He said Argentina should relax its visa processing system for Pakistani business community to enhance trade and economic ties with each other. He informed that ICCI is arranging exchange of business delegations with different countries while in near future ICCI would also plan to take a business delegation to Argentina and sought collaboration of Argentina Embassy to facilitate them.

Speaking on the occasion, Eduardo Bustamante, First Secretary of Argentine Embassy said that his country is keen to enhance its present trade volume with Pakistan. He said that there is a need to further enhance collaboration between ICCI and Argentina Embassy to facilitate the exchange of business delegations between the two countries. He said that Argentina companies are showing interest to invest in Pakistan's CNG and pharmaceutical sectors as Argentina is known for producing CNG kits and cylinders and in future, some of their companies would be looking to start cylinders manufacturing in Pakistan.

First Secretary of Argentina Embassy said that a pharmaceutical company BAGO is investing 5 million dollars in Pakistan for manufacturing of pharmaceutical products. He further informed that Argentina is also interested for collaboration with Pakistan in dairy sector and installing a milk processing plant in Pakistan.

He said that Argentina would also collaborate with Pakistan in agriculture sector and can supply agricultural equipment as per requirement of Pakistan.

He informed that trade delegation of Argentina is planning to visit Pakistan in 2009 to meet with Pakistani business communities at Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad. He said that on the visit, Argentina Embassy would like to arrange B-to-B meetings with the concerned counterparts. He further informed that Argentina Embassy would facilitate Pakistani businessmen in the grant of their business visas so that they could visit Argentina and said that on the recommendation of ICCI, early processing of visa applications shall be ensured.

Business Recorder [Pakistan's First Financial Daily]
 
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Work on Diamer-Bhasha Dam to start next year: WAPDA

LAHORE: Detailed engineering design and tender documents of the multi-purpose Diamer-Bhasha Dam Project has been completed. The international panel of experts has reviewed all the studies and details, chairman Water and Power Development Authority (WAPDA), Shakil Durrani said Monday. Mr Durrani said the construction on the project would commence next year following international competitive biddings and every effort would be made to ensure that the high professional standard quality and safety were maintained. It will help increase the ratio of low-cost hydel power in National Grid, he added. During a presentation on Diamer-Bhasha Dam Project, attended by the project consultants, senior officers of the ministry of Water and Power and Planning Commission, former members (Water) and members of the Authority, he said, “The Diamer-Bhasha is a project of immense importance, as it is the largest project ever executed in any sector in the country.” He informed an amount of Rs 200 million has been allocated for the project in the federal budget 2008-09, while the pre-qualification process of the contractors has already been initiated. The consultants briefed the participants 272 metre high Diamer-Bhasha Dam would be highest Roller Compacted Concrete (RCC) dam in the world with more than 100 kilometers long reservoir. staff report

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Rs 990 billion revenue target achieved
SOHAIL SARFRAZ

ISLAMABAD (July 01 2008): The provisional revenue collection is likely to exceed Rs 1 trillion in 2007-08 against the revised target of Rs 990 billion, as the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) touched the figure of nearly Rs 990 billion by the end of June, reflecting extraordinary performance during last year.

Sources told Business Recorder on Monday that the board had collected around Rs 971.3 billion till June 28. The provisional revenue collection figure for June 2008 has reached nearly Rs 144 billion against the required amount of Rs 140 billion, meeting the target of Rs 990 billion.

The board has estimated to collect an amount over and above Rs 24 billion on June 30, taking final collection to Rs 990 billion during 2007-08. Incorporating figures of June 29 and 30, tax managers were confident that the FBR might present the figure of nearly Rs 1 trillion before the meeting of Economic Co-ordination Committee (ECC) of the Cabinet.

Break-up of revised target of Rs 990 billion showed that direct taxes target was fixed at Rs 385 billion, whereas indirect taxes target was Rs 605 billion for 2007-08. Tax authorities have expressed hope that the board would meet both direct and indirect tax targets for the fiscal year. It is expected that the FBR would officially announce collection figures on July 3 to celebrate record collection in the year.

