What's new

Pakistan’s fiscal deficit widens to Rs1.13tr in 6MFY21

muhammadhafeezmalik

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jan 21, 2015
Messages
5,417
Reaction score
-17
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan

Amid a record Rs1.138 trillion fiscal deficit in first half of the current fiscal year, the government has called the inaugural meeting of the 10th National Finance Commission (NFC) on Feb 18 to review overall fiscal position of the centre and the provinces.


The Ministry of Finance on Wednesday said the fiscal deficit as percentage of GDP stood at 2.5pc in first half (July-December) of 2020-21. The country witnessed 2.7pc of fiscal deficit during the same period in 2018-19 — the first year under the PTI government. However, in absolute numbers the deficit had amounted to Rs1.030tr.


In first half of 2019-20, the fiscal deficit had amounted to 2.3pc of GDP or Rs995bn.


The fiscal data released by the finance ministry put the total revenue in first half of FY21 at Rs3.35tr, or 7.4pc of GDP, while tax revenues came in at Rs2.455tr, or 5.4pc of GDP. Non-tax revenue on the other hand amounted to Rs895bn or 2pc of GDP.


On the other hand, total expenditure in 6MFY21 amounted to Rs4.489tr, or 9.9pc of GDP. This included current expenditure of Rs4.029tr, or 8.8pc of GDP. Both current total expenditure and current expenditure were higher than last year even defence expenditure was lower than last year.


The mark-up payments in 6MFY21 amounted to Rs1.475tr against Rs1.28tr of same period last year. The defence expenditure this year amounted to Rs486bn compared to Rs530bn of comparable period last year. Development expenditure has also been lower this year at Rs414bn in first six months compared with Rs464bn of last year.


First NFC meeting convened on 18th

Primary balance (deficit excluding debt servicing) came in at 0.7pc of surplus, or Rs337bn, compared to Rs286bn or 0.6pc of GDP last year.


It is in this background that the centre has set a two-point agenda for the NFC meeting. All the stakeholders have been asked to come up with their latest fiscal positions and the future projections. The first meeting would also be setting the stage for the NFC discussions including formation of various sub-groups on various sectors including the shape of future scope of fiscal arrangements between the centre and the provinces and among the provinces.


Under the reconstituted NFC, Finance Minister Hafeez Shaikh is the chairman of the commission. The NFC has been in limbo for almost two years owing to legal challenges arising out of Mr Shaikh’s portfolio as adviser to the prime minister on finance who has now been re-designated as minister for finance besides controversies of provincial private memberships.


The reconstituted nine-member NFC is now led by the federal minister for finance and comprises four provincial finance ministers, besides non-statutory members Tariq Bajwa from Punjab, Dr Asad Sayeed from Sindh, Musharraf Rasool Cyan from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Dr Kaiser Bengali from Balochistan.


The TORs of the NFC suggest that the centre would like the provinces to share the financial burden of national development projects and take some unspecified additional fiscal responsibilities. Three broad ToRs have been included in the NFC notification.


These include issues relating to sharing of financial expenses incurred or to be incurred (i) by the federation in respect of subjects and matters falling within the domain of the provinces and vice versa (ii) by the federation and/or provinces in respect of trans-provincial matters, and (iii) for national projects to be shared by the federation and the provinces.


The ToR relating to clause 2 of Article 160 of the Constitution that required the 10th NFC to distribute between the centre and the provinces the net proceeds of five major tax categories as defined in clause 3 of Article 160, besides making grants-in-aid by the federal government to the provincial governments would remain unchanged.


The NFC will also set powers and conditions for the federal and provincial governments for borrowing, besides any other matter to finance referred to it by the president.


The 9th NFC was constituted on April 24, 2015 and reconstituted a couple of times in 2016, 2018 and 2019 owing to change in governments and replacement of non-statutory members, but it failed to conclude a new award as no meaningful and structured dialogue could be sustained.


As a result, multiple calls from various quarters, including the finance ministry, the armed forces and the International Monetary Fund, to rebalance the transfer of larger chunk of divisible pool resources to the provinces under the 7th NFC award have remained unaddressed.


Also, the 7th NFC award announced in 2009 continued with annual extensions and remains in place even now instead of constitutional term of five years that came to an end on June 30, 2015. As per the Constitution, provincial shares in each NFC award could not be reduced.


The four provinces are collectively entitled to 57.5pc of divisible pool taxes, besides revenue from income tax, wealth tax, capital value tax, general sales tax, customs duties and federal excise under the 7th NFC award.


