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PM opted for IMF deal despite another option: Umar

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PM opted for IMF deal despite another option: Umar
By Shahbaz Rana
Published: July 27, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2022374-PTIleaderAsadUmerphotofile-1564201172-294-640x480.JPG

PTI leader Asad Umer. PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan was provided with an alternative solution to deal with the country’s financial crunch instead of opting for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout package but he chose to avoid going down the risky path, former finance minister Asad Umar has revealed.

“In March [this year], I went to the prime minister and showed him the numbers. I told him that going to the IMF was now a choice as opposed to a compulsion,” the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader, who is now the chairman of the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Finance, said at an event organised by the Karachi School of Business and Leadership (KSBL).

Pakistan to further increase power tariff in Aug: IMF



“That choice had been created primarily because of the phenomenal goodwill of the prime minister in the global market, particularly in Asia, and a very mutually reinforcing relationship between the civil and the military arms of the government,” Umar told the audience.

Under the alternative plan, Umar wanted to put these factors to work and also use the Pakistani military’s good relations with Gulf countries to raise funds from the global capital markets and commercial banks and apply a combination of tariff and non-tariff barriers and gradual currency depreciation, according to an official familiar with these discussions at that time.

Umar said it was at the prime minister’s discretion to decide whether to opt for the IMF programme or for the solution he had proposed.

“Because every single expert agreed that we must go to the IMF, he decided not to take that risk,” he added.

The former minister quoted prime minister as telling him back then: “You know I am a risk-taker but everyone is saying that we should go to the IMF.”

The meeting in March had taken place exactly a month after Umar had told the prime minister about the adverse implications of the IMF deal.

In February, The Express Tribune had reported about Umar sharing some of the harsh conditions of the IMF package with the prime minister and Economic Advisory Council (EAC) members.

To support his argument at that time, Umar had cited the example of Egypt, where the poverty level had increased from nearly 30% to 53% because of an IMF programme.

Pakistan will get $38 billion to meet financing needs: IMF

Egypt steeply devalued its currency but that did not even help in reducing the current account deficit.

The government has added a cost of Rs4.323 trillion to the economy — $27 billion — since July last year because of the increase in the interest rate and currency devaluation, said Dr Ashfaq Hasan Khan, a member of the EAC and staunch opponent of the IMF programme.

“The currency devaluation added Rs3.21 trillion to external public debt and liabilities while the cost of the increase in interest rate stands at Rs1.11 trillion,” he added.

While quoting these figures, Dr Khan did even not calculate the additional cost that the consumers are paying after electricity and gas tariffs were increased twice to meet the IMF’s conditions.

Umar acknowledged the role of former directors general of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Naveed Mukhtar and Asim Munir, and then the army chief in convincing the Gulf countries to financially assist Pakistan.

“In a country where one of the biggest challenges you face is the weakness of the institutions, it would be short-sightedness if you don’t try to use the strongest institution of the country to your full advantage,” said Umar.

“We worked as a team and got a $3.3 billion oil facility and $3 billion in cash injection from Saudi Arabia, $2 billion from the UAE, Chinese currency equivalent to $3 billion and $3 billion from Qatar.”

Umar said his ministry was able to squeeze the current account deficit considerably and also raked in money to bridge the gap and that was how the opportunity was created.

“The liquidity for emerging markets risks was phenomenal in the middle of this year. Tonnes of money were available for countries like Pakistan and we could have raised money through Eurobonds and Sukuk at that time,” he maintained.

“The money from commercial banks and capital markets was available to Pakistan but the price was relatively higher in the absence of the IMF programme,” Umar told The Express Tribune on Friday.

“The army has particularly good relations with the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar and that helped us in raising money from these countries.”

The official familiar with the alternative plan said it envisaged project financing from multilateral lenders, but programme financing was excluded from these projections.

The plan also involved drastic reduction in the current account deficit on the back of regulatory duties, non-tariff barriers and currency depreciation. But the currency deprecation was less than what Pakistan went for under the IMF deal.
 
