EVALUATION OF THE IMF PROGRAM
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Transcript EVALUATION OF THE IMF PROGRAM
EVALUATION OF THE IMF
PROGRAM
BY
Dr. Hafiz A. Pasha*
*former Finance Minister; Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission and Vice Chancellor
University of Karachi
The Economic Situation
2012-13
• Growth rate remains low at about 3.5%
• Rate of Inflation down to 7.4%
• Large Fiscal Deficit of over Rs 1830 billion, 8 % of GDP
• Balance of Payments Deficit of $2.3 billion,
with current Account Deficit:-
$2.3 billion
Capital/Financial Account Surplus: - % 0.0 billion
• Plus Repayment to IMF of $ 2.5 billion
• Decline in Foreign Exchange Reserves of $ 4.8 billion, from $
10.8 billion at the end of 2011-12 to $ 6 billion at end of 201213
The Economic Situation
2013-14
• Peak Repayments to IMF in 2013-14 of $ 3.2 billion
• With ‘Business as Usual’ Scenario ,danger of default by
Pakistan, unless drastic steps taken
• Recourse to IMF, Global Lender of Last Resort and Policy of
Government of NEW LOAN TO REPAY OLD LOAN
Key Features of IMF Program
• Three Year Under Extended Fund Facility (EFF), with focus
on structural reforms
• Access to 425 % of Quota; Amount $6.6 billion
• 5 ‘Tough’ Prior Actions
• Initial Release of $ 544 million, 12 quarterly installments
following successful ‘review’ each time
• 5 Performance Criteria; 11 Structural Benchmarks; 9 to be
completed by June 2014
Objectives Of the Program
‘Stabilize First; Revive Later’
2013-14
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION
Balance of Payments
• Improve Balance of Payments from Deficit of $2.3 billion to
surplus of $ 4.6 billion
• Raise FE reserves from $6 billion to $ 9.6 billion by end of 201314
BUDGET
• Reduce fiscal deficit to 5.8 % of the GDP from 8% of GDP
Policy Instruments
Balance of Payments
• Depreciate the Rupee by 14 %
• Interest Rates to rise with Rate of Inflation
• Higher inflow of Aid from World Bank, ADB, etc., due to Program
Budget
• Taxation Proposals in Budget of over Rs 200 billion (GST, direct
taxes etc)
• Reduce Subsidy by substantial Jump in Power Tariff
• Higher taxation of Gas
• Cut Development Expenditure by 25 %
Current Position
At the End of First Quarter of 2013-14
Projected FE Reserves by IMF at end - September of $ 5.6 billion; Actual
Reserves of $ 4.6 billion.
THEREFORE, PROGRAM IS ALREADY OFF-TRACK
Projected depreciation of Rupee in the Program of 14 percent in 201314; Already 7 percent in the first three months
Shortfall in CSF inflow of $ 300 million
Budgetary Position is better at 1.6 percent of the GDP in first quarter of
2013-14; but almost Rs. 500 billion printing by the Central Bank (SBP)
FBR revenue growth of 17-18 per cent; as compared to target growth
rate of 23 per cent
‘Core` Inflation rate close to 9 percent in September; compared to annual
projection of below 8 percent in the program
Current Position
• In November, large repayment to IMF of over $700 million; FE
reserves could fall to below $3.5 billion, not enough for even one
month’s import cover. Therefore, rupee could come under severe
pressure.
Projected Level of Foreign Exchange Reserves
10
IMF
9.6
9
8
7.2
7
FE Reserves
($ billion)
6
5.6
5
‘Worst Case ’Scenario
5.3
4.9
4.6
4.2
4
3.5
One Month’s
Import Cover
3
2
1
1st Qr
2nd Qr
3rd Qr
4th Qr
Contingency Planning
• Implement Policy of Import Compression by
I. early withdrawal of SROs
II. regulatory duties on non-essential imports
III. raise import margin requirements
IV. other punitive measures
Seek more front loading of releases from IMF
Further cut in development expenditure, except for projects in power
and water sectors
Implement further cuts in non-salary expenditure
Tight Limit to overdraft of Provincial Governments
Projection of Key Macro Economic
Variables in 2013-14
IMF
GDP Growth Rate
2.5
Red
Rate of Inflation
2.5
11
8
Fiscal Deficit (% of GDP)
7
Current Account Deficit
(% of GDP)
1.7
5.8
0.6
The Future
• Pakistan is poised on the `Knife edge` in 2013-14, even in the
presence of an IMF program
• Danger of rising inflation and loss of growth
• Improvement in the economic situation will also hinge on
o The Security Situation
o Level of Power Load shedding
• If Pakistan manages to build up reserves of $7 billion or so ( 1 ½
month’s import cover) by June 2014 then conditions will improve in
2014-15 and beyond as net receipts will take place from IMF
• Pakistan can then start a program of economic revival and try to
achieve 6 per cent growth rate by 2016-17.
Thank You