The provincial governments get their horizontal shares on the basis of population, poverty, revenue collection and inverse population density, allowing Punjab to get 51.74pc, Sindh 24.55pc, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 14.62pc and Balochistan 9.09pc share.

 
1612424902920.png
 
I thought the fiscal deficit was decreasing????
I dont go much in depth but the life of a common man is becoming very difficult, so anyone saying we are improving economically should be slapped on the face.
 
Amid a record Rs1.138 trillion fiscal deficit in first half of the current fiscal year, the government has called the inaugural meeting of the 10th National Finance Commission (NFC) on Feb 18 to review overall fiscal position of the centre and the provinces.


The Ministry of Finance on Wednesday said the fiscal deficit as percentage of GDP stood at 2.5pc in first half (July-December) of 2020-21. The country witnessed 2.7pc of fiscal deficit during the same period in 2018-19 — the first year under the PTI government. However, in absolute numbers the deficit had amounted to Rs1.030tr.


In first half of 2019-20, the fiscal deficit had amounted to 2.3pc of GDP or Rs995bn.


The fiscal data released by the finance ministry put the total revenue in first half of FY21 at Rs3.35tr, or 7.4pc of GDP, while tax revenues came in at Rs2.455tr, or 5.4pc of GDP. Non-tax revenue on the other hand amounted to Rs895bn or 2pc of GDP.


On the other hand, total expenditure in 6MFY21 amounted to Rs4.489tr, or 9.9pc of GDP. This included current expenditure of Rs4.029tr, or 8.8pc of GDP. Both current total expenditure and current expenditure were higher than last year even defence expenditure was lower than last year.


The mark-up payments in 6MFY21 amounted to Rs1.475tr against Rs1.28tr of same period last year. The defence expenditure this year amounted to Rs486bn compared to Rs530bn of comparable period last year. Development expenditure has also been lower this year at Rs414bn in first six months compared with Rs464bn of last year.




Primary balance (deficit excluding debt servicing) came in at 0.7pc of surplus, or Rs337bn, compared to Rs286bn or 0.6pc of GDP last year.


It is in this background that the centre has set a two-point agenda for the NFC meeting. All the stakeholders have been asked to come up with their latest fiscal positions and the future projections. The first meeting would also be setting the stage for the NFC discussions including formation of various sub-groups on various sectors including the shape of future scope of fiscal arrangements between the centre and the provinces and among the provinces.


Under the reconstituted NFC, Finance Minister Hafeez Shaikh is the chairman of the commission. The NFC has been in limbo for almost two years owing to legal challenges arising out of Mr Shaikh’s portfolio as adviser to the prime minister on finance who has now been re-designated as minister for finance besides controversies of provincial private memberships.


The reconstituted nine-member NFC is now led by the federal minister for finance and comprises four provincial finance ministers, besides non-statutory members Tariq Bajwa from Punjab, Dr Asad Sayeed from Sindh, Musharraf Rasool Cyan from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Dr Kaiser Bengali from Balochistan.


The TORs of the NFC suggest that the centre would like the provinces to share the financial burden of national development projects and take some unspecified additional fiscal responsibilities. Three broad ToRs have been included in the NFC notification.


These include issues relating to sharing of financial expenses incurred or to be incurred (i) by the federation in respect of subjects and matters falling within the domain of the provinces and vice versa (ii) by the federation and/or provinces in respect of trans-provincial matters, and (iii) for national projects to be shared by the federation and the provinces.


The ToR relating to clause 2 of Article 160 of the Constitution that required the 10th NFC to distribute between the centre and the provinces the net proceeds of five major tax categories as defined in clause 3 of Article 160, besides making grants-in-aid by the federal government to the provincial governments would remain unchanged.


The NFC will also set powers and conditions for the federal and provincial governments for borrowing, besides any other matter to finance referred to it by the president.


The 9th NFC was constituted on April 24, 2015 and reconstituted a couple of times in 2016, 2018 and 2019 owing to change in governments and replacement of non-statutory members, but it failed to conclude a new award as no meaningful and structured dialogue could be sustained.


As a result, multiple calls from various quarters, including the finance ministry, the armed forces and the International Monetary Fund, to rebalance the transfer of larger chunk of divisible pool resources to the provinces under the 7th NFC award have remained unaddressed.


Also, the 7th NFC award announced in 2009 continued with annual extensions and remains in place even now instead of constitutional term of five years that came to an end on June 30, 2015. As per the Constitution, provincial shares in each NFC award could not be reduced.


