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ZARDARI LEADING PAKISTAN TO ECONOMIC DISASTER : Pakistan Economic Destruction Profile 2012

So what is he (Zardari) thinking?

The answer, unhappily, is a familiar one. One, Zardari’s obsession with proving that he can drag this government over the finish line — completing its term — continues to dominate all else. Two, Zardari cares about only Zardari. And three,
Zardari’s world begins and ends with domestic politics.Combine those three elements and you have answers to all the vexing questions
. (From the DAWN | Cyril Almeida | 24th June, 2012)

Adnan·

Dear Cyril 

you nailed it, zardari and his dream world has no other fellow, just him and his lust for more. I would beg to differ though on your last thought, where your think we have to bear with him a little longer. I believe on the contrary that he is staying for much longer and his party plus his coalition partners are coming back next year. And that is because we dont have enough educated people like yourself in the country. Most of our populace only remembers what happened last night, and not over the last five years. So my dear Cyril, WE will elect them back in power, bacause we do not know the difference between good and bad. WE have rotted as a nation and as a people, and WE will only elect what is the worst of the lot, because WE are blind in our faith and deaf in our belief.

2 replies · active 6 weeks ago

0

Omar's avatar

Omar· 

You are right Adnan you are the few ones that admit that WE have a problem as a nation. But I also beg to differ with you on one thing, majority of our educated people in and out of country don’t use common sense and blame others for what they have done to their nation which directly involves their personal life. The problem is with the citizen of Pakistan, educated or not educated. Many of us don’t even know whats right and whats wrong. And just like Zardari WE care about only ourself and don’t care even about the small neighborhood that we live in. 

BTW great article Cyril

 

Pakistan Economy Profile 2012

Economy – overview

Decades of internal political disputes and low levels of foreign investment have led to slow growth and underdevelopment in Pakistan. Agriculture accounts for more than one-fifth of output and two-fifths of employment. Textiles account for most of Pakistan’s export earnings, and Pakistan’s failure to expand a viable export base for other manufactures has left the country vulnerable to shifts in world demand. Official unemployment is 6%, but this fails to capture the true picture, because much of the economy is informal and underemployment remains high. Over the past few years, low growth and high inflation, led by a spurt in food prices, have increased the amount of poverty – the UN Human Development Report estimated poverty in 2011 at almost 50% of the population. Inflation has worsened the situation, climbing from 7.7% in 2007 to more than 13% for 2011, before declining to 9.3% at year-end. As a result of political and economic instability, the Pakistani rupee has depreciated more than 40% since 2007. The government agreed to an International Monetary Fund Standby Arrangement in November 2008 in response to a balance of payments crisis. Although the economy has stabilized since the crisis, it has failed to recover. Foreign investment has not returned, due to investor concerns related to governance, energy, security, and a slow-down in the global economy. Remittances from overseas workers, averaging about $1 billion a month since March 2011, remain a bright spot for Pakistan. However, after a small current account surplus in fiscal year 2011 (July 2010/June 2011), Pakistan’s current account turned to deficit in the second half of 2011, spurred by higher prices for imported oil and lower prices for exported cotton. Pakistan remains stuck in a low-income, low-growth trap, with growth averaging 2.9% per year from 2008 to 2011. Pakistan must address long standing issues related to government revenues and energy production in order to spur the amount of economic growth that will be necessary to employ its growing population. Other long term challenges include expanding investment in education and healthcare, and reducing dependence on foreign donors.

GDP (purchasing power parity)

$488 billion (2011 est.) 
$476.5 billion (2010 est.) 
$459.3 billion (2009 est.) 
note: data are in 2011 US dollars

GDP (official exchange rate)

$204.1 billion (2011 est.)

GDP – real growth rate

2.4% (2011 est.) 
3.8% (2010 est.) 
1.7% (2009 est.)

GDP – per capita (PPP)

$2,800 (2011 est.) 
$2,800 (2010 est.) 
$2,700 (2009 est.) 
note: data are in 2011 US dollars

GDP – composition by sector

agriculture: 20.9% 
industry: 25.8% 
services: 53.3% (2011 est.)

Population below poverty line

22.3% (FY05/06 est.)

Labor force

58.41 million 
note: extensive export of labor, mostly to the Middle East, and use of child labor (2011 est.)

Labor force – by occupation

agriculture: 45% 
industry: 20.1% 
services: 34.9% (2010 est.)

Unemployment rate

5.6% (2011 est.) 
5.5% (2010 est.) 
note: substantial underemployment exists

Unemployment, youth ages 15-24

total: 7.7% 
male: 7% 
female: 10.5% (2008)

Household income or consumption by percentage share

lowest 10%: 9.9% 
highest 10%: 39.3% (FY07/08)

Distribution of family income – Gini index

30.6 (FY07/08) 
41 (FY98/99)

Investment (gross fixed)

11.8% of GDP (2011 est.)

Budget

revenues: $26.3 billion 
expenditures: $39.77 billion (2011 est.)

Taxes and other revenues

12.9% of GDP (2011 est.)

Budget surplus (+) or deficit (-)

-6.6% of GDP (2011 est.)

Public debt

60.1% of GDP (2011 est.) 
61.4% of GDP (2010 est.)

Inflation rate (consumer prices)

13.7% (2011 est.) 
13.9% (2010 est.)

Central bank discount rate

12% (31 January 2012 est.) 
14% (31 December 2010 est.)

Commercial bank prime lending rate

12.34% (31 December 2011 est.) 
14.12% (31 December 2010 est.)

Stock of money

$NA (31 December 2008) 
$52.76 billion (31 December 2007)

Stock of narrow money

$72.32 billion (30 June 2011) 
$62.02 billion (30 June 2010)

Stock of quasi money

$NA (31 December 2008) 
$18.42 billion (31 December 2007)

Stock of broad money

$79.67 billion (31 December 2011 est.) 
$85.22 billion (31 December 2010 est.)

Stock of domestic credit

$65.72 billion (31 December 2011 est.) 
$61.39 billion (31 December 2010 est.)

Market value of publicly traded shares

$38.17 billion (31 December 2010) 
$33.24 billion (31 December 2009) 
$23.49 billion (31 December 2008)

Agriculture – products

cotton, wheat, rice, sugarcane, fruits, vegetables; milk, beef, mutton, eggs

Industries

textiles and apparel, food processing, pharmaceuticals, construction materials, paper products, fertilizer, shrimp

Industrial production growth rate

3% (2011 est.)

Electricity – production

93.35 billion kWh (2010 est.)

Electricity – production by source

fossil fuel: 68.8% 
hydro: 28.2% 
nuclear: 3% 
other: 0% (2001)

Electricity – consumption

74.35 billion kWh (2010 est.)

Electricity – exports

0 kWh (2011 est.)

Electricity – imports

0 kWh (2009 est.)

Oil – production

64,950 bbl/day (2010 est.)

Oil – consumption

410,000 bbl/day (2010 est.)

Oil – exports

29,840 bbl/day (2009 est.)

Oil – imports

346,400 bbl/day (2009 est.)

Oil – proved reserves

313 million bbl (1 January 2011 est.)

Natural gas – production

42.9 billion cu m (2011 est.)

Natural gas – consumption

42.9 billion cu m (2011 est.)

Natural gas – exports

0 cu m (2009 est.)

Natural gas – imports

0 cu m (2009 est.)

Natural gas – proved reserves

840.2 billion cu m (1 January 2011 est.)

Current Account Balance

$268 million (2011 est.) 
-$3.94 billion (2010 est.)

Exports

$25.35 billion (2011 est.) 
$19.67 billion (2010 est.)

Exports – commodities

textiles (garments, bed linen, cotton cloth, yarn), rice, leather goods, sports goods, chemicals, manufactures, carpets and rugs

Exports – partners

US 15.8%, Afghanistan 8.1%, UAE 7.9%, China 7.3%, UK 4.3%, Germany 4.2% (2009)

Imports

$35.82 billion (2011 est.) 
$31.2 billion (2010 est.)

Imports – commodities

petroleum, petroleum products, machinery, plastics, transportation equipment, edible oils, paper and paperboard, iron and steel, tea

Imports – partners

UAE 16.3%, Saudi Arabia 12.5%, China 11.6%, Kuwait 8.4%, Singapore 7.1%, Malaysia 5% (2009)

Reserves of foreign exchange and gold

$17.02 billion (31 December 2011 est.) 
$17.21 billion (31 December 2010 est.)