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Do something about import export balance!!! Reduce the damn imports increase exports! I wonder what can we export ... Besides what we are already
 
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Do something about import export balance!!! Reduce the damn imports increase exports! I wonder what can we export ... Besides what we are already
In absence of a huge industry to provide goods for export, Pak can in the short term provide some service based exports. Things like call centers, IT solutions, etc. can be setup rather quickly. Pakistan has the same combination of cheap labor and skilled IT professionals as India does...if the government focuses on it and pushes for it, Pak can probably get a boost in earnings from this sector in the short term. Growing the manufacturing industry would take longer.
 
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In absence of a huge industry to provide goods for export, Pak can in the short term provide some service based exports. Things like call centers, IT solutions, etc. can be setup rather quickly. Pakistan has the same combination of cheap labor and skilled IT professionals as India does...if the government focuses on it and pushes for it, Pak can probably get a boost in earnings from this sector in the short term. Growing the manufacturing industry would take longer.
you are right.

but since the trade war started chinese have started to move industries from China into pakistan thats why imports have skyrocketed as well. it should be steady too much industry is trying to move into pakistan . we dont have an economy to sustain that much imports in 1 year. it should be phased absorbtion. we are not china. we should take time to absorb and do it as we stabilize it.
 
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you are right.

but since the trade war started chinese have started to move industries from China into pakistan thats why imports have skyrocketed as well. it should be steady too much industry is trying to move into pakistan . we dont have an economy to sustain that much imports in 1 year. it should be phased absorbtion. we are not china. we should take time to absorb and do it as we stabilize it.
I didn't hear of any such development where China was moving manufacturing industries to Pak at such a fast pace...but if it's the case I welcome it. It maybe a strain now but it's going to be great in the long run. With that Pak will have a diverse economy and most things would be produced locally which would definitely reduce imports and increase exports.

I'm really hoping that those dedicated zones around CPEC are utilized soon by companies to set up their manufacturing industries. The sooner they set up shop and start rolling out their products to middle East, Europe and Africa the better. Pak should offer a tax break for the first 5 years or something lucrative like that. In addition they would save money on bypassing things like tarrifs(as in the current scenario) and save on shipping(all the way from East China) by producing it right next to the CPEC route itself.
 
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PM opted for IMF deal despite another option: Umar
By Shahbaz Rana
Published: July 27, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2022374-PTIleaderAsadUmerphotofile-1564201172-294-640x480.JPG

PTI leader Asad Umer. PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan was provided with an alternative solution to deal with the country’s financial crunch instead of opting for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout package but he chose to avoid going down the risky path, former finance minister Asad Umar has revealed.

“In March [this year], I went to the prime minister and showed him the numbers. I told him that going to the IMF was now a choice as opposed to a compulsion,” the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader, who is now the chairman of the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Finance, said at an event organised by the Karachi School of Business and Leadership (KSBL).

Pakistan to further increase power tariff in Aug: IMF



“That choice had been created primarily because of the phenomenal goodwill of the prime minister in the global market, particularly in Asia, and a very mutually reinforcing relationship between the civil and the military arms of the government,” Umar told the audience.

Under the alternative plan, Umar wanted to put these factors to work and also use the Pakistani military’s good relations with Gulf countries to raise funds from the global capital markets and commercial banks and apply a combination of tariff and non-tariff barriers and gradual currency depreciation, according to an official familiar with these discussions at that time.

Umar said it was at the prime minister’s discretion to decide whether to opt for the IMF programme or for the solution he had proposed.

“Because every single expert agreed that we must go to the IMF, he decided not to take that risk,” he added.

The former minister quoted prime minister as telling him back then: “You know I am a risk-taker but everyone is saying that we should go to the IMF.”

The meeting in March had taken place exactly a month after Umar had told the prime minister about the adverse implications of the IMF deal.

In February, The Express Tribune had reported about Umar sharing some of the harsh conditions of the IMF package with the prime minister and Economic Advisory Council (EAC) members.

To support his argument at that time, Umar had cited the example of Egypt, where the poverty level had increased from nearly 30% to 53% because of an IMF programme.

Pakistan will get $38 billion to meet financing needs: IMF

Egypt steeply devalued its currency but that did not even help in reducing the current account deficit.