The four provinces are collectively entitled to 57.5pc of divisible pool taxes, besides revenue from income tax, wealth tax, capital value tax, general sales tax, customs duties and federal excise under the 7th NFC award.


The provincial governments get their horizontal shares on the basis of population, poverty, revenue collection and inverse population density, allowing Punjab to get 51.74pc, Sindh 24.55pc, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 14.62pc and Balochistan 9.09pc share.


it’s a huge pet peeve of mine that Pakistan’s foreign debt is always highlighted in Pak rupees to confuse the people. If the debt is foreign call it out in US$ as most of the world does why hide it in the local currency!

can some one please convert this in US$

k
 
I thought the fiscal deficit was decreasing????
I dont go much in depth but the life of a common man is becoming very difficult, so anyone saying we are improving economically should be slapped on the face.


that is the current acc aka external deficit


what the OP is mentioning = local debt aka govt borrowing deficit


govt borrows from both local and foreign lenders
 
Amid a record Rs1.138 trillion fiscal deficit in first half of the current fiscal year, the government has called the inaugural meeting of the 10th National Finance Commission (NFC) on Feb 18 to review overall fiscal position of the centre and the provinces.


The Ministry of Finance on Wednesday said the fiscal deficit as percentage of GDP stood at 2.5pc in first half (July-December) of 2020-21. The country witnessed 2.7pc of fiscal deficit during the same period in 2018-19 — the first year under the PTI government. However, in absolute numbers the deficit had amounted to Rs1.030tr.


In first half of 2019-20, the fiscal deficit had amounted to 2.3pc of GDP or Rs995bn.


The fiscal data released by the finance ministry put the total revenue in first half of FY21 at Rs3.35tr, or 7.4pc of GDP, while tax revenues came in at Rs2.455tr, or 5.4pc of GDP. Non-tax revenue on the other hand amounted to Rs895bn or 2pc of GDP.


On the other hand, total expenditure in 6MFY21 amounted to Rs4.489tr, or 9.9pc of GDP. This included current expenditure of Rs4.029tr, or 8.8pc of GDP. Both current total expenditure and current expenditure were higher than last year even defence expenditure was lower than last year.


The mark-up payments in 6MFY21 amounted to Rs1.475tr against Rs1.28tr of same period last year. The defence expenditure this year amounted to Rs486bn compared to Rs530bn of comparable period last year. Development expenditure has also been lower this year at Rs414bn in first six months compared with Rs464bn of last year.




Primary balance (deficit excluding debt servicing) came in at 0.7pc of surplus, or Rs337bn, compared to Rs286bn or 0.6pc of GDP last year.


It is in this background that the centre has set a two-point agenda for the NFC meeting. All the stakeholders have been asked to come up with their latest fiscal positions and the future projections. The first meeting would also be setting the stage for the NFC discussions including formation of various sub-groups on various sectors including the shape of future scope of fiscal arrangements between the centre and the provinces and among the provinces.


Under the reconstituted NFC, Finance Minister Hafeez Shaikh is the chairman of the commission. The NFC has been in limbo for almost two years owing to legal challenges arising out of Mr Shaikh’s portfolio as adviser to the prime minister on finance who has now been re-designated as minister for finance besides controversies of provincial private memberships.


The reconstituted nine-member NFC is now led by the federal minister for finance and comprises four provincial finance ministers, besides non-statutory members Tariq Bajwa from Punjab, Dr Asad Sayeed from Sindh, Musharraf Rasool Cyan from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Dr Kaiser Bengali from Balochistan.


The TORs of the NFC suggest that the centre would like the provinces to share the financial burden of national development projects and take some unspecified additional fiscal responsibilities. Three broad ToRs have been included in the NFC notification.


These include issues relating to sharing of financial expenses incurred or to be incurred (i) by the federation in respect of subjects and matters falling within the domain of the provinces and vice versa (ii) by the federation and/or provinces in respect of trans-provincial matters, and (iii) for national projects to be shared by the federation and the provinces.


The ToR relating to clause 2 of Article 160 of the Constitution that required the 10th NFC to distribute between the centre and the provinces the net proceeds of five major tax categories as defined in clause 3 of Article 160, besides making grants-in-aid by the federal government to the provincial governments would remain unchanged.


The NFC will also set powers and conditions for the federal and provincial governments for borrowing, besides any other matter to finance referred to it by the president.


