Hyde
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I think we did change it 2-3 years ago so whats the hurry?Is there any plan of changing base year for GDP?
I think we will change it again in 2019-20
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I think we did change it 2-3 years ago so whats the hurry?Is there any plan of changing base year for GDP?
I think we did change it 2-3 years ago so whats the hurry?
I think we will change it again in 2019-20
Frankly speaking we Pakistanis are confused nation. I am not supporting any political party but it is a fact that due to our affiliations we like to be blind and ignore the facts. For example when the government tookover in 2013 these were some of the major headlinesthats good. so all this fuss of the current government being corrupt is a bit strange as the previous government did not care at all but this one does. isnt it better to have a corrupt pm who does good for the country as opposed to one who bleeds it?
Frankly speaking we Pakistanis are confused nation. I am not supporting any political party but it is a fact that due to our affiliations we like to be blind and ignore the facts. For example when the government tookover in 2013 these were some of the major headlines
1) Pakistan is a failed state and will be defaulted in 3 months
2) The talibans will takeover nuclear assets and have reached within 100 miles of capital (Islamabad)
3) Target killing in Karachi rose to kill about 2700 people in 2013.
4) Bhatta (extortion ) mafia in Karachi
5) Gdp growth rate of less than 3% (the worst in South Asia and one of the lowest in the world)
6) Forex reserves dropped to around 8 billion dollars, not even enough to pay off 3 months of salary
7) Mega scandals in every government project such as rental power plants, energy projects and anything you can name it
8) Electricity load shedding of 18 hours a day
And look where we are standing today. No more talks of surrendering to terrorists, no more talks of failed state, economy growing to one of the fastest in the region and terrorism reduced by over 70%. But we Pakistanis will give credit to all the positives to anything but government and all the negatives to the government.
There has not been any major scandals appearing like the last goverment which itself is a maassive achievement (though they r corrupt but have apparently been working as well)
thats good. so all this fuss of the current government being corrupt is a bit strange as the previous government did not care at all but this one does. isnt it better to have a corrupt pm who does good for the country as opposed to one who bleeds it?
so whats your long term thoughts on pakistan in regards to corruption. what id like to see is a bunch of educated youths 25-35 create theri own party and have a campaign strategy like donald trump. the people would naturally believe them as they are exposing politicians who are naturally believed to be "bent" have some rallies "ik style" but not threaten to shutdown any cities. or major infrastructure.Times will get better still, the last few years took me from extreme pessimism to cautious optimism.
We'll still face many challenges, we should be vigilant of that. We'll have to overcome new challenges as the economy grows, the inequality discussed in this thread is another such example.
Pakistan's political system is not mature. And the people of Pakistan and their level of discourse on a political level is primitive and immature. We mostly obsess about personalities and the statements/rhetoric of one politician vs the another, very little consideration is given beyond that, discussions related to policy are superficial and short-lived. And the media that facilitates discourse is staffed by media personalities of their own sort, many of our talk show hosts and media houses are staffed by people of fairly low IQ.
However, this isn't because Pakistanis are somehow inferior compared to the rest of the world. Our system is not as old as the state, it's only as old as 2008. Purely in numbers, 2008-2017, Pakistan's political system has barely progressed beyond infant stages. We've sustained civil war like conditions at home, economic adversity, and also suffered incompetent and corrupt politicians alike. The incompetent also happen to be corrupt, yet their incompetency is so astonishing that even if they were to become honest, they'd fail at governance.
For now, I have little hopes of competent civil servants, competent and honest politicians, coherent opposition, a compliant military top brass and all those other wonderful things. At best I hope for slow and steady progress, with political stability allowing us to mend our civil society and build our civil institutions. Economic progress will pick up pace as we do that.
so whats your long term thoughts on pakistan in regards to corruption. what id like to see is a bunch of educated youths 25-35 create theri own party and have a campaign strategy like donald trump. the people would naturally believe them as they are exposing politicians who are naturally believed to be "bent" have some rallies "ik style" but not threaten to shutdown any cities. or major infrastructure.
what do you think of that idea? is it good or is it suicide
mind you over here we have corruption too. remember when David Cameron got £200k+ as a gift from his mum into his offshore account? (wish my mum gave me that much as a gift)
What is purpose? Why we need to change base year and what is impact of base year? But please start from base year.I think we did change it 2-3 years ago so whats the hurry?