Debt – external

$61.83 billion (31 December 2011 est.) 
$59.91 billion (31 December 2010 est.)

Stock of direct foreign investment – at home

$31.26 billion (31 December 2011 est.) 
$30.06 billion (31 December 2010 est.)

Stock of direct foreign investment – abroad

$1.419 billion (31 December 2011 est.) 
$1.362 billion (31 December 2010 est.)

Exchange rates

Pakistani rupees (PKR) per US dollar – 
85.99 (2011 est.) 
85.19 (2010 est.) 
81.71 (2009) 
70.64 (2008) 
60.6295 (2007)

Fiscal year

1 July – 30 June

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/pk.html

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URGENT APPEAL: EXPATRIATE PAKISTANIS PLEASE SAVE THAR COAL PROJECT. FIGHT AGAINST PAKISTAN OIL IMPORTERS LOBBY

AN APPEAL 

TO ALL PAKISTANIS AND PAKISTANI ORGANIZATIONS

FOR THE LOVE OF 180 MILLION SUFFERING BROTHERS AND SISTERS IN OUR SOHNI DHARTI

pakistan-flag

PLEASE FIGHT THE EFFORTS OF PAKISTAN OIL IMPORTERS LOBBY TO SCUTTLE THE

THAR COAL COAL PROJECT.

THIS IS A GIFT OF ALLAH ALMIGHTY

TO PAKISTAN

PLEASE FIGHT TO SAVE THIS PROJECT AND SUPPORT DR.SAMAR MUBARAK MAND’S

EFFORTS TO MAKE PAKISTAN ENERGY SELF SUFFICIENT.

BEHIND THE OIL IMPORTERS LOBBY ARE OIL EXPORTING COUNTRIES LIKE SAUDI OWNED ARABIA AND UAE.

PLEASE SEND A ONE LINER TO PAKISTAN PLANNING COMMISSION:

I, (YOUR NAME), WHO SENDS DOLLAR/POUND REMITTANCES TO PAKISTAN SUPPORT THE THAR COAL PROJECT 

YOUR SIGNATURE

P.S. KINDLY FORWARD THIS APPEAL TO ALL ON YOUR E-MAIL LIST

OFFICIAL EMAIL ADDRESSES OF OFFICERS
OF PLANNING COMMISSION
ISLAMABAD

 

1. Deputy Chairman

[email protected]

2. Advisor on Science and Technology

advisorst@pc.gov.pk

3. Secretary

[email protected]

4. Parliamentary Secretary

[email protected]

5. Chief Economist

[email protected]

6. Additional Secretary

[email protected]

7. Member Infrastructure

[email protected]

8. Member Social Sector

[email protected]

9. Member Science and Technology

[email protected]

10. Member Implementation and Monitoring

[email protected]

11. Member Energy

[email protected]

12. Member Food and Agriculture

[email protected]

13. Special Adviser to Deputy Chairman

[email protected]
14. Sr. Joint Secretary (Admn)

[email protected]

15. Senior Chief Agriculture and Food Section

[email protected]

16. Senior Chief Energy Wing

[email protected]

17. Senior Chief Water Resource Section

[email protected]

18. Director General (ICT Section & JACC)

[email protected]

19.  Joint Chief Economist Macro Modeling

[email protected]

20. Joint Chief Economist Macro

[email protected]

21. Joint Chief Economist (OP)

[email protected]

22. Chief Economic Appraisal Section

[email protected]

23. Chief Plan Coordination Section

[email protected]

24.  Chief Public Investment Authorization Section

[email protected]

25. Chief Public Investment Programming Section

[email protected]

26. Chief Environment Section

[email protected]

27. Chief Health Section

[email protected]

28. Chief Physical Planning and Housing Section

[email protected]

29. Chief Population and Social Planning Section

[email protected]

30. Chief Science and Technology Section

[email protected]

31. Chief Transport and Communication Section

[email protected]

32. Chief Energy Information system and Computer Section

[email protected]

33. DG (C) Projects Wing

[email protected]

34. DG (SS) Projects Wing

[email protected]

35.  DG (infra) Projects Wing

[email protected]

36. DG (Evalution) Projects Wing

[email protected]

37. DG PPMI

[email protected]

38.  Project Director Capacity Building

[email protected]

39. Chief Education Section

[email protected]

40. Chief Governance Section

[email protected]

41. Chief Industries and Commerce Section

[email protected]

42. Chief Mass, Media, Sports, Tourism and Youth Affairs Section

[email protected]

43. Chief Nutrition Section

[email protected]

44. Chief Printing and Publication Section

[email protected]

45. Chief Social Welfare Section

[email protected]

46. Chief Women Development Manpower Section

[email protected]

47. Chief Employment and Research Section

[email protected]

48. Chief Int. Trade and Finance Section

[email protected]

49. Chief Macro Economic Section

[email protected]

50. Chief Money, Prices and fiscal Section

[email protected]

51. Chief Poverty Alleviation Section

[email protected]

52. Chief Devolution & Area Development Section

[email protected]

53. Director CRPIRD

[email protected]

54. NPD Federal DERA Unit

[email protected]

55. PD Macro Modeling Project

[email protected]

56 . PD NFDC

[email protected]

57. OIC NLC

[email protected]

58. Director PIDE

[email protected]

 

ADMINISTRATION (AS A SPECIAL CASE UPTO BPS-19)

59. Deputy Secretary-I

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60. Deputy Secretary-II

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61. Deputy Secretary-III

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Is Pakistan an emerging market?

 

Is Pakistan an emerging market? 
February 13, 2012

Most people in the West believe that Pakistan is an unstable country on the verge of imminent collapse or an explosion of violence. It is consistently portrayed—by politicians, policymakers, and the media—as the most dangerous and dysfunctional state in the world, struggling with terrorism, an out-of-control military, and interreligious conflict.
And yet, Pakistan is included on Goldman Sachs’ list of the next eleven (N-11) most important emerging markets. Although it has along with Nigeria and Bangladesh) “broad and systematic issues across a range of areas” that will prevent it from fully delivering on its growth potential, the country’s large population (it currently has 180 million people) assures its inclusion. Indeed, within a generation, Pakistan will have the fourth largest number of people in the world, behind only India, China, and the United States, and be a market too significant to ignore.
It was possible to see this potential before 2007. Ranked highly for the openness of its markets, the country drew billions in foreign investment in the mid-2000s while chalking up growth rates of seven percent per year. Its equity markets were one of the best performers worldwide. The middle class was expanding rapidly, reaching into the tens of millions. Goldman predicted in 2007 that Pakistan could “ultimately have the potential to become similar to the smaller of today’s G7 in terms of size.”
Of course, much has changed since 2007. Or has it?
To be sure, the country has a wide range of problems. Political instability, insecurity, natural disasters, and energy shortages dominate the news. Ineffectual leadership and a weak state apparatus stifle progress in a whole slew of areas and prevent forceful action to deal with these issues. And, of course, there is terrorism, an out-of-control military, and interreligious conflict.
But except for spikes in terrorist attacks and drone strikes—and a concomitant deterioration in sentiment towards and within the country—all of Pakistan’s other problems existed five years ago.
And despite it all, Pakistan’s economy avoided a recession during the financial crisis and has managed to achieve 3-4 percent growth since. Middle class consumers started to spend again in 2011. The rural economy is experiencing a boom from high commodity prices.
Many of the problems the country faces can be found in some form in other emerging markets such as India, Indonesia, Mexico, and Nigeria, all of which are increasingly targeted by international investors. Nigeria, for instance, has suffered from terrorism, attacks on churches and mosques, and nationwide strikes—all in the last few weeks. It also has a long history of military intervention into politics. Mexico’s war against the country’s drug cartels has produced nearly 40,000 deaths over the past five years—roughly the same number as Pakistan’s troubles (in a country that has far fewer people).
India, which is more like Pakistan than either would care to admit, has many of these same problems. It currently faces an insurgency that operates in over one-eighth of its districts. Its government has more often than not been a hindrance to development. Many of it northern states have social development indicators worse than Pakistan. Yet, it is considered one of the most important emerging markets in the world.
Pakistan also has a number of important assets that contributed to its former success in attracting investment, including an able pool of professionals, an enterprising business community, a significant industrial base, and a modern banking system. It is a very investor-friendly country in terms of regulation and a relative lack of corruption. Its low wages, strategic location, and large domestic market offer an abundance of opportunities for investment and trade.
It also is a much less violent country than commonly believed. The homicide rate per year per 100,000 inhabitants is one-third of Brazil’s, on par with Estonia, and lower than Costa Rica, Kazakhstan, and Indonesia, none of which are known as especially violent places. As Pakistani ambassador to China Masood Khan told the China-Pakistan Cooperation Conference in Beijing in October:
I think that this common perception that the whole of Pakistan is insecure is not true. Vast parts of the country are secure for foreign investment.

