Thevilone
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- Feb 27, 2023
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Every country has two types of Loans : Domestic and External. Domestic loans are the ones taken from own citizens, banks, companies. For eg. if I put money in a govt. controlled pension fund, it is a domestic loan for the govt. The money is given by ME to the GOVT. on loan, on promise of return with interest. Increase in domestic loans mean a govt. has a taxation issue. Pakistan does have this problem, both at federal and state level. It is not considered too severe as money is to be circulated within the same country.
Then there are the external loans. Pakistan had always been struggling financially, just like all south Asian nations. Things started turning bad on a fundamental economic level during Musharraf era, especially due to increasing population. Pakistan's population started reaching levels where imports of basic food items such as pulses, tea and feed to cattle/poultry started rising. This should have been the time to start drastic action.
In mid-2010s Pakistan failed to compete with countries like India and Bangladesh in export industries like textiles, power shortages being one of the reasons. This resulted in contracting exports in the face of increasing imports. This was the last time Pakistan could save itself without major damage, but it did not happen. in 2015 Pakistan started CPEC. Do not confuse CPC with BRi, both are very different. WHile, we can debate BRI some other time, CPEC included lot of power generation plants, powered by fossil fuels. These were made with Chinese loans with RoI decied by the Chinese, built by Chinese contractors with no external competition and price and quality of work to be decided by the Chinese for work to be carried out mostly by Chinese work-force and materials. A lot of the money was siphoned back by the Chinese companies and much of the rest was smuggled abroad (Papa Johns is just one of the many examples.)
Then there are the external loans. Pakistan had always been struggling financially, just like all south Asian nations. Things started turning bad on a fundamental economic level during Musharraf era, especially due to increasing population. Pakistan's population started reaching levels where imports of basic food items such as pulses, tea and feed to cattle/poultry started rising. This should have been the time to start drastic action.
In mid-2010s Pakistan failed to compete with countries like India and Bangladesh in export industries like textiles, power shortages being one of the reasons. This resulted in contracting exports in the face of increasing imports. This was the last time Pakistan could save itself without major damage, but it did not happen. in 2015 Pakistan started CPEC. Do not confuse CPC with BRi, both are very different. WHile, we can debate BRI some other time, CPEC included lot of power generation plants, powered by fossil fuels. These were made with Chinese loans with RoI decied by the Chinese, built by Chinese contractors with no external competition and price and quality of work to be decided by the Chinese for work to be carried out mostly by Chinese work-force and materials. A lot of the money was siphoned back by the Chinese companies and much of the rest was smuggled abroad (Papa Johns is just one of the many examples.)