The 9th NFC was constituted on April 24, 2015 and reconstituted a couple of times in 2016, 2018 and 2019 owing to change in governments and replacement of non-statutory members, but it failed to conclude a new award as no meaningful and structured dialogue could be sustained.


As a result, multiple calls from various quarters, including the finance ministry, the armed forces and the International Monetary Fund, to rebalance the transfer of larger chunk of divisible pool resources to the provinces under the 7th NFC award have remained unaddressed.


Also, the 7th NFC award announced in 2009 continued with annual extensions and remains in place even now instead of constitutional term of five years that came to an end on June 30, 2015. As per the Constitution, provincial shares in each NFC award could not be reduced.


The four provinces are collectively entitled to 57.5pc of divisible pool taxes, besides revenue from income tax, wealth tax, capital value tax, general sales tax, customs duties and federal excise under the 7th NFC award.


The provincial governments get their horizontal shares on the basis of population, poverty, revenue collection and inverse population density, allowing Punjab to get 51.74pc, Sindh 24.55pc, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 14.62pc and Balochistan 9.09pc share.

I am confused?????

Is it 2.5% how can that be worse???

Pakistan has seen 10+% fiscal deficits

Whats going ..do i have to go back to school? Is my math off??
I thought the fiscal deficit was decreasing????
I dont go much in depth but the life of a common man is becoming very difficult, so anyone saying we are improving economically should be slapped on the face.
Fiscal deficit doesnt matter in recovery phase as long as your current account is okay

But fiscal deficit will always lead to CAD

Anyway anything less then 5% is very good for economy like ours
And it was 2.5% for first 6 months
I thought the fiscal deficit was decreasing????
I dont go much in depth but the life of a common man is becoming very difficult, so anyone saying we are improving economically should be slapped on the face.
Fiscal deficit doesnt matter in recovery phase as long as your current account is okay

But fiscal deficit will always lead to CAD

Anyway anything less then 5% is very good for economy like ours
And it was 2.5% for first 6 months
it’s a huge pet peeve of mine that Pakistan’s foreign debt is always highlighted in Pak rupees to confuse the people. If the debt is foreign call it out in US$ as most of the world does why hide it in the local currency!

can some one please convert this in US$

k
Infact that is also not right
Debt should only be talked in % of gdp
 
Congratulations.. something has crossed Trillion....
 

One thing to keep in mind is government has moved petroleum levy to non tax revenue instead of tax revenue (others).

Our deficit is 1.3t and in absolute terms it is 1.026t.

The debt repayment is 1.475t, we are taking less loans than we are repaying.

1612523423117.png


Deficit of 2.5% is an extremely good number overall. That means it will be very well managed and we will be successful to contain it withing the target of 7%.

These figures are a true reflection of fiscal discipline practiced by federal government and my salute to the armed forces of Pakistan.
I thought the fiscal deficit was decreasing????
I dont go much in depth but the life of a common man is becoming very difficult, so anyone saying we are improving economically should be slapped on the face.

Bro these are very good numbers.
But without going into details for the month of Feb food inflation (perishable and non perishable) will be down collectively by 2.7% as compared to this month. MoM their will be a decline of 0.2% overall collectively in all categories after taking into account the increase in fuel and electricity.

But the YoY monthly comparison will hit 8% due to low base effect kicking in from Feb. (But as compared to the cost of living this month there will a slight decrease).

If we look at broader picture prices will be stable going forward with new equilibrium set at higher level (set after bringing the value of rupee to market level, and other fiscal constrains brought in effect).
You might witness seasonal change in prices of perishables and edible oil fluctuation in relation to international prices. Petrol prices will vary with international market. (Government will not pass on the burden but will take the most hit in respect to their tax revenues).
 
Last edited:
I am confused?????

Is it 2.5% how can that be worse???

Pakistan has seen 10+% fiscal deficits

Whats going ..do i have to go back to school? Is my math off??

Fiscal deficit doesnt matter in recovery phase as long as your current account is okay

But fiscal deficit will always lead to CAD

Anyway anything less then 5% is very good for economy like ours
And it was 2.5% for first 6 months

Fiscal deficit doesnt matter in recovery phase as long as your current account is okay

But fiscal deficit will always lead to CAD

Anyway anything less then 5% is very good for economy like ours
And it was 2.5% for first 6 months

Infact that is also not right
Debt should only be talked in % of gdp

It was never 10+%. Highest in last 28 years was 8.9% in the last year.
 
Back
Top Bottom