Indeed, you are spot on here.
In the end consumption and supplies is really about
volumes over prices. Prices can get complicated (for directed comparisons in whatever units) given the interlinking mechanisms there (big one in many cases is your local currency vs world currencies and you local inflation vs world inflation etc).
Volumes however remains simple...people can basically understand if you wanted to eat 2 apples today, but you could only get and eat one...you could only meet half of your requirement etc.
Volumes really is the first principles kind of thing.
It is thus instructive to have a look at the important details in some manner of better resolution to try get an idea of volumes (I am keeping things deliberately very simple for audience here since there is lot of lingo to describe these things):
https://oec.world/en/profile/country/pak/
Before I proceed, let me just say this is looking at GOODS only (services trade and remittances etc adds more layers to analyse further as to the general health of pakistan forex + economy...but for simplicity sake for now stick with goods)
Let us compare the month of highest import in current relative timeframe (may 2018) to the most recent month available (jan 2020).
Jan 2020 is also good because it by an large avoids the severe turbulence ongoing now because of the corona crisis + wild oil (energy) price movements.
View attachment 649820
Some extra info thats going to be handy:
https://www.macrotrends.net/1369/crude-oil-price-history-chart
https://www.xe.com/currencycharts/?from=USD&to=PKR&view=5Y
View attachment 649821 View attachment 649822
Looking at imports first. They vary greatly in demand elasticity (i.e consumption to price change).
Overall the trend is fairly linear in this time period (may 2018 to jan 2020)
i.e a fairly linear decline from 5.8 billion to 4.1 billion. A change of about 1.7 billion spread over about 20 months.
Thus at first glance a 10 billion total distributed reduction (in OP subject) looks fairly correct.
But like you said, is this good or bad?
Let us look at the most inelastic import (and massive base input) for indication of Pakistan economy ...i.e energy (esp. given its a energy consumer rather than producer).
May 2018 = 1.64 billion USD import
Jan 2020 = 1.15 billion USD import
From the oil price of these two months (and given Pakistan imports this in USD), one would assume an external demanded price ratio pressure (jan20/may18), ceterus paribus of roughly:
51/68 = 0.75
The actual realised ratio was: 1.15/1.64 = 0.70 .... so its fairly close, maybe about 5% volume erosion....which is low and proves this kind of good is also fairly inelastic.
However this shows Pakistan economy is fairly stagnant (since I am unaware of any massive upsurge in local primary energy sourcing to replace+substitute, but maybe
@niaz knows more) in this time period given one expects an increase in energy volume consumption in a developing country from year to year (as it is a key base input for so much economic activity).
In any case the reduction in energy import seems to account for about 500 million USD per month in todays downstream snapshot.
But that still leaves (1.7 - 0.5) = 1.2 billion USD reduction to account for...and where.
Looking at OEC data again, some notable reductions were as follows:
Machines - 300 million
Chemicals - 250 million
Transport - 200 million
Metals - 150 million
Textiles (mostly inputs) - 100 million
A lot of these look like fairly base input stuff....esp. given Pakistan did not (and has not over this time period) adequately invested into capital goods production (last few times I looked into it) to explain these declines by say larger local volumetric production and supply for its economy.
Ceterus paribus, may 2018 import of 5.8 billion was about 5.8 *115 = 667 billion PKR worth of stuff
jan 2020 was: 4.1 *155 = 635 billion PKR worth of stuff.
Thus 1st stage cursory "volumetric" you can see there was not a huge decline from a local-oriented perspective.
But 2nd stage volumetric would have to account for inflation of that PKR too (esp relative to the USD inflation rate).
This would essentially be near 1:1 correlation with the overall terms of trade decline for how much a Pakistani resident (working within confines of his economy) has to work (or use wealth) to produce the means to pay for which to consume these things the local economy is not providing readily and competitively (i.e imports from foreign economies).
Whatever the accumulated total inflation has been of PKR (in this time period may18 - jan20) would thus be very close to the extra hours and extra savings and extra everything the layman in Pakistan has to put in to pay his way for what pakistan cannot locally supply.
The govt+corporates also does their bit through top off loans and attracting investments etc....through the capital side forces and pressure.....as this is the route to dip into more long term stuff (that defines the capital account in first place) and larger national+system credibility that the laypeople cannot (who operate in current account exclusively).
It has not been promising trend in Pakistan's case from what I have seen so far....either previous admin or this current one.
Or one can simply assume (since its import side) volumes are largely correlated to the USD amounts w.r.t final consumption level since USD was lot more stable (and a much bigger buffer to begin with) in this time period.
Coming to export side, its lot simpler overall (since Pakistan is not a huge exporter relative to its imports):
May 2018: 2.2 billion USD
Jan 2020 : 2 billion USD
Looking at the chart too, it seems fairly stable at this level overall per month.
Volumetrically (1st phase) though, given depreciation of PKR in this time period from 115 to 155....that means:
2.2 *115 = 253 bn PKR
versus 2*155 = 310 bn PKR
First glance seems good increase....but in the 2nd phase you would put in the relative inflation to get the real final volumetric trend (to see actual final physical materials activities efforts).
Once you do that, again it paints stark picture of stagnancy overall.
Actually I leave it as an exercise for members here to find/calc that inflation number for this period if they are interested. It is a vital cog in final transmission of reality (after forex forces and PKR:USD exchange rate) to the people of Pakistan on the ground.
My conclusion:
Pakistan needs deep deep apolitical institutional reform and massive sustained development of corporate structures.
You simply cannot tinker and dabble with some cherry-picked numbers here and there of foreign sector activity....this is political propaganda method.
@SQ8 @farhan_9909 @jaibi @Joe Shearer @PanzerKiel @Bilal Khan (Quwa)
N.B I wrote this all in one go with little proof-reading, please excuse any errors.