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Pathways to growth

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Pathways to growth
Sakib Sherani October 25, 2019

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The writer is a former member of the prime minister’s economic advisory council, and heads a macroeconomic consultancy based in Islamabad.

TWO very different narratives regarding the state of the economy are currently in the field. The government as well as the central bank are emphasising that the external account has stabilised, the economic crisis has dissipated and the economy has ‘turned the corner’. Most independent commentators, media and the public are complaining about high inflation, businesses going under and rising unemployment. Both these narratives are not completely wrong (though one is partially correct and the other entirely so).

How does one reconcile these two apparently conflicting views? I had presented a framework to do so in my previous article in this newspaper [State of the economy]. The ‘shock wave’ from the balance-of-payments crisis that Pakistan experienced last year first moved from the external account to the asset markets (currency, stocks, real estate), and then, within a few months, got transmitted to the real sector of the economy — businesses, factories, retailers etc. Its effects are now moving to the banking system, as anticipated.

When stabilisation begins to take place, the process works in the same order. The external account stabilises first, with foreign exchange reserves and the currency stabilising, followed quickly by the asset markets. The real sector, however, takes a longer while to recover. How long the recovery takes depends on the severity of the crisis and the corresponding ‘dosage’ of the policy measures adopted.

In short, the economy consists of many moving parts — and the government is talking about one of them, ie the external account. Everyone else, however, is exposed more directly to how private-sector businesses and individuals are faring on a daily basis, and how each is trying to cope with high inflation, loss of income, lower purchasing power and joblessness. Hence, there is an obvious disconnect as the government and the people are looking at different parts of the picture.

Despite the fiscal straitjacket there are potential avenues to growth.

The silver lining is that stabilisation of the external account is a necessary condition for the economy to turn the corner from the crisis, and the more it takes hold, the closer Pakistan will be to seeing economic activity bounce back. However, stabilisation on its own is not a sufficient condition for growth.

Reviving economic growth will require robust policy action in the area of structural reform. Indeed, many of these reforms on the taxation side or documentation (such as the anti-smuggling drive), are anti-growth in the short to medium term. However, the government should accept this trade-off.

Growth for its own sake should not be the policy objective. This crisis affords an opportunity to policymakers to reset not just the growth path but also the quality of growth. Growth without reforms will lead to a repeat of the boom-bust, debt-financed unstable cycles of the past. What policymakers need to aim for is economic growth that is sustainable, inclusive and jobs-creating — one that lasts uninterrupted at seven per cent plus for two decades or more.

This goal is not unattainable. While the reforms undertaken so far are clearly insufficient, developments and policy actions in the recent past have opened up growth opportunities for Pakistan that have not been available for decades. The first and foremost of these is the adjustment of the exchange rate. The removal of the almost perennial overvaluation of the rupee has lifted a millstone from the country’s export potential — as well as opened up opportunities for import-substituting industries. In a country that imports virtually everything from pins to planes, the potential for import substitution cannot be overstated. (It may not be planes, but there is plenty in between to provide tremendous business opportunities going forward).

The performance of exports in terms of quantities is testimony that the adjustment of the rupee is already bearing fruit. There is more proof. A leading fast-moving consumer goods company has not just begun its first exports from Pakistan to regional countries — but has exported to the US market too post-devaluation. These are its first-ever exports from the country after decades of operations in Pakistan.

The exchange rate adjustment needs to be supplemented by a host of growth-supporting measures in the short run that primarily target the export sector. While policy latitude is limited under the IMF programme, there is quite a lot the government can still do, provided the finance ministry chooses to be innovative and strategic in its approach. It should reinstate the export sector’s energy subsidies and ensure pending tax refunds are paid back as agreed with an improvement in the sector’s liquidity.

In addition, the FBR should realise that direct exporters are one final part of a supply chain. Causing disruption to any part of the export supply chain, much of which is composed of small and medium enterprises will hit final exporters too. The thinking in policy circles, including at the Prime Minister’s Office, continues to mistakenly view SMEs as stand-alone businesses operating in a vacuum, when they are largely part of a value chain. If the larger businesses in autos, textiles, consumer goods, steel, sports goods etc. are distressed, that distress is transmitted throughout the chain.

One measure that can alleviate the rising distress of SMEs is the possibility of introducing a line of subsidised long-term credit by the central bank where higher-interest rate financing for working capital can be ‘swapped’, much like the long-term financing facility introduced by the State Bank in the mid-2000s. At the same time, the bank needs to reconsider its excessively high real interest target which is imposing a heavy cost on government and businesses.