I think we will change it again in 2019-20
Quite honestly, Pakistan first needs to strengthen its institutions and make them capable of preventing corruption, PTI is a lot like the party you describe. it's anti-establishment, anti-corruption as its core message, primarily supported by young and educated individuals and they're populist. But they're also for causing political instability, revolutions and all that other stuff that we have too much of already.
And as for us here, you're right, our corruptions is legal though. David Cameron's just one symptom, the problem is systemic. Honestly speaking, I'm more concerned for British politics right now than I am for Pakistani politics. I see the outlook for Pakistan as positive, however, I have genuine concern for where we're headed in Britain.
Times will get better still, the last few years took me from extreme pessimism to cautious optimism.
We'll still face many challenges, we should be vigilant of that. We'll have to overcome new challenges as the economy grows, the inequality discussed in this thread is another such example.
Pakistan's political system is not mature. And the people of Pakistan and their level of discourse on a political level is primitive and immature. We mostly obsess about personalities and the statements/rhetoric of one politician vs the another, very little consideration is given beyond that, discussions related to policy are superficial and short-lived. And the media that facilitates discourse is staffed by media personalities of their own sort, many of our talk show hosts and media houses are staffed by people of fairly low IQ.
However, this isn't because Pakistanis are somehow inferior compared to the rest of the world. Our system is not as old as the state, it's only as old as 2008. Purely in numbers, 2008-2017, Pakistan's political system has barely progressed beyond infant stages. We've sustained civil war like conditions at home, economic adversity, and also suffered incompetent and corrupt politicians alike. The incompetent also happen to be corrupt, yet their incompetency is so astonishing that even if they were to become honest, they'd fail at governance.
For now, I have little hopes of competent civil servants, competent and honest politicians, coherent opposition, a compliant military top brass and all those other wonderful things. At best I hope for slow and steady progress, with political stability allowing us to mend our civil society and build our civil institutions. Economic progress will pick up pace as we do that.
Now that's a good news...not sure why pakistani friends are so negative about NS...at the end of the day if economy is improving under him than he should get the credit for it...the way he gets flak for wrongdoings....no??
pti is a good party , honestly i was hoping you'd forget about them and look to a clean sheet party. pti is a good established party, from what i have been hearing from notorious eagle is corruption has dropped in north west pakistan (forgot the province name) but not from within the party. which is expected i guess.
as for the uk.........it dont look pretty.
no matter how bad is this gov still its 1000 times better then zardari dark ages
In an Ideal world yes...however do we live in an ideal world? Corruption is not some benign tumor that you can simply operate and throw away. Is India not a corrupt country? Is China not a corrupt country? What about US?? So reducing corruption is a long battle and it is always a work in progress... Regarding long term project - then i am sorry this is standard practice. You take loans and invest in areas that will bring in revenue in long term...Some will be exceptional..some average and some will turn out to be outright disaster....As long as fiscal deficit is managed things wont go south in an abrupt way....He is corupt that is the problem here. I doubt any country can have a sustainable growth rate unless corupt elements are dealt with at the bud. A weak foundation will collapse our economy once again as it collapsed in 2008. Secondly Nawaz Sharief is taking a big gamble by taking loans and investing in project as if those project dont pan out in long run he will fall right back on his arse.
Coruption has to go one way or the other for Pakistan to progress.
Frankly speaking we Pakistanis are confused nation. I am not supporting any political party but it is a fact that due to our affiliations we like to be blind and ignore the facts. For example when the government tookover in 2013 these were some of the major headlines
1) Pakistan is a failed state and will be defaulted in 3 months
2) The talibans will takeover nuclear assets and have reached within 100 miles of capital (Islamabad)
3) Target killing in Karachi rose to kill about 2700 people in 2013.
4) Bhatta (extortion ) mafia in Karachi
5) Gdp growth rate of less than 3% (the worst in South Asia and one of the lowest in the world)
6) Forex reserves dropped to around 8 billion dollars, not even enough to pay off 3 months of salary
7) Mega scandals in every government project such as rental power plants, energy projects and anything you can name it
8) Electricity load shedding of 18 hours a day
And look where we are standing today. No more talks of surrendering to terrorists, no more talks of failed state, economy growing to one of the fastest in the region and terrorism reduced by over 70%. But we Pakistanis will give credit to all the positives to anything but government and all the negatives to the government.
There has not been any major scandals appearing like the last goverment which itself is a maassive achievement (though they r corrupt but have apparently been working as well)