Nilgiri
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The drastic fall of PKR must be creating lots of issue with common man.
Given that lot of things consumed by locals is imported, the businessman must be having hard time to keep up sales price with changing dollar value as well as keeping up the trust of consumer.
Similarly the consumers budget must be getting very high hit...salaries wont change as per changes in $$ exchange rates nor does it would cope up with inflation in realtime. Hard time indeed, how the mass handles this economic shock will define which way Pakistan is heading.
Heart goes with all the pakistani citizens, may this hard time gets over at earliest and may there be peace and happiness in life.
Not every country is the same. In the end it depends on how sensitive/reliant/elastic Pakistan is on imports and loans compared to its export/remittance capability to pay for them. This will all show up in data later. It really cannot be understood too well by reading people saying all different things on a forum (or even online journalists/experts) to make some monolith narrative or somewhat artificial debate etc of theirs. The reality bears out from million times more people and processes and interactions in a large macro-goo.
Time is thus the ultimate great sunshine bleach and disinfectant for all these opinions in here.
From what we have seen thus far, Pakistan definitely seems to be on average more sensitive to the net effect caused by import/loans compared to what it can pay its way by (i.e it cannot substitute that quick or easily locally or with cheaper means). Thus the penalty by bad decision and structure that perpetuated it is coming through. But how it changes and the exact intermediate and longer term effect, we will have to see.
Large population countries after all respond like large diesel engines....as opposed to a spritey small gasoline one.
True but establishment doesn't have any solutions to economic mess either. Last time when Musharraf took over, country was in similar shape (nearly bankrupt) by the same PPP / PMLN. Only 9/11 saved it. Debt to GDP back then was nearly 88 percent.
Blaming pakistan political parties/dictators/leaders is only getting to the middle layer of the problem at best. There is something underneath all of that....that is a more systemic, core, consistent basis for the basic underlying problem (given its disproportionate control and influence over general movers, shakers and elites in Pakistan). Till Pakistan grapples with that sincerely, all this debate with political parties corruption etc is somewhat an eyewash.
This is good for Pakistan. It means expensive imports and cheaper exports.
Well more crucial is just how elastic/inelastic those are (especially the most relevant ones to some argument of social wellbeing etc) to price changes/shifts.