However, this is certainly not how the country is perceived. Indeed, “You tend to hear the worst 5% of the Pakistan story 95% of the time,” as Pakistani entrepreneur Monis Rahman explained.
Changing the narrative—returning it to where it was half a decade ago—may not be easy, but offers very high returns. After all, Pakistan’s economy will determine the long-run path for the country, making it a more critical issue than many of the immediate crises plaguing the state.
Possibly the best way to do this would be to open up trade with India. As Dr. S. Akbar Zaidi has noted,

It would be revolutionary—there is a massive potential for trade between India and Pakistan, and if this were realized, then there would be concurrent massive changes in the political and social economy of the country.

The recent decision by Pakistan to grant Most Favored Nation (MFN) status to India could be extremely significant, but it remains unclear whether the deal will actually go through.
Donors such as DFID and USAID, both of which have made the country one of their top priorities, have a lot at stake here. The effectiveness of their programs for Pakistan depend to a great extent on whether this narrative can be changed such that investors return, growth rates pick up, and a virtuous cycle that eases many of the country’s ailments can be started.
They therefore should be emphasizing programs that can change this narrative. Besides indirectly aiding efforts to open up trade with India, they ought to consider what might change perceptions about Pakistan. What initiatives might ensure enough security for investors so they factor it more out of their thinking? What projects might make people (inside and outside the country) think differently about Pakistan’s prospects? How might the country’s positives be better broadcast to those (such as the diaspora) with the greatest possibility of putting their money at risk? How might the country’s burgeoning remittances be better channeled towards development? How might the legions of small businesspeople that matter so much to the economy be encouraged to believe more in its future (and thus invest more)?
As the recent financial crisis made vividly clear, investors often choose between greed and fear with a herd mentality. Right now everyone is scared of Pakistan. Those outside of the country stay away. Those inside are risk adverse. These concerns are not completely unwarranted, but they are immensely exaggerated. Whatever can be done to break this bubble of pessimism promises to have a large impact on the country’s future.

The above is based on my work chairing the working group on State Building in Pakistan during the 2011 Global Economic Symposium

 

 

Pakistan an emerging market for investment

 

Pakistan an emerging market for investment

 

Pakistan, rich with exciting opportunities, is an emerging market for Chinese investment in diverse sectors. These views were expressed by VP SAARC Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Pak chapter Iftikhar Ali Malik,a veteran trade leader and SVP,LCCI Meher Kashif Younis on Sunday while talking to APP.

They said “Pakistan is now open to Chinese businessmen with best atmosphere of investment which provide significant possibilities for Chinese and other foreign investors.” With Chinese investment, Pakistan would achieve sustained growth in key sectors,including increase in per capita income and improvement in micro-economic in the years to come, they added.

Iftikhar Ali Malik said current visit of Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani to China at Boao Forum will not only further strengthen bilateral relations but also boost trade ties between the two countries.

He observed that Pakistan is ideally located which has geographically immediate access to the Central Asian Republics and has a competitively affordable and expanding work force of 36 million. He said Pakistan’s foreign investment policy was open and liberal, which was a good news for Chinese companies interested in doing business here.

Meher Kashif said Lahore Chamber and all other chambers  across the country including Federation of Pakistan Chamber would  help Chinese corporate sector to identify opportunities in Pakistan’s vast resource based industries, such as oil, gas and petrochemicals, a fast growing infrastructure sector and other  industries such as power and water, IT, garments, Agriculture, livestock, communication, software and automotive manufacturing.

 

By: APP | April 02, 2012 | 1

 

 

A Comment: 
In my recent visit to Pakistan I saw an emerging vibrant, rekindling and promising Pakistan on individual and collective scale.  There are only 2 entities that are desperately attempting to undo Pakistan. (1) Nincompoop Mullahs; in the name of Islam. (2) Greedy Leaders; in the name of Democracy. Pakistan can be a leading Asian country without the both of them.

 

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Vibrant Pakistani Economy of 2008 Destroyed by War on Terror and Bad Governance

How a flourishing Pakistan economy has been destroyed by fiscally inept policies of the Zardari/PPP government. Despite, record exports, deficit spending almost 40 percent, has dried up investments and made credit unavailable for consumers.

 

 

Pakistan economic review projects that because of strong economic policies taken up by Pakistan government manufacturing and financial services sectors have flourished in fiscal 2008.

Economic review of Pakistan shows that there has been a growth rate of 7 percent per year for four successive years till 2007. Though Pakistan is a poor country, yet its growth rate has been better than global average growth rate. 

As per economic review in Pakistan several economic reforms that have been taken up in recent years helped in its economic growth. Economic review at Pakistan shows that there has been improvement in currency reserves and foreign exchange reserves of Pakistan have developed. In present situation of recession, however, growth in economy of Pakistan has been held back a little bit. 

Economic review of Pakistan has been focusing in recent times on how to deal with economic recession. Syed Yousaf Raza Gilani who is Prime Minister of Pakistan has initiated a number of procedures to address regional economic imbalances. Economic indicators look positive in present situation. Discount rate of central bank has been improved to 1.5 percentage points. This will help in dealing with high inflation rate in Pakistan. 

Pakistan economic review projects that government encourages foreign investments in various fields of real estate, telecommunications, software, energy, fertilizer, aerospace, textiles, steel, ship building, arms manufacturing, cement and automotives. 

Reduction of poverty from Pakistan is a major issue for economic department of government. In present analysis, plans have been made to develop roads, dams and power generating plants to generate more job openings and increase development. According to new plan, 541 billion rupees will be used for economic development of country. 

Export of goods is a major concern for Pakistan economy. From 1999, exports of Pakistan have increased from $7.5 billion to $18 billion in financial year 2007-2008. Major items for exports include cotton fiber, vegetables, rice, electrical appliances, furniture, cement, tiles, marble, textiles, clothing, sports goods, powdered milk, livestock meat, software, seafood, leather goods, surgical instruments, carpets, rugs, ice cream, chicken, wheat, processed food items, Pakistani assembled Suzuki cars, salt, defense equipment, onyx, marble and engineering goods to mention a few. 

Some important import items of Pakistan are petroleum and petroleum products, automobiles, medicines, industrial machinery, construction machinery, trucks, electronics, civilian aircraft, computers, pharmaceutical products, computer parts, food items, toys, defense equipment, iron and steel.

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Double Digit Gains in Pakistan’s Per Capita Income

 

Pakistan’s nominal per capita income rose 16.9 percent to $1,254 in 2010-11 from $1,073 in 2009-2010, according to the Economic Survey of Pakistan. Using the IMF’s purchasing power parity exchange rate of Rs. 34 to a US dollar (versus official exchange rate of Rs. 85 to a US dollar), Pakistan’s per capita income in terms of purchasing power parity works out to $3,135.00.

Per Capita PPP GDP

Although Pakistan’s per capita GDP rose by only 0.7% in real terms, the much higher 16.9% nominal per capita income increase reflects a combination of the nation’s double-digit inflation rate and the the rupee’s stable exchange rate with the US dollar which has been losing ground to most major world currencies in 2010-2011.

Similar to Pakistan’s nominal growth, at least a part of India’s nominal growth in per capita gdp and income is also driven by rising domesticinflation of over 10% and appreciating Indian rupee (5.5% from 48.32 in 2009 to 45.65 in 2010) from strong hot money inflows from the Fed’s quantitative easing in the United States and elsewhere. India’s FDI hasdeclined by a third from $34.6 billion in 2009 to $23.7 billion in 2010. Its current account deficit is being increasingly funded by significant short-term capital inflows (FII up 66% from $17.4 billion in 2009 to $29 billion in 2010) rather than more durable foreign direct investment (FDI). This alarming trend of declining FDI and surging FII in India has continued into 2010-2011. 