The government has added a cost of Rs4.323 trillion to the economy — $27 billion — since July last year because of the increase in the interest rate and currency devaluation, said Dr Ashfaq Hasan Khan, a member of the EAC and staunch opponent of the IMF programme.

“The currency devaluation added Rs3.21 trillion to external public debt and liabilities while the cost of the increase in interest rate stands at Rs1.11 trillion,” he added.

While quoting these figures, Dr Khan did even not calculate the additional cost that the consumers are paying after electricity and gas tariffs were increased twice to meet the IMF’s conditions.

Umar acknowledged the role of former directors general of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Naveed Mukhtar and Asim Munir, and then the army chief in convincing the Gulf countries to financially assist Pakistan.

“In a country where one of the biggest challenges you face is the weakness of the institutions, it would be short-sightedness if you don’t try to use the strongest institution of the country to your full advantage,” said Umar.

“We worked as a team and got a $3.3 billion oil facility and $3 billion in cash injection from Saudi Arabia, $2 billion from the UAE, Chinese currency equivalent to $3 billion and $3 billion from Qatar.”

Umar said his ministry was able to squeeze the current account deficit considerably and also raked in money to bridge the gap and that was how the opportunity was created.

“The liquidity for emerging markets risks was phenomenal in the middle of this year. Tonnes of money were available for countries like Pakistan and we could have raised money through Eurobonds and Sukuk at that time,” he maintained.

“The money from commercial banks and capital markets was available to Pakistan but the price was relatively higher in the absence of the IMF programme,” Umar told The Express Tribune on Friday.

“The army has particularly good relations with the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar and that helped us in raising money from these countries.”

The official familiar with the alternative plan said it envisaged project financing from multilateral lenders, but programme financing was excluded from these projections.

The plan also involved drastic reduction in the current account deficit on the back of regulatory duties, non-tariff barriers and currency depreciation. But the currency deprecation was less than what Pakistan went for under the IMF deal.

IMF was the easier option for GoP.

Omar can try his luck with PDP.
 
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you are right.

but since the trade war started chinese have started to move industries from China into pakistan thats why imports have skyrocketed as well. it should be steady too much industry is trying to move into pakistan . we dont have an economy to sustain that much imports in 1 year. it should be phased absorbtion. we are not china. we should take time to absorb and do it as we stabilize it.

Is the true can you add the link i would like to read about that china moving industry to Pakistan
 
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PM opted for IMF deal despite another option: Umar
By Shahbaz Rana
Published: July 27, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2022374-PTIleaderAsadUmerphotofile-1564201172-294-640x480.JPG

PTI leader Asad Umer. PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan was provided with an alternative solution to deal with the country’s financial crunch instead of opting for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout package but he chose to avoid going down the risky path, former finance minister Asad Umar has revealed.

“In March [this year], I went to the prime minister and showed him the numbers. I told him that going to the IMF was now a choice as opposed to a compulsion,” the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader, who is now the chairman of the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Finance, said at an event organised by the Karachi School of Business and Leadership (KSBL).

Pakistan to further increase power tariff in Aug: IMF



“That choice had been created primarily because of the phenomenal goodwill of the prime minister in the global market, particularly in Asia, and a very mutually reinforcing relationship between the civil and the military arms of the government,” Umar told the audience.

Under the alternative plan, Umar wanted to put these factors to work and also use the Pakistani military’s good relations with Gulf countries to raise funds from the global capital markets and commercial banks and apply a combination of tariff and non-tariff barriers and gradual currency depreciation, according to an official familiar with these discussions at that time.

Umar said it was at the prime minister’s discretion to decide whether to opt for the IMF programme or for the solution he had proposed.

“Because every single expert agreed that we must go to the IMF, he decided not to take that risk,” he added.

The former minister quoted prime minister as telling him back then: “You know I am a risk-taker but everyone is saying that we should go to the IMF.”

The meeting in March had taken place exactly a month after Umar had told the prime minister about the adverse implications of the IMF deal.

In February, The Express Tribune had reported about Umar sharing some of the harsh conditions of the IMF package with the prime minister and Economic Advisory Council (EAC) members.

To support his argument at that time, Umar had cited the example of Egypt, where the poverty level had increased from nearly 30% to 53% because of an IMF programme.

