FOOLS_NIGHTMARE
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- ADB loan was signed at rate of 1% for a period of 40 years.
- Pakistan struggling to meet its external financing obligations.
- Minister Ayaz Sadiq rules out possibility of Pakistan's default.
Floods caused by abnormal monsoon rains and a melting glacier submerged huge swathes of the country earlier this year and killed nearly 1,700 people, the majority of them children and women.
Minister Ayaz Sadiq said the concessionary ADB loan was signed at the rate of 1% for a period of 40 years.
"The impression that's being spread is that God forbid, Pakistan is going to be bankrupt, or it is in financial crisis. There is nothing like that," Sadiq said in a recorded message.
"Had there been such a situation, the ADB wouldn't have signed these loans with us today."
Pakistan is struggling to meet its external financing obligations in the face of low foreign exchange reserves that are barely enough to cover a month of imports. It is also beset by decades-high inflation.
The country has been trying to approach allies to seek financial support, and a ninth review of the International Monetary Fund for a 2019 bailout programme has been pending since September.
Pakistan signs $475m flood loan deal with ADB
Minister Ayaz Sadiq says concessionary ADB loan was signed at rate of 1% for a period of 40 years
www.geo.tv