The idea of PPP or purchasing power parity is quite simple. A US dollar can be exchanged today for about 85 Pakistani rupees. But with Rs 85 you can buy more goods and services in Pakistan than one US dollar can buy in the United States. So Pakistan’s GDP expressed in dollars at current exchange rates is about 40% of what it is when adjusted for PPP. The current ratio for both Indian and Pakistani GDP conversion from nominal US dollars to PPP dollars is about 2.5, calculated as follows:

Country……Official Rate….Purchasing Power…..Ratio

India………..INR 45……………..INR 18……….2.5

Pakistan…….PKR 85…………….PKR 34……….2.5

Looking at the increase in per capita income alone is quite misleading in judging the health of Pakistan’s economy. Other indicators, such as real GDP growth and investments, show that the state of the economy is very poor. The nation’s GDP grew only 2.4% in real terms in 2010-2011. Domestic investment dropped to a 40-year low of 13.4% of GDP, and foreign direct investment (FDI) declined by 29 percent to $1.232 billion during July-April 2010-11 from $1.725 million in the same period a year earlier. 

In addition to improved security environment, Pakistan has an urgent need for serious economic reform, greater social justice and better governance. Unless the PPP government acts to improve this situation, no amount of foreign aid, external loans and other help will suffice. The first step in the process is for the ruling elite to lead by example by paying their fair share of taxes and adopting less extravagant personal lifestyles to get Pakistan’s fiscal house in order.

 
 
 
Courtesy: Reference

SUNDAY, JUNE 12, 2011

Double Digit Gains in Pakistan’s Per Capita Income

 

Riaz Haq’s Comments

Riaz Haq said…
The PPP conversion factor changes every year for both India and Pakistan as the inflation erodes the buying power of currencies in South Asia. 

For example, here is the history of the purchasing power dollar exchange rate for Indian and Pakistani rupees as calculated by the World Bank:

Year India Pakistan

2006 15 20

2007 15 21

2008 16 24

2009 17 29

http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/PA.NUS.PPP I have used Rs 34 to a US dollar for Pakistan in 2011 to convert to PPP from nominal in my post.

IMF PPP conversion estimates for India and Pakistan for 2010 are INR 18 and Pak Rs 34 to a US dollar in 2011.
JUNE 12, 2011 9:40 AM
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_dj7hueuj-U0/SZ4fE28YCBI/AAAAAAAAA4Y/1uFweBSg82U/S45/riaz.jpg” width=”35″ height=”35″ class=”photo” alt=””>
Riaz Haq said…
Here’s a recent piece on FDI decline and FII upsurge in India: 

In 2010-11, inbound FDI into India fell by as much as 28%, the second consecutive year of decline and the first such large decline since the opening up of the economy in 1991-92. As a result of this decline, the present level of $27 billion of FDI inflows is the lowest in four years.

A large part of the progress made in FDI inflows over the boom years has now been reversed, with flows down by almost 29% from their high in 2007-08. This trend, more than just being odd, is also worrying when seen in the context of the fact that the past four years cover the recessionary period as well.
—-
The decline in FDI in 2009-10 could be explained by the fact that it was a year when recessionary effects were visible in the global economy. All BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) saw declines in FDI flows during that year.

According to the United Nations Conference on Trade & Development (Unctad), flows into China fell by over 12% and to Russia and Brazil by as much as 49% and 42% from the previous year.

However, a number of emerging markets have shown substantial recovery in 2010. The RBI pointed to Unctad figures to show that countries like China, Brazil, Mexico and Thailand had in 2010 shown a rebound in FDI of between 6-53 percent. Indonesia apparently showed a three-fold rise from the previous year.

In India itself, FII flows have been on the rise over the past two years on an annual basis, with only 2008-09 being a year of sharp outflows. In fact, the outflow of $15 billion was more than made up by inflows of $29 billion — their highest ever — in 2009-10. This level was largely maintained in 2010-11 as well, with a small increase.

Both these factors go on to show that the decline in FDI into India in 2010-11 is not the result of a weak global situation or investor risk-aversion. The causes really lie elsewhere.
———–
FDI flows showed a dismal performance in almost every month of the previous financial year, with May being the only exception. By the end of the third quarter, it became clear that FDI inflows would be nowhere close to what they were the year before.

The RBI highlighted this in its quarterly ‘Macroeconomic and Monetary Developments (MMD) study released in January 2011 and suggested some reasons for the trend as well.

According to the bank, the “major reason for the decline in inward FDI is reported to have been the environment-sensitive policies pursued, as manifested in the recent episodes in the mining sector, integrated township projects and construction of ports, which appear to have affected the investors’ sentiments.”

The Ministry of Environment had recently questioned the ecological viability of the Korean steel giant, Posco’s proposed plans in Orissa, which could be one of India’s biggest FDIs ever.

The MMD review further goes on to observe that there are other reasons for the decline as well, such as “persistent procedural delays, land acquisition issues and availability of quality infrastructure”.

Indeed, delays in decision-making are visible in sectors like defence and multi-brand retail, discussions on which have been long in the works. The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) had floated a discussion paper on defence in May 2010 and on multi-brand retail in July 2010.

Feedback on these was received by parties interested in the sector, but a decision on allowing FDI into these sectors is still nowhere in sight.
—
This is corroborated by the numbers. Both telecom and real estate have seen an above-average decline in FDI flows during the year. While flows into telecom declined by 35% to $1.6 billion, the flows to housing and real estate declined by as much as 60% to $1.1 billion…

http://www.firstpost.com/business/hot-money-is-flowing-but-rest-of-india-story-has-gone-cold-21519.html
JUNE 14, 2011 6:12 PM
 
Riaz Haq said…
Here’s a BBC report of how inflation is hurting Indians and Pakistanis: 

Inflation is the price that ordinary Asians are paying for high growth rates.

For the less well-off, who spend their money on food and fuel, the story is even worse. The rise in their household expenses at the moment is usually higher than headline inflation rates.

According to the International Monetary Fund, last year consumer prices rose 13.2% in India, 11.7% in Pakistan and 9.2% in Vietnam. Other Asian nations coped better but the average for developing Asia was 6% – compared to a 1.6% average rise in prices in advanced economies.

The speed at which prices are shooting up means that unless people find ways to save and invest effectively, they in fact get much poorer – even if Asia is getting richer.
—
The world is jealous of Asia’s sky-high growth rates, but for ordinary people the price of success is corrosive inflation which could eat away their savings.

”From outside it looks good,” says Manasi Pawar. “We’re staying in a big house, paying so much in rent and our kids are going to great schools.”

Manasi, a qualified software worker in hi-tech Hyderabad in India, recently became a full-time mother. Her husband also works in the IT industry.

The couple epitomise the emergence of a well-to-do middle class in Asian countries – except there’s one significant snag.

”We were actually losing money,” says Manasi.

The couple recently woke up to the fact that inflation rates of nearly 9% meant that their savings were actually disappearing in front of their eyes.

”We were sitting on a bunch of cash but we didn’t know where to put it, and it’s important that we don’t let it lie there in the bank – because a bank doesn’t give an interest rate that even matches the inflation rate,” she says.
—-
The poorest people in society, who spend disproportionately more on food, are hit most savagely of all.

But there is a way to fight back against inflation: to save, and to put some of that money in a part of the economy that rises along with inflation.

For most people, that means investing in shares or equities. “The only way you can make money long-term is through an equity linked product,” says Ms Halan.

Money in the bank in India may only earn 3% or 4% – which in fact means you are losing money. But equity linked funds in this exploding economy have risen much faster, sometimes as high as 25%. 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-13959235
 
Riaz Haq said…
Here’s a Nepal Monitor report on MPI poverty in South Asia:

Among the 104 countries, Nepal ranks 82 in the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) by Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI) with UNDP support. Sri Lanka (32) tops South Asia followed by Pakstan (70), Bangladesh (73), India (74) and Nepal.

UNDP’s Human Development Report for this year, to be published in late October, will be based on this new MPI method. The new method incorporates 10 indicators of poverty, and these are clustered under three dimensions— education (years of schooling and child enrolment), health (child mortality and nutrition), and standard of living (electricity, drinking water, sanitation, flooring, cooking fuel, and assets).