The revenue collection from National Bank of Pakistan (NBP) branches in far-flung areas would also be instrumental in improving revenue collection in the next one/two days. On the other hand, sales tax amnesty scheme for payment of principal amount for wavier of penalty and additional tax expired on June 30.

The amount collected from amnesty scheme would also be incorporated in the overall sales tax collection. The sales tax collection from imports and domestic consumption would be updated in the next one-two days.

The withholding tax collection, better monitoring, books adjustments and income tax collection from demands raised would also help in improving revenue collection. The compilation of final figures of collection made in June 29-30 would take the total to Rs 1 trillion.

Sources said that the FBR has broken all previous records of revenue collection, evident from the provisional collection in June. This is for the first time that the board is going to cross psychological barrier of Rs 1 trillion.

It is worth mentioning that the board had collected Rs 851.3 billion (net) during the first eleven months (July-May) of 2007-08 as compared to Rs 722.2 billion in the same period of last year thereby posting an increase of 18 percent. In May 2008, the FBR collected Rs 87.7 billion which is 33.5 percent more than the same period of last year, bolstered by strong growth of 42.1 percent for sales tax (domestic activity 80.6 percent) and 33.4 percent for customs duty.

Business Recorder [Pakistan's First Financial Daily]
 
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Government considering shifting KPT, PQA workload to Gwadar
MUSHTAQ GHUMMAN

ISLAMABAD (July 01 2008): The government is considering to shift 20 percent workload of Port Qasim and Karachi Port to Gwadar Port, on the recommendation of Balochistan government, official sources told Business Recorder. Gwadar Port is not yet fully operational.

Despite its outsourcing to Port of Singapore Authority, the element of inertia is evident, which requires similar government support as was earlier extended to Port Qasim at its initial stages through allocation of assured cargo, sources quoted Secretary, Ministry of Ports and Shipping Muhammad Saleem Khan, as saying in a proposal to the Prime Minister.

According to sources, the Ports and Shipping Ministry Secretary has expressed the view that Gwadar Port has already handled a wheat-carrying ship in March 2008, and the port operator has adequate arrangements for handling any fresh consignments. Balochistan government has also proposed that 2.5 million tons wheat, being imported by the federal government, should be handled at Gwadar Port to strengthen operational activity.

Besides, the Balochistan Governor has recommended that 20 percent of the workload of other ports should be shifted to Gwadar. Sources said that the Secretaries' committee, headed by Finance Minister, in its meeting on June 18 had recommended that the federal government should at least allow import of wheat destined to Balochistan through Gwadar Port.

Business Recorder [Pakistan's First Financial Daily]
 
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Pakistan in need of increased economic aid: Gilani tells Boucher

ISLAMABAD (July 01 2008): Prime Minister Syed Yousaf Raza Gilani has said it is often not realised that one incident of terrorism in Pakistan leads to flight of foreign capital from the country besides discouraging the flow of foreign investment. Pakistan is in need of increased economic assistance not only to stabilise democracy but also to fulfil our promise of providing better life to the people, he further said.

He made these remarks while talking to Richard Boucher, US Assistant Secretary of State, who called on him at Prime Minister's House here on Monday morning. Gillani said that terrorism is a global phenomenon and a serious threat to humanity, ruining global peace and Pakistan is fighting extremism in its own national interest and not to serve the objectives of another country. Similarly, it was a terrorist act that claimed the life of Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto Shaheed.

He added, "Pakistan is convinced that there is a need to address the factors that encourage terrorism." With the inception of new political government, Pakistan has developed a three-pronged strategy to cement peace and security in the tribal areas in consultation with its coalition partners, which encompasses political, economic and security dimensions. The government has initiated dialogues with tribal elders, which is supported by the general public, he said.

On the other front, Gilani emphasised early setting up of the Reconstruction Opportunity Zones (ROZs) to accelerate economic activity in the troubled areas of NWFP and Balochistan so that more job opportunities could be created. He also stressed the need for providing assured access to US markets to goods produced in these ROZs.