While the second phase of CPEC is a potential growth driver, there is a need to dissipate the lingering uncertainty with regard to the vulnerability of the external account in the medium term. This is where the IMF can step up with a more positive role. It needs to augment its programme and show more ‘skin in the game’. It also needs to move the goal post for its reviews from narrow, quantitative targets to more structural conditionality.

Finally, the government should suspend its anti-encroachment drive against markets and businesses across the country and provide relief to small business owners.

The writer is a former member of the prime minister’s economic advisory council, and heads a macroeconomic consultancy based in Islamabad.

Published in Dawn, October 25th, 2019

@ziaulislam @Nilgiri @The Eagle
 
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The author seems credible and well read on the issues at hand...and has presented a good synopsis here.

However the devil lies in the details lurking few or many layers below the points he brings up....and specifically how much those can be quickly implemented (and well) or massaged/oriented best they can for now (and be picked up later when scope/priority for those become more relevant.

Authors like this hopefully with time create series of articles that delve into each point (and as frankly+factually as possible) in more depth (as possible, and not be too wary about losing broader layman audience) given they have worked inside the govt mechanism but had a good position to see larger position where they are. i.e just pick one of these points down the road, and give a full follow up article/analysis on whats been done, what remains to be done....what priorities look like and what are the mistakes that have been done etc.

This 2nd thing is somewhat lacking in Pakistan print media I found (maybe related to institutions not being as developed as they should be even accounting for Pakistan's relative economic imprint and gross perceived development) , so it somewhat surface based ripples and circular hopping in lily pads etc (because I do hear the overall same nice words, euphemisms, directives, goals and broad contours being mentioned from one well-read + versed + experienced author to the next one).

i.e Need to get into nitty gritty (maybe like a format that brings in the bureaucrats just below the top layer to discuss with them)....but maybe its done in other media forms more, which I don't follow?

But then again folks like @Oscar tell me its very brittle in areas it should not be....and fluid in areas it should not be....in the way lot of pak govt+elite crust been set up and how they exist downstream as consequence in current timeframe. That basically it all need complete system purge because lot of negative stuff is very entrenched to degree of 95% and the drama/discussion is then focused/directed/steered inevitably on the 5% iceberg poking above surface....like ongoing eternal train of sacrificial lambs... so few look at the altar edifice and beneath.

What to do? Maybe some more members reading this can give me their frank opinion and comments on this larger issue?

@Chak Bamu @VCheng @ps3linux @The Accountant @N.Siddiqui @DESERT FIGHTER @PakSword @niaz @Rashid Mahmood @Indus Pakistan @waz @AMG_12 @Arsalan 345 @Inception-06 @Mentee @OsmanAli98 @M.AsfandYar et al.
 
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The author seems credible and well read on the issues at hand...and has presented a good synopsis here.

However the devil lies in the details lurking few or many layers below the points he brings up....and specifically how much those can be quickly implemented (and well) or massaged/oriented best they can for now (and be picked up later when scope/priority for those become more relevant.

Authors like this hopefully with time create series of articles that delve into each point (and as frankly+factually as possible) in more depth (as possible, and not be too wary about losing broader layman audience) given they have worked inside the govt mechanism but had a good position to see larger position where they are. i.e just pick one of these points down the road, and give a full follow up article/analysis on whats been done, what remains to be done....what priorities look like and what are the mistakes that have been done etc.

This 2nd thing is somewhat lacking in Pakistan print media I found (maybe related to institutions not being as developed as they should be even accounting for Pakistan's relative economic imprint and gross perceived development) , so it somewhat surface based ripples and circular hopping in lily pads etc (because I do hear the overall same nice words, euphemisms, directives, goals and broad contours being mentioned from one well-read + versed + experienced author to the next one).

i.e Need to get into nitty gritty (maybe like a format that brings in the bureaucrats just below the top layer to discuss with them)....but maybe its done in other media forms more, which I don't follow?

But then again folks like @Oscar tell me its very brittle in areas it should not be....and fluid in areas it should not be....in the way lot of pak govt+elite crust been set up and how they exist downstream as consequence in current timeframe. That basically it all need complete system purge because lot of negative stuff is very entrenched to degree of 95% and the drama/discussion is then focused/directed/steered inevitably on the 5% iceberg poking above surface....like ongoing eternal train of sacrificial lambs... so few look at the altar edifice and beneath.

What to do? Maybe some more members reading this can give me their frank opinion and comments on this larger issue?

@Chak Bamu @VCheng @ps3linux @The Accountant @N.Siddiqui @DESERT FIGHTER @PakSword @niaz @Rashid Mahmood @Indus Pakistan @waz @AMG_12 @Arsalan 345 @Inception-06 @Mentee @OsmanAli98 @M.AsfandYar et al.