UNDP’s earlier reports measured poverty in terms of survival, access to knowledge and decent standard of living (overall economic provisioning).

The latest MPI is based on surveys conducted on various countries between 2000 to 2007. Nepal’s statistics are from 2006.

Nepal is better positioned than Pakistan and India in terms of years of schooling for children and enrolments. Pakistan had 32.50 percent and India had 23.99 percent deprivation in the educational dimension whereas Nepal had 21.32 percent deprivation. Sri Lanka (6.26) and Bangladesh (18.70) fared better than Nepal and other countries in the region.

In the health dimension Nepal is better than the other surveys countries in the region—Sri Lanka (35.40 percent), Pakistan (36.35), Bangladesh (34.68), and India (33.53).

In the living standard measure Nepal was better than Sri Lanka (58.34) or Bangladesh (46.81), but worse than Pakistan (31.14) or India (41.33).

For the surveyed year 2006, Nepal’s MPI value was 0.350, the highest in the region. The MPI value reflects the percentage of people who are MPI poor and the average intensity of their poverty. Nepal’s Incidence of Poverty was 64.7 percent and her Average Intensity Across the Poor was 54.0 percent.

Slovenia, Czech Republic, Belarus, Latvia, Kazakhstan, Georgia, Hungary, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, and Albania, respectively, are the countries ranking in the top ten on the index for 104 developing countries. The surveyed countries have a combined population of 5.2 billion, which comprise 78 percent of the human total. The study reveals that a third of population in all surveyed countries combined live in multidimensional poverty.

Half of the world’s poor, according to the MPI, live in South Asia (51 percent or 844 million people). India, in particular, has more MPI poor people in eight of her states alone (421 million in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal) than in the 26 poorest African countries combined (410 million). The overall figure for the entire of African developing countries is 28 percent (458 million).

http://www.nepalmonitor.com/2010/07/post_22.html
JULY 19, 2011 7:39 PM
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Riaz Haq said…
Here’s a Jan, 2011 NDTV-PTI report on India’s per capita income:

Per capita income of Indians grew by 14.5 per cent to Rs. 46,492 in 2009-10 from Rs. 40,605 in the year-ago period, as per the revised data released by the government on Monday.

The new per capita income figure estimates on current market prices is over Rs. 2,000 more than the previous estimate of Rs. 44,345 (one nominal US dollar equals INR 44.34909, and PPP USD equals INR 18) calculated by the Central Statistical Organisation (CSO).

Per capita income means earnings of each Indian if the national income is evenly divided among the country’s population at 117 crore.

However, the increase in per capita income was only about 6 per cent in 2009-10 if it is calculated on the prices of 2004-05 prices, which is a better way of comparison and broadly factors inflation.

Per capita income (at 2004-05 prices) stood at Rs. 33,731 in FY10 against Rs. 31,801 in the previous year, the latest data on national income said.

The size of the economy at current prices rose to Rs. 61,33,230 crore in the last fiscal, up 16.1 per cent over Rs. 52,82,086 crore in FY’09.

Based on 2004-05 prices, the Indian economy expanded by 8 per cent during the fiscal ended March 2010. This is higher than 6.8 per cent growth in fiscal 2008-09.

The country’s population increased to 117 crore at the end of March 2010, from 115.4 crore in fiscal 2008-09.


Read more at: http://profit.ndtv.com/news/show/india-s-per-capita-income-rises-to-rs-46-492-138555?cp
JULY 22, 2011 6:28 PM
Riaz Haq said…
India’s GDP likely to hit $2 trillion this year, reports Rediff:

India is poised to join the coveted club of economies whose national income, or gross domestic product, exceeds $2 trillion.

According to recently released data, India’s nominal GDP is expected to grow at 14 per cent in 2011-12, to reach Rs 90 lakh crore (Rs 90 trillion). At a dollar exchange rate of Rs 45, this works out to $2 trillion.

However, if inflation is assumed to be 7 per cent and the real growth rate is 9 per cent as projected, the growth rate of 14 per cent may actually understate nominal growth rate by 2 percentage points, which means India’s nominal GDP in dollar terms will actually exceed $2 trillion this fiscal!

India’s nominal GDP crossed the $1-trillion mark in 2007-08, which implies GDP has doubled in four years. 

First, the magic number of $2 trillion is based on an exchange rate of $45 to the dollar. If the rupee were to depreciate, India’s nominal GDP would be lower for the same level of output.

Second, in celebrating the nominal as opposed to the real GDP, we may be losing sight of the contribution of inflation.

The difference between real and nominal GDP is inflation, and so for a given level of real GDP, the higher the inflation the more rapidly would nominal GDP increase. This is clearly an undesirable outcome for everybody. 
——
Statistical convolutions aside, the health of the Indian economy needs a candid review, particularly in light of potential downsides that could derail the genuine progress the Indian economy has made over the past two decades.

The slowdown in virtually all sectors of the economy, barring a few select industries like ‘transport, logistics and communication’, which has been growing annually at 25 per cent, is indeed worrisome.

Growth in the agriculture sector continues to be dampened by under-investment, despite some increase during the past five years. This has resulted in the sector being caught in a classic low productivity trap. 

Manufacturing too is spinning on its wheels, with annual growth rates stubbornly in the single digits. This reflects deeply embedded structural problems, which have been discussed in this space.

India’s economic growth continues to rely on the service sector growing at or around 10 per cent annually, which renders it vulnerable to global shocks.

The situation on the supply side also leaves a lot to be desired. This particularly applies to the tardy progress in the development of infrastructure and investment in human development, which is already holding India back. 

http://www.rediff.com/business/slide-show/slide-show-1-budget-2011-india-set-to-become-a-2-trillion-dollar-economy/20110307.htm
JULY 31, 2011 8:50 AM
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Riaz Haq said…
Here’s a News International report on impact of US downgrade on Pakistan:

The ongoing economic crisis across the world after downgrade of the United States credit rating would have a positive impact on Pakistan’s economy as analysts said that the current account balance would stay in surplus and the electricity subsidy will automatically be contained.

The United States credit rating downgrade after enhancement of debt ceiling rattled the stock markets around the globe and majority of the equity markets have touched their lower locks. While major commodities, except gold, have also witnessed sharp decline in their prices after 2008.

“With the decline in oil prices globally, Pakistan’s current account balance is likely to stay in surplus and the electricity subsidy will automatically be contained,” according to a JS research report on Tuesday.

The report said that the growth is expected to rebound due to the bumper agriculture crops and inflation would tame further, whereas equity market will remain resilient compared to its regional peers due to lower foreign exposure.

“However, political instability and deteriorating law and order situation are the key risks to the economy,” it added.

Analysts said that the present global crisis is different to 2008. The crisis of 2007/08 was driven by excessive overheating of the global economy and resultantly commodity and real estate markets touched their peak levels.

In that crisis, Pakistan suffered as a result of higher global commodity prices and the government flawed domestic prices of providing huge subsidy.

“As a result, the twin deficits hit 16.3 percent of the GDP,” the JS report revealed, adding that this difficult scenario led to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme in order to bailout the economy from the brink of collapse.

However, the report said that in 2011/12 crisis Pakistan’s macros will be resilient and will benefit from the decline in the global commodity prices.

“Unlike 2008, Pakistan’s real interest rates are positive, real effective exchange rate is not overvalued and subsidies are largely contained,” it added.

About the United States austerity plan and its impact on Pakistan, experts believed that the United States is unlikely to reduce its spending towards the war on terror.

The American economy is going through its worst period in history, where Obama’s administration is left with very little fiscal space to finance its ballooning fiscal deficit that is around nine percent of the GDP.

The stimulus package of post-Lehman crisis has left the Federal Reserve Bank of America literally with no option either. To smooth the functions of the US Treasury, the lawmakers have agreed to provide additional $2.4 trillion to the debt ceiling, subject to deficit saving of approximately $1 trillion over the next decade.

This year the Americans are unlikely to reduce their spending as the austerity measures decided will be implemented from 2013 onwards, experts said.

The JS report said that the United States will continue to pay for counterinsurgency programme in Afghanistan even if it plans to pullout from Afghanistan by 2014.

On Pakistan’s front, the United States will definitely play the role of the devil’s advocate and delay the due payments or reduce the grant size, according to the report.