On Saturday the government carried out operation against terrorists in the areas of Khyber Agency and destroyed the hideouts of militants, he told the delegation. In a statement, Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani has said that Pakistan greatly values its relationship with the US and is keen to strengthen it covering diplomatic, political, economic, defence and security fields.

"We are desirous of a broad-based and long-term relationship focussing especially on bilateral co-operation in trade, energy, investment, science & technology, educational and cultural fields with a view to bringing the people of the two countries closer to each other," he said.

Gilani said that he had no doubt that the victory of democratic and progressive forces in the country especially in the NWFP and Balochistan provinces and the formation of broad-based democratic governments at the Centre and in the provinces would further strengthen the close and co-operative relationship that existed between the two countries.

He said that there is a need for better monitoring of the borders from the Afghanistan side as our side has 900 check posts compared to about 100 such posts on the Afghanistan side, which is inadequate. The Prime Minister said Pakistan is keen to see a stable and strong Afghanistan in its neighbourhood which is equally good for both the countries and for regional peace and stability.

Pakistan is making utmost efforts to strengthen security along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border including the installation of biometric system on entry points. He said Pakistan has also offered to fence the border. Pakistan needs help all the more urgently in view of the steep rise in the global prices of oil and food commodities.

Boucher said that United States has great interest in the success of democratic government and economic well-being of the people of Pakistan. He said that US is ready to help resettle Afghan refugees in their country.

The meeting was also attended by US Ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson, Special Assistant to the US President Mark Webber, Advisor to Prime Minister on Interior, Rehman Malik, Advisor to Prime Minister on National Security, Mahmud Durrani, and Acting Secretary, Foreign Affairs. The Prime Minister recalled his useful meeting with President Bush at Sharm Al-Shaikh and said he looks forward to meeting the President in Washington next month.

US Assistant Secretary of State, Richard Boucher also called on Rehman A Malik and discussed with him the details of operation carried out in the tribal areas particularly in Khyber Agency. Malik said the situation in NWFP is under control and there is no law and order situation, however there are some miscreants who will be dealt with iron hand.

Later, Boucher also met Advisor to Prime Minister on National Security, Mehmud Durrani and discussed general security position in NWFP and Balochistan. Afterwards, talking to the US Congressional delegation led by Senator Cardin, the Prime Minister said, "We want the US to help Pakistan rebuild its economy."

Highlighting the importance Pakistan attaches to its relations with the United States, the Prime Minister underscored the desire to deepen bilateral co-operation in diverse fields, including defence, trade, economy, energy and social sectors. He told the delegation that the government's foremost priorities included fighting extremism and terrorism in Pakistan's own interest as well as rebuilding the economy.

The Prime Minister also apprised the members of Congress of the three-pronged counter-terrorism strategy. He further underlined the need for accelerating the ROZs initiative stressing that it would help expand economic opportunities and generate jobs.

The Prime Minister also underscored the vital interest Pakistan has in a stable Afghanistan. He apprised the delegation of the steps taken by Pakistan to strengthen security along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border and entertain 3 million Afghan refugees. The Prime Minister stressed the need for the international community to support these efforts.

The members of the congressional delegation highlighted the strategic importance of the US relations with Pakistan and reciprocated the desire to expand bilateral co-operation in various fields. They affirmed US readiness to support Pakistan in its efforts to address the security issues and to achieve economic progress over the long term.

They said that the US regards Pakistan as its important and strategic ally and is keen to closely work with the democratic government to help it overcome its economic problems. They said, "Pakistan is a linchpin in the region and we want to expand our bilateral co-operation in all areas including trade, investment and security matters."

The Congressional delegation included Senator Benjamin Cardin, Congressman Zach Wamp, Congressman Robert Aderholt, Congressman Mike McIntyre and Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez. The meeting was also attended by Advisor to Prime Minister on Interior, Rehman A Malik, Advisor to Prime Minister on National Security, Mahmud Durrani, and Acting Secretary, Foreign Affairs.

Business Recorder [Pakistan's First Financial Daily]
 
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