I know Saqib for a decade and change now he is a very good and balanced economist, last time I checked, before being appointed to PM advisory board he was working as chief economist of a top tier bank.

There is neither a doomsday in sight for Pakistan's economy nor is there any path to paradise. What I say is that the bridge between expectation and reality is called experience, and experience tells a major shift for any country/nation in its policies requires not a year or few but decades of consistent policies.

While I am a hopeless optimist when it comes to Pakistan, being in the finance dealing with numbers for so long I am rational as well and know good time are far may be beyond my life time, not that I am a geriatric. Structural reforms are taking place people have different views on them, some are concerned with the pace or lack thereof.

I focus on building block rather than the building itself, and I am talking about a country/nation (where decades are just number, it took american almost 200 years to reach a certain point) so structural reforms are happening, no mans land (FATA) is no more they are in the process of being brought into main stream, religious seminaries reforms are in process, uniform educational curriculum is being developed, parts of 18th amendment will be repealed, reforms for bureaucracy are being worked out, financial discipline/belt tightening has started, reforms in financial sector (thanks to india and FATF) are being done, documentation of economy has improved and will continue to do so, import curbs are leading to import substitution, industrialists are now looking beyond cotton/bedsheets/socks/t.shirts and under garments exports they now looking towards VAS, there are some positive moves towards starting high tech industries in Pakistan, PSEs particularly loss making will either be restructured or offloaded in the next few years, despite deep division along political affiliation a rising sense of nationalism. We came out of the delusion that terrorism and Terror financing is an issue in Pakistan we are addressing it, curbing extremism through subtle tactics.

While many of the analysts take a snapshot of few variables and build their model/theories around culmination of level 1 and 2 information, I on the other hand prefer to take all major variables into account with up to level 4 information, develop different algorithms with various probability models and then draw a macro level conclusion.
 
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My economics education is limited to the three 3- credit courses I took in the MBA (evening program) of the Long Island University back in 1971. Hence I am not qualified to comment on the observations by an economic pundit like Mr. Shakib Shirani. I would, therefore, limit me to say that IMO most prominent Economists tend to be ‘Prima Donnas’ with each one having different ideas on how to resolve a country’s economic problems.

Formulating an effective macro-economic program for a developing country is an extremely complex & difficult task and the results are slow in coming. Also, there are multiple side effects of any economic policy decision which are almost impossible to foresee. On the other hand, the majority of the politicians tend to be experts in finding faults with the economic policies of the opponents and promise heaven on earth upon attaining power without actually having any clue as to how to go about it.

One thing is however clear, ever since I can remember GOP expenses have exceeded the income primarily because my countrymen don’t like to pay taxes. This state of affairs cannot go on ' ad- infinitum' and require a major restructuring which would inevitably result is a short-term economic downturn.

Regrettably, there are no easy solutions. In my view, we should let the current economic team carry on with whatever they are doing and wait for the signs of recovery. If it does not happen after a year or so, change the team.
 
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Tech services and local true manufacturing are ways to growth. I was astonished to see how many unemployed people have an income because of Foodpanda, uber, careem etc in my recent visit to Pakistan.
I asked them they all say something is better than nothing.

Diploma mill education system of Pakistan is to blame.
 
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My economics education is limited to the three 3- credit course I took in the MBA (evening program) of the Long Island University back in 1971. Hence I am not qualified to comment on the observations by an economic pundit like Mr. Shakib Shirani. I would, therefore, limit me to say that IMO most prominent Economists tend to be ‘Prima Donnas’ with each one having different ideas on how to resolve a country’s economic problems.

Formulating an effective macro-economic program for a developing country is an extremely complex & difficult task and the results are slow in coming. Also, there are multiple side effects of any economic policy decision which are almost impossible to foresee. On the other hand, the majority of the politicians tend to be experts in finding faults with the economic policies of the opponents and promise heaven on earth upon attaining power without actually having any clue as to how to go about it.

One thing is however clear, ever since I can remember GOP expenses have exceeded the income primarily because my countrymen don’t like to pay taxes. This state of affairs cannot go on ' ad- infinitum' and require a major restructuring which would inevitably result is a short-term economic downturn.

Regrettably, there are no easy solutions. In my view, we should let the current economic team carry on with whatever they are doing and wait for the signs of recovery. If it does not happen after a year or so, change the team.


Sir Positive Signs Have Already Started Merging Current Account Deficit Has Been Substantially Reduced,Pakistan Has Improved Massively in World Bank EDB Index And According To APTMA Textile Industry Has Turned A Profit After 10 Years
 
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