Overall, the presence of the United States in Afghanistan will keep the dollar flows continued into Pakistan directly or indirectly, the report said, adding that the United States rationalisation of budgets will have a bare minimum impact on Afghanistan and Pakistan.

http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintDetail.aspx?ID=61883&Cat=3
AUGUST 10, 2011 10:20 PM
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Riaz Haq said…
Here’s an excerpt from Indian govt press release on per capita income in India for 2011:

The Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Statistics and Programme Implementation Shri Srikant Kumar Jena has said that the Per Capita Income at the national level, which was Rs. 24,143 in the year 2004-05, stands at Rs. 54,835 in the year 2010-11, showing an increase of more than 120%. The details of State/UT-wise per capita income (Net State Domestic Product at factor cost) at current prices, for the years 2004-05 to 2009-10, as compiled and provided by the Directorates of Economics & Statistics of the States, are given in the table at Annex.

http://pib.nic.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx The current ratio for both Indian and Pakistani GDP conversion from nominal US dollars to PPP dollars is about 2.5, calculated as follows:

Country……Official Rate….Purchasing Power…..Ratio

India…..INR 45….INR 18….2.5

Pakistan.PKR 85…PKR 34……….2.5


Using 18 INR to a PPP dollar, Indian PPP per capita income for 2011 works out to $ 3,046.
AUGUST 15, 2011 7:52 PM
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Riaz Haq said…
Nominal per capita incomes in both India and Pakistan stand at just over $1200 a year, according to figures released in May and June of 2011 by the two governments. This translates to about $3100 per capita in terms of PPP (purchasing power parity). Using a more generous PPP correction factor of 2.9 for India as claimed by Economic Survey of India 2011 rather than the 2.5 estimated by IMF for both neighbors, the PPP GDP per capita for Indian and Pakistan work out to $3532 and $3135 respectively. 

Nominal per capita income of Indians grew by 17.9 per cent to Rs 54,835, or $1218, in 2010-11 from Rs 46,492 in the year-ago period, according to the revised data released by the government in May, 2011 as reported by Indian media. 

In June 2011, Economic Survey of Pakistan reported that the nominal per capita income of Pakistanis rose 16.9 percent to $1,254 in 2010-11, up from $1,073 in 2009-2010.
AUGUST 19, 2011 8:57 AM
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Riaz Haq said…
Rising per capita income and a growing, young population spending more time online and at Western movies are helping build a mass market in Pakistan, according to Businessweek:

One way to take a city’s economic pulse is to check out where locals shop. In Karachi, Pakistan, shoppers are flocking to Port Grand, which opened in May. Built as a promenade by the historic harbor for almost $23 million, the center caters to Pakistanis eager to indulge themselves. This city of 20 million has seen more than 1,500 deaths from political and sectarian violence from January to August. At Port Grand the only hint of the turmoil is the presence of security details and surveillance cameras. “The whole world is going through a new security environment,” says Shahid Firoz, 61, Port Grand’s developer. “We have to be very conscious of security just as any other significant facility anywhere in the world needs to be.”

Young people stroll the promenade eating burgers and fries and browsing through 60 stores and stalls that sell everything from high fashion to silver bracelets to ice cream. Ornate benches dot a landscaped area around a 150-year-old banyan tree. “Port Grand is something fresh for the city, very aesthetically pleasing and unique,” says Yasmine Ibrahim, a 25-year-old Lebanese American who is helping set up a student affairs office at a new university in Karachi.

One-third of Pakistan’s 170 million people are under the age of 15, which means the leisure business will continue to grow, says Naveed Vakil, head of research at AKD Securities. Per capita income has grown to $1,254 a year in June from $1,073 three years ago.

The appetite for things American is strong despite the rise in tensions between the two allies. Hardee’s opened its first Karachi outlet in September: In the first few days customers waited for hours. It plans to open 10 more restaurants in Pakistan in the next two and a half years, says franchisee Imran Ahmed Khan. U.S. movies are attracting crowds to the recently opened Atrium Cinemas, which would not be out of place in suburban Chicago. Current features include The Adventures of Tintin and the latest Twilight Saga installment. Mission: Impossible—Ghost Protocol is coming soon. Operator Nadeem Mandviwalla says the cinema industry in Pakistan is growing 30 percent a year.

Exposure to Western lifestyles through cable television and the Internet is raising demand for these goods and services. Pakistan has 20 million Internet users, compared with 133,900 a decade ago, while 25 foreign channels, such as CNN (TWX) and BBC World News, are now available. And for many Pakistanis, reruns of the U.S. sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond are a regular treat.

The bottom line: With per capita income rising quickly, Pakistan is developing a mass market eager for Western goods.
Riaz Haq said…The PPP conversion factor changes every year for both India and Pakistan as the inflation erodes the buying power of currencies in South Asia. 

For example, here is the history of the purchasing power dollar exchange rate for Indian and Pakistani rupees as calculated by the World Bank:

Year India Pakistan

2006 15 20

2007 15 21

2008 16 24

2009 17 29

http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/PA.NUS.PPP

I have used Rs 34 to a US dollar for Pakistan in 2011 to convert to PPP from nominal in my post.

IMF PPP conversion estimates for India and Pakistan for 2010 are INR 18 and Pak Rs 34 to a US dollar in 2011.Riaz Haq said…Here’s a recent piece on FDI decline and FII upsurge in India: 

In 2010-11, inbound FDI into India fell by as much as 28%, the second consecutive year of decline and the first such large decline since the opening up of the economy in 1991-92. As a result of this decline, the present level of $27 billion of FDI inflows is the lowest in four years.

A large part of the progress made in FDI inflows over the boom years has now been reversed, with flows down by almost 29% from their high in 2007-08. This trend, more than just being odd, is also worrying when seen in the context of the fact that the past four years cover the recessionary period as well.
—-
The decline in FDI in 2009-10 could be explained by the fact that it was a year when recessionary effects were visible in the global economy. All BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) saw declines in FDI flows during that year.

According to the United Nations Conference on Trade & Development (Unctad), flows into China fell by over 12% and to Russia and Brazil by as much as 49% and 42% from the previous year.

However, a number of emerging markets have shown substantial recovery in 2010. The RBI pointed to Unctad figures to show that countries like China, Brazil, Mexico and Thailand had in 2010 shown a rebound in FDI of between 6-53 percent. Indonesia apparently showed a three-fold rise from the previous year.

In India itself, FII flows have been on the rise over the past two years on an annual basis, with only 2008-09 being a year of sharp outflows. In fact, the outflow of $15 billion was more than made up by inflows of $29 billion — their highest ever — in 2009-10. This level was largely maintained in 2010-11 as well, with a small increase.

Both these factors go on to show that the decline in FDI into India in 2010-11 is not the result of a weak global situation or investor risk-aversion. The causes really lie elsewhere.
———–
FDI flows showed a dismal performance in almost every month of the previous financial year, with May being the only exception. By the end of the third quarter, it became clear that FDI inflows would be nowhere close to what they were the year before.

The RBI highlighted this in its quarterly ‘Macroeconomic and Monetary Developments (MMD) study released in January 2011 and suggested some reasons for the trend as well.

According to the bank, the “major reason for the decline in inward FDI is reported to have been the environment-sensitive policies pursued, as manifested in the recent episodes in the mining sector, integrated township projects and construction of ports, which appear to have affected the investors’ sentiments.”

The Ministry of Environment had recently questioned the ecological viability of the Korean steel giant, Posco’s proposed plans in Orissa, which could be one of India’s biggest FDIs ever.

The MMD review further goes on to observe that there are other reasons for the decline as well, such as “persistent procedural delays, land acquisition issues and availability of quality infrastructure”.

Indeed, delays in decision-making are visible in sectors like defence and multi-brand retail, discussions on which have been long in the works. The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) had floated a discussion paper on defence in May 2010 and on multi-brand retail in July 2010.

Feedback on these was received by parties interested in the sector, but a decision on allowing FDI into these sectors is still nowhere in sight.
—
This is corroborated by the numbers. Both telecom and real estate have seen an above-average decline in FDI flows during the year. While flows into telecom declined by 35% to $1.6 billion, the flows to housing and real estate declined by as much as 60% to $1.1 billion…

http://www.firstpost.com/business/hot-money-is-flowing-but-rest-of-india-story-has-gone-cold-21519.htmlJUNE 14, 2011 6:12 PM <img src=”http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_dj7hueuj-class=”photo” alt=””>Riaz Haq said…Here’s a BBC report of how inflation is hurting Indians and Pakistanis: 

Inflation is the price that ordinary Asians are paying for high growth rates.

