Hareeb
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2016
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- 2,310
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whats special about it?
FDI
The credit goes to the population not the skills
Same goes for India. Doesn't it?
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whats special about it?
The credit goes to the population not the skills
He was saying pakistan is in a better position because petrol is cheaper per litre in pakistan than India. I guess Venezuela is firdows cuz it cost 1 cent/L.
But then Pakistan will experience famine due to tomato shortageJust remove him and put Biradar @BHarwana. He will fix it like Magic.
How much FDI Pakistan received this year?
I understand the need for time for PTI to fix things.
I'm simply trying the assess what it is they are trying to fix!
That message is directed to particular members trolling in Indian economic sections.
...because it is not an investment...but loan. It must be showing under external debt.
Because it’s a loan
Nicely Explained. @Nilgiri
What does patwari mean?I speculated these issues cropping up (if no commensurate reforms done side by side) quite some time back (Ever since CPEC loans were being loaded onto Pak economy and people didn't even get that its not FDI). But of course response was quite hostile...which is ironic because same kind of people are now blaming all the ills on the NS admin (which is true to large degree...but why not genuinely do that before instead of giving free pass and even praise just because its CPEC?)...and label any Pakistani detractors as "patwari" or whatever....as though fundamental logic and economics cares about identity politics.
Dbl leveraged account keeping is especially very disturbing if that is indeed what is going on (local + foreign leveraging using the same backing capital).
It is increasingly looking like Pakistan went for easy route with a hail mary objective....rather than go for long term reforms to build up the system more robustly (but that would mean saying no to loan buffet till you do it).
It will require very much more transparency and honesty by current govt to address these issues systematically...rather than just continuing more of the same strategy and tinkering a few optics. I will give them a year or two first though.
@VCheng
What does patwari mean?
It is increasingly looking like Pakistan went for easy route with a hail mary objective....rather than go for long term reforms to build up the system more robustly (but that would mean saying no to loan buffet till you do it).
It will require very much more transparency and honesty by current govt to address these issues systematically...rather than just continuing more of the same strategy and tinkering a few optics. I will give them a year or two first though.
actual its -90b as we have 97b obligations..https://profit.pakistantoday.com.pk...t-negative-4b-excluding-imf-debt-obligations/
ISLAMABAD: Figures released by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Wednesday have revealed that the country’s balance of payment crisis isn’t over since its net international reserves are negative $4 billion even after eliminating IMF debt obligations.
The figures released by the central bank show up to one-year obligations of the central bank surpass its gross official foreign currency reserves by around $4 billion, reports Express Tribune.
Last week, the gross official reserves of SBP were recorded at $8.2 billion against its short-term liabilities which stand around $12.2 billion.
SBP’s gross official reserves are mostly retained by contracting short-term loans from commercial banks and taking Chinese and Saudi deposits under currency swap arrangements.
Till September 2018, SBP had obtained $7.22 billion from commercial banks in the aegis of forward and currency swap arrangements.
Also, SBP needs to return $1.5 billion within a month, $3.2 billion within three months and a remainder of $2.6 billion in a years’ time, official data reveals.
Swap deals reached with commercial banks are in the range of 2.5% to 4% interest rates, as per banking sector sources.
Moreover, the central bank owes $1 billion to Saudi Arabia, $3 billion to China and $700 million to various lenders, said sources.
And approximately $453 million are repayable to the IMF in current FY19, which will directly be deducted from SBP’s reserves.
As per the IMF’s definition of Net International Reserves, SBP’s reserves would stand at -$9.7 billion after inclusion of its overall $6 billion obligations.
However, the IMF’s repayments are to be done over a period of coming five years, hence, all the amount cannot be eliminated against the short-term liabilities of SBP.
in 2017 in order to keep inflation low PML N blew up 10b dollars..where india adjusted it rupee by devlauting time and gain as needed we didnt result infront of usI don't get it; where the heck did all the forex go? What about the billions that Pakistan receives from its own emigrant population to the Gulf? That should be a significant amount of forex.
One question here; why is it that this problem didn't exist until last year and all of a sudden all the reserves are showing red?
I speculated these issues cropping up (if no commensurate reforms done side by side) quite some time back (Ever since CPEC loans were being loaded onto Pak economy and people didn't even get that its not FDI). But of course response was quite hostile...which is ironic because same kind of people are now blaming all the ills on the NS admin (which is true to large degree...but why not genuinely do that before instead of giving free pass and even praise just because its CPEC?)...and label any Pakistani detractors as "patwari" or whatever....as though fundamental logic and economics cares about identity politics.
Dbl leveraged account keeping is especially very disturbing if that is indeed what is going on (local + foreign leveraging using the same backing capital).
It is increasingly looking like Pakistan went for easy route with a hail mary objective....rather than go for long term reforms to build up the system more robustly (but that would mean saying no to loan buffet till you do it).
It will require very much more transparency and honesty by current govt to address these issues systematically...rather than just continuing more of the same strategy and tinkering a few optics. I will give them a year or two first though.
@VCheng
This is very sad and very bad.
Where did CPEC 62 billion go?
Where did CPEC 62 billion go?