Pakistan will get $38 billion to meet financing needs: IMF

Egypt steeply devalued its currency but that did not even help in reducing the current account deficit.

The government has added a cost of Rs4.323 trillion to the economy — $27 billion — since July last year because of the increase in the interest rate and currency devaluation, said Dr Ashfaq Hasan Khan, a member of the EAC and staunch opponent of the IMF programme.

“The currency devaluation added Rs3.21 trillion to external public debt and liabilities while the cost of the increase in interest rate stands at Rs1.11 trillion,” he added.

While quoting these figures, Dr Khan did even not calculate the additional cost that the consumers are paying after electricity and gas tariffs were increased twice to meet the IMF’s conditions.

Umar acknowledged the role of former directors general of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Naveed Mukhtar and Asim Munir, and then the army chief in convincing the Gulf countries to financially assist Pakistan.

“In a country where one of the biggest challenges you face is the weakness of the institutions, it would be short-sightedness if you don’t try to use the strongest institution of the country to your full advantage,” said Umar.

“We worked as a team and got a $3.3 billion oil facility and $3 billion in cash injection from Saudi Arabia, $2 billion from the UAE, Chinese currency equivalent to $3 billion and $3 billion from Qatar.”

Umar said his ministry was able to squeeze the current account deficit considerably and also raked in money to bridge the gap and that was how the opportunity was created.

“The liquidity for emerging markets risks was phenomenal in the middle of this year. Tonnes of money were available for countries like Pakistan and we could have raised money through Eurobonds and Sukuk at that time,” he maintained.

“The money from commercial banks and capital markets was available to Pakistan but the price was relatively higher in the absence of the IMF programme,” Umar told The Express Tribune on Friday.

“The army has particularly good relations with the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar and that helped us in raising money from these countries.”

The official familiar with the alternative plan said it envisaged project financing from multilateral lenders, but programme financing was excluded from these projections.

The plan also involved drastic reduction in the current account deficit on the back of regulatory duties, non-tariff barriers and currency depreciation. But the currency deprecation was less than what Pakistan went for under the IMF deal.

Pakistan should NOT have gone for the IMF bailout. This is by design a system set up by Zionist-America to trap countries and subjugate them to bend to the Zionist's will. This is how they destroyed countries like Argentina, Libya, Venezuela, Guatemala, Ecuador, Iran and etc. I am sure that Pakistan could have taken the option which avoided them going to IMF. Which ever the reason, now the hurdles ahead mean, Pakistan can ill-afford to make any mistakes. It needs to simultaneously ensure the successful operations of CPEC by strict accountability, providing security for this national project and adhere to strict tax collection. If anyone of these steps encounters failure, Pakistan would find itself in serious trouble. In other words, this is "3rd Strike" stage for Pakistan. Every minister in government, every official in the bureaucratic system has to make sure they do their job responsibly and are accountable for their every action. Again, IMF/WB are death traps, look at Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy.
 
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i think that is why he is removed on imf pressure.If he would be a financial minister we would become strong economy in long run but establishment are slaves of u.s and imf and we will remain in darkness for long time if current setup is not changed
 
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Pakistan should NOT have gone for the IMF bailout.

i think that is why he is removed on imf pressure.If he would be a financial minister we would become strong economy in long run but establishment are slaves of u.s and imf and we will remain in darkness for long time if current setup is not changed

I am sure PMIK made the decision to go to IMF in the best interests of Pakistan. He did have a choice not to go to them, but he decided to do so. IMF did not not go to him offering a bailout.
 
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But how give suggestions kehnay ko ham keh saktay Hain
Make Pakistan a super power

These kind of people have no suggestions, they have only "wish lists" in their minds, and that is exactly the mindset of the people running affairs of Pakistan since 1947, they just have "wish lists" but no "capability to materialize their wish list into reality". Pakistan isn't f***** up for no reason. These are the kind of minds whose focus is always on the "end goal" but not on the "mechanism" and the "strategy" that one needs to reach to a given goal. Knowing about goal/target is just 10% of the effort, the rest 90% lies on developing the actual capability, strategy and mechanism to reach to the envisaged goal/target.
 
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