For the less well-off, who spend their money on food and fuel, the story is even worse. The rise in their household expenses at the moment is usually higher than headline inflation rates.

According to the International Monetary Fund, last year consumer prices rose 13.2% in India, 11.7% in Pakistan and 9.2% in Vietnam. Other Asian nations coped better but the average for developing Asia was 6% – compared to a 1.6% average rise in prices in advanced economies.

The speed at which prices are shooting up means that unless people find ways to save and invest effectively, they in fact get much poorer – even if Asia is getting richer.
—
The world is jealous of Asia’s sky-high growth rates, but for ordinary people the price of success is corrosive inflation which could eat away their savings.

”From outside it looks good,” says Manasi Pawar. “We’re staying in a big house, paying so much in rent and our kids are going to great schools.”

Manasi, a qualified software worker in hi-tech Hyderabad in India, recently became a full-time mother. Her husband also works in the IT industry.

The couple epitomise the emergence of a well-to-do middle class in Asian countries – except there’s one significant snag.

”We were actually losing money,” says Manasi.

The couple recently woke up to the fact that inflation rates of nearly 9% meant that their savings were actually disappearing in front of their eyes.

”We were sitting on a bunch of cash but we didn’t know where to put it, and it’s important that we don’t let it lie there in the bank – because a bank doesn’t give an interest rate that even matches the inflation rate,” she says.
—-
The poorest people in society, who spend disproportionately more on food, are hit most savagely of all.

But there is a way to fight back against inflation: to save, and to put some of that money in a part of the economy that rises along with inflation.

For most people, that means investing in shares or equities. “The only way you can make money long-term is through an equity linked product,” says Ms Halan.

Money in the bank in India may only earn 3% or 4% – which in fact means you are losing money. But equity linked funds in this exploding economy have risen much faster, sometimes as high as 25%. 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business
Riaz Haq said…Here’s a Nepal Monitor report on MPI poverty in South Asia:

Among the 104 countries, Nepal ranks 82 in the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) by Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI) with UNDP support. Sri Lanka (32) tops South Asia followed by Pakstan (70), Bangladesh (73), India (74) and Nepal.

UNDP’s Human Development Report for this year, to be published in late October, will be based on this new MPI method. The new method incorporates 10 indicators of poverty, and these are clustered under three dimensions— education (years of schooling and child enrolment), health (child mortality and nutrition), and standard of living (electricity, drinking water, sanitation, flooring, cooking fuel, and assets).

UNDP’s earlier reports measured poverty in terms of survival, access to knowledge and decent standard of living (overall economic provisioning).

The latest MPI is based on surveys conducted on various countries between 2000 to 2007. Nepal’s statistics are from 2006.

Nepal is better positioned than Pakistan and India in terms of years of schooling for children and enrolments. Pakistan had 32.50 percent and India had 23.99 percent deprivation in the educational dimension whereas Nepal had 21.32 percent deprivation. Sri Lanka (6.26) and Bangladesh (18.70) fared better than Nepal and other countries in the region.

In the health dimension Nepal is better than the other surveys countries in the region—Sri Lanka (35.40 percent), Pakistan (36.35), Bangladesh (34.68), and India (33.53).

In the living standard measure Nepal was better than Sri Lanka (58.34) or Bangladesh (46.81), but worse than Pakistan (31.14) or India (41.33).

For the surveyed year 2006, Nepal’s MPI value was 0.350, the highest in the region. The MPI value reflects the percentage of people who are MPI poor and the average intensity of their poverty. Nepal’s Incidence of Poverty was 64.7 percent and her Average Intensity Across the Poor was 54.0 percent.

Slovenia, Czech Republic, Belarus, Latvia, Kazakhstan, Georgia, Hungary, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, and Albania, respectively, are the countries ranking in the top ten on the index for 104 developing countries. The surveyed countries have a combined population of 5.2 billion, which comprise 78 percent of the human total. The study reveals that a third of population in all surveyed countries combined live in multidimensional poverty.

Half of the world’s poor, according to the MPI, live in South Asia (51 percent or 844 million people). India, in particular, has more MPI poor people in eight of her states alone (421 million in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal) than in the 26 poorest African countries combined (410 million). The overall figure for the entire of African developing countries is 28 percent (458 million).

http://www.nepalmonitor.com/2010/07/post_22.htmlJULY 19, 2011 7:39 PM <img src=”http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_dj7hueuj-U0/SZ4fE28YCBI/AAAAAAAAA4Y/1uFweBSg82U/S45/riaz.jpg” width=”35″ height=”35″ class=”photo” alt=””>Riaz Haq said…Here’s a Jan, 2011 NDTV-PTI report on India’s per capita income:

Per capita income of Indians grew by 14.5 per cent to Rs. 46,492 in 2009-10 from Rs. 40,605 in the year-ago period, as per the revised data released by the government on Monday.

The new per capita income figure estimates on current market prices is over Rs. 2,000 more than the previous estimate of Rs. 44,345 (one nominal US dollar equals INR 44.34909, and PPP USD equals INR 18) calculated by the Central Statistical Organisation (CSO).

Per capita income means earnings of each Indian if the national income is evenly divided among the country’s population at 117 crore.

However, the increase in per capita income was only about 6 per cent in 2009-10 if it is calculated on the prices of 2004-05 prices, which is a better way of comparison and broadly factors inflation.

Per capita income (at 2004-05 prices) stood at Rs. 33,731 in FY10 against Rs. 31,801 in the previous year, the latest data on national income said.

The size of the economy at current prices rose to Rs. 61,33,230 crore in the last fiscal, up 16.1 per cent over Rs. 52,82,086 crore in FY’09.

Based on 2004-05 prices, the Indian economy expanded by 8 per cent during the fiscal ended March 2010. This is higher than 6.8 per cent growth in fiscal 2008-09.

The country’s population increased to 117 crore at the end of March 2010, from 115.4 crore in fiscal 2008-09.


Read more at: http://profit.ndtv.com/news/show/india-s-per-capita-income-rises-to-rs-46-492-138555?cpJULY 22, 2011 6:28 PM <img src=”http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_dj7hueuj-U0/SZ4fE28YCBI/AAAAAAAAA4Y/1uFweBSg82U/S45/riaz.jpg” width=”35″ height=”35″ class=”photo” alt=””>Riaz Haq said…India’s GDP likely to hit $2 trillion this year, reports Rediff:

India is poised to join the coveted club of economies whose national income, or gross domestic product, exceeds $2 trillion.

According to recently released data, India’s nominal GDP is expected to grow at 14 per cent in 2011-12, to reach Rs 90 lakh crore (Rs 90 trillion). At a dollar exchange rate of Rs 45, this works out to $2 trillion.

However, if inflation is assumed to be 7 per cent and the real growth rate is 9 per cent as projected, the growth rate of 14 per cent may actually understate nominal growth rate by 2 percentage points, which means India’s nominal GDP in dollar terms will actually exceed $2 trillion this fiscal!

India’s nominal GDP crossed the $1-trillion mark in 2007-08, which implies GDP has doubled in four years. 

First, the magic number of $2 trillion is based on an exchange rate of $45 to the dollar. If the rupee were to depreciate, India’s nominal GDP would be lower for the same level of output.

Second, in celebrating the nominal as opposed to the real GDP, we may be losing sight of the contribution of inflation.

The difference between real and nominal GDP is inflation, and so for a given level of real GDP, the higher the inflation the more rapidly would nominal GDP increase. This is clearly an undesirable outcome for everybody. 
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Statistical convolutions aside, the health of the Indian economy needs a candid review, particularly in light of potential downsides that could derail the genuine progress the Indian economy has made over the past two decades.

The slowdown in virtually all sectors of the economy, barring a few select industries like ‘transport, logistics and communication’, which has been growing annually at 25 per cent, is indeed worrisome.

Growth in the agriculture sector continues to be dampened by under-investment, despite some increase during the past five years. This has resulted in the sector being caught in a classic low productivity trap. 

Manufacturing too is spinning on its wheels, with annual growth rates stubbornly in the single digits. This reflects deeply embedded structural problems, which have been discussed in this space.

India’s economic growth continues to rely on the service sector growing at or around 10 per cent annually, which renders it vulnerable to global shocks.

The situation on the supply side also leaves a lot to be desired. This particularly applies to the tardy progress in the development of infrastructure and investment in human development, which is already holding India back. 

http://www.rediff.com/business/slide-show/slide-show-1-budget-2011-india-set-to-become-a-2-trillion-dollar-economy/20110307.htmJULY 31, 2011 8:50 AM <img src=”http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_dj7hueuj-U0/SZ4fE28YCBI/AAAAAAAAA4Y/1uFweBSg82U/S45/riaz.jpg” width=”35″ height=”35″ class=”photo” alt=””>Riaz Haq said…Here’s a News International report on impact of US downgrade on Pakistan:

The ongoing economic crisis across the world after downgrade of the United States credit rating would have a positive impact on Pakistan’s economy as analysts said that the current account balance would stay in surplus and the electricity subsidy will automatically be contained.

The United States credit rating downgrade after enhancement of debt ceiling rattled the stock markets around the globe and majority of the equity markets have touched their lower locks. While major commodities, except gold, have also witnessed sharp decline in their prices after 2008.

“With the decline in oil prices globally, Pakistan’s current account balance is likely to stay in surplus and the electricity subsidy will automatically be contained,” according to a JS research report on Tuesday.

The report said that the growth is expected to rebound due to the bumper agriculture crops and inflation would tame further, whereas equity market will remain resilient compared to its regional peers due to lower foreign exposure.

“However, political instability and deteriorating law and order situation are the key risks to the economy,” it added.

Analysts said that the present global crisis is different to 2008. The crisis of 2007/08 was driven by excessive overheating of the global economy and resultantly commodity and real estate markets touched their peak levels.

In that crisis, Pakistan suffered as a result of higher global commodity prices and the government flawed domestic prices of providing huge subsidy.

“As a result, the twin deficits hit 16.3 percent of the GDP,” the JS report revealed, adding that this difficult scenario led to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme in order to bailout the economy from the brink of collapse.

However, the report said that in 2011/12 crisis Pakistan’s macros will be resilient and will benefit from the decline in the global commodity prices.

“Unlike 2008, Pakistan’s real interest rates are positive, real effective exchange rate is not overvalued and subsidies are largely contained,” it added.

About the United States austerity plan and its impact on Pakistan, experts believed that the United States is unlikely to reduce its spending towards the war on terror.

The American economy is going through its worst period in history, where Obama’s administration is left with very little fiscal space to finance its ballooning fiscal deficit that is around nine percent of the GDP.

The stimulus package of post-Lehman crisis has left the Federal Reserve Bank of America literally with no option either. To smooth the functions of the US Treasury, the lawmakers have agreed to provide additional $2.4 trillion to the debt ceiling, subject to deficit saving of approximately $1 trillion over the next decade.

This year the Americans are unlikely to reduce their spending as the austerity measures decided will be implemented from 2013 onwards, experts said.

The JS report said that the United States will continue to pay for counterinsurgency programme in Afghanistan even if it plans to pullout from Afghanistan by 2014.

On Pakistan’s front, the United States will definitely play the role of the devil’s advocate and delay the due payments or reduce the grant size, according to the report.

Overall, the presence of the United States in Afghanistan will keep the dollar flows continued into Pakistan directly or indirectly, the report said, adding that the United States rationalisation of budgets will have a bare minimum impact on Afghanistan and Pakistan.

http://www.thenews.com.pk/TodaysPrintDetail.aspx?ID=61883&Cat=3AUGUST 10, 2011 10:20 PM <img src=”http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_dj7hueuj-U0/SZ4fE28YCBI/AAAAAAAAA4Y/1uFweBSg82U/S45/riaz.jpg” width=”35″ height=”35″ class=”photo” alt=””>Riaz Haq said…Here’s an excerpt from Indian govt press release on per capita income in India for 2011:

The Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Statistics and Programme Implementation Shri Srikant Kumar Jena has said that the Per Capita Income at the national level, which was Rs. 24,143 in the year 2004-05, stands at Rs. 54,835 in the year 2010-11, showing an increase of more than 120%. The details of State/UT-wise per capita income (Net State Domestic Product at factor cost) at current prices, for the years 2004-05 to 2009-10, as compiled and provided by the Directorates of Economics & Statistics of the States, are given in the table at Annex.

http://pib.nic.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx

The current ratio for both Indian and Pakistani GDP conversion from nominal US dollars to PPP dollars is about 2.5, calculated as follows:

Country……Official Rate….Purchasing Power…..Ratio

India…..INR 45….INR 18….2.5

Pakistan.PKR 85…PKR 34……….2.5


Using 18 INR to a PPP dollar, Indian PPP per capita income for 2011 works out to $ 3,046.AUGUST 15, 2011 7:52 PM <img src=”http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_dj7hueuj-U0/SZ4fE28YCBI/AAAAAAAAA4Y/1uFweBSg82U/S45/riaz.jpg” width=”35″ height=”35″ class=”photo” alt=””>Riaz Haq said…Nominal per capita incomes in both India and Pakistan stand at just over $1200 a year, according to figures released in May and June of 2011 by the two governments. This translates to about $3100 per capita in terms of PPP (purchasing power parity). Using a more generous PPP correction factor of 2.9 for India as claimed by Economic Survey of India 2011 rather than the 2.5 estimated by IMF for both neighbors, the PPP GDP per capita for Indian and Pakistan work out to $3532 and $3135 respectively. 

Nominal per capita income of Indians grew by 17.9 per cent to Rs 54,835, or $1218, in 2010-11 from Rs 46,492 in the year-ago period, according to the revised data released by the government in May, 2011 as reported by Indian media. 

In June 2011, Economic Survey of Pakistan reported that the nominal per capita income of Pakistanis rose 16.9 percent to $1,254 in 2010-11, up from $1,073 in 2009-2010.Riaz Haq said…Rising per capita income and a growing, young population spending more time online and at Western movies are helping build a mass market in Pakistan, according to Businessweek:

One way to take a city’s economic pulse is to check out where locals shop. In Karachi, Pakistan, shoppers are flocking to Port Grand, which opened in May. Built as a promenade by the historic harbor for almost $23 million, the center caters to Pakistanis eager to indulge themselves. This city of 20 million has seen more than 1,500 deaths from political and sectarian violence from January to August. At Port Grand the only hint of the turmoil is the presence of security details and surveillance cameras. “The whole world is going through a new security environment,” says Shahid Firoz, 61, Port Grand’s developer. “We have to be very conscious of security just as any other significant facility anywhere in the world needs to be.”

Young people stroll the promenade eating burgers and fries and browsing through 60 stores and stalls that sell everything from high fashion to silver bracelets to ice cream. Ornate benches dot a landscaped area around a 150-year-old banyan tree. “Port Grand is something fresh for the city, very aesthetically pleasing and unique,” says Yasmine Ibrahim, a 25-year-old Lebanese American who is helping set up a student affairs office at a new university in Karachi.

One-third of Pakistan’s 170 million people are under the age of 15, which means the leisure business will continue to grow, says Naveed Vakil, head of research at AKD Securities. Per capita income has grown to $1,254 a year in June from $1,073 three years ago.

The appetite for things American is strong despite the rise in tensions between the two allies. Hardee’s opened its first Karachi outlet in September: In the first few days customers waited for hours. It plans to open 10 more restaurants in Pakistan in the next two and a half years, says franchisee Imran Ahmed Khan. U.S. movies are attracting crowds to the recently opened Atrium Cinemas, which would not be out of place in suburban Chicago. Current features include The Adventures of Tintin and the latest Twilight Saga installment. Mission: Impossible—Ghost Protocol is coming soon. Operator Nadeem Mandviwalla says the cinema industry in Pakistan is growing 30 percent a year.

Exposure to Western lifestyles through cable television and the Internet is raising demand for these goods and services. Pakistan has 20 million Internet users, compared with 133,900 a decade ago, while 25 foreign channels, such as CNN (TWX) and BBC World News, are now available. And for many Pakistanis, reruns of the U.S. sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond are a regular treat.

The bottom line: With per capita income rising quickly, Pakistan is developing a mass market eager for Western goods.

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