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Posts Tagged Nawaz & ISHAQ DAR MAKE MONEY

Pakistan’s external debt likely to swell to $110b in four years By Shahbaz Rana

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Pakistan’s external debt likely to swell to $110b in four years

By Shahbaz Rana

Published: November 13, 2016
 
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s external debt is projected to grow to a whopping $110 billion within four years and it will need over $22 billion a year just to meet external payment requirements, posing a serious threat to the country’s solvency.

By that time, Pakistan will again be back to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to avoid default on international payments as it did in 2013, according to independent projections revealed at the National Debt Conference on Saturday.

Circular debt in power sector: Govt could not repay bank loans of Rs136.5b

Two renowned economists, former finance minister Dr Hafiz Pasha and former director general debt Dr Ashfaque Hasan Khan, have made the external debt projections. The $110-billion external debt level by 2019-20 will be $24 billion higher than projections made by the IMF in its latest report on Pakistan.

Khan shared his assessment at the debt conference, arranged by the Policy Research Institute of Market Economy (PRIME) – an independent think tank.

The duo updated their previous external debt forecast for fiscal year 2018-19 from $90 billion to $98 billion after the government borrowed heavily in the past one year.

At present, the external debt stands at $73 billion, which has been projected to swell 50% to $110 billion in just four years.

They did not see a major change in Pakistan’s export situation and anticipated that by 2019-20, the exports would stand roughly at $25 billion, a level that the country crossed in the last year of previous government of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP).

Owing to slowdown in exports, Pakistan’s external debt to export ratio has been projected at 441.8% by 2019-20, which is highly unsustainable. By that year, the country will consume 40% of its export earnings to service the external debt.

“Pakistan is fast slipping into the debt trap and neither the government nor parliament is playing its due role,” remarked Asad Umar, MNA of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf while speaking at the conference.

Khan said by 2019-20 amortisation payments would increase to $10 billion. To fill the current account gap, the country will require another $12.5 billion a year, increasing the total external payment requirement to $22.5 billion. The current account deficit will mainly widen due to imports of machinery and plants for projects being developed under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

Against IMF’s projection of $16.7 billion, Khan said total external financing needs to bridge the current account deficit and repay loans would stand at $22.5 billion by 2019-20.

After exhausting all available resources including CPEC financing, foreign investment and funds from traditional donors, there would still be $11-billion financing gap, which the country would not be able to bridge without IMF’s help, said Khan.

He predicted that Pakistan would return to the IMF in 2018-19 – the fiscal year when the country’s external debt would be $98 billion and its financing gap will be $9 billion.

“Pakistan’s debt situation is deteriorating rapidly and posing a serious threat to its solvency,” he cautioned. Commercial borrowings comprised 25% of external debt, which was a matter of concern, said Shahid Kardar, former governor of the State Bank of Pakistan.

He said low returns on the country’s foreign currency reserves compared to the borrowing cost were also a matter of concern.

Khan said the PML-N and PPP governments had added $49 billion to the current external debt of $73 billion. Most of this amount, estimated at $32.6 billion, was added from 2008 to 2016 while the remaining $17.4 billion was added during the 1990s.

Pakistan’s trade deficit widens 22%, stands at $9.3 billion

“We need to develop a more effective borrowing strategy, which should be consistent with the country’s development priorities,” suggested Khan.

“Pakistan can keep its debt at sustainable levels by achieving about 6% annual economic growth,” said Dr Ali Kemal, research economist at the Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE). He, however, said despite the increase in debt levels, Pakistan was still not Greece.

“We are at a comfortable stage and there is no need to worry about anything,” said Zafar Masud, Director General of the Central Directorate of National Savings, while speaking at the conference.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 13th, 2016.

 

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Myth & Reality about Devaluation of US Dollar

Myth & Reality about Devaluation of US Dollar

 

MYTH & REALITY ABOUT DEVALUATION OF US DOLLAR

   Myth & Reality about Devaluation of US Dollar

 

 

 The inherent motive behind lowering value of the US dollar against the Pak Rupee.
When Nawaz’s younger son Hasan launched Flagship Holdings in London in 2002-03 (it is closed down now)–it also introduced establishment of a ‘hedge fund’ with an investment of £300 million ($500 million). The Flagship thrived unprecedentedly, during the past ten years, on the strengthen of:

1) Cash flow of £300 million ($500 million)–which the Sharifs had in 2003–now it may be a cash flow in excess of £3 billion ($5 billion). 

 

 

2) Easy money transfer protocols through UK, India and Dubai (as the Iranians are doing under international banking sanctions). This money laundering stunt in the West is a complete eyewash–one can bring into UK millions of pounds after paying commission to the UK banks and intermediary financial handlers, who in turn will legalise everything for the fund-bringer. Which is why since 2007–more than 1,000 Pakistani politicians, bureaucrats and dodgy businessmen have purchased properties in the UK worth £5 billion (more than $8 billion), and nothing has precluded them from doing so.

 

 

3) Clockwise and anti-clockwise fund-purchasing. The Sharifs and their larcenous munshi Ishaq Dar have divided the financial year into 3-4 revolves. In one revolve (say: June to September 2013)–they increased the value of dollar as $1=Rs 111, and brought home say: $1 billion in cash–which got them Rs 111 billion. If they bring in secretly (which they easily can–having their own bank chiefs) $5 billion–pretending it as a foreign remittance per quarter (revolve), they will get Rs 555 billion. In my understanding–the Sharifs made Rs 50-100 billion ($500 to $900 million) during the first four months of their government (June to October 2013).

 

 

During the second revolve–they kept things stable @ $1=Rs 111, and recycled that money within the country for 3/4 months (October 2013 to February 2014), and bought essential commodities (rice, wheat, sugar, lentils, cooking oil, livestock and petrol/diesel). In the next two/three years–the Sharifs (applying the Jewish and Hindus sahukaar monopolistic model) have intend to hijack the commodity sector under fake names. They plan to paralyse the country by hoarding these commodities, if a military takeover occurs or a hostile political group takes over in Pakistan. They are carrying out this commodity monopolisation in partnership with international traders of Britain/EU/India/UAE/Brazil/Australia and so forth–so that the military (or non-friendly political elite) government collapses more quickly after failing to withstand international pressure.

 

 

In the third revolve (March to May/June 2014–before the Budget)–as they have hundreds of billions of rupees, say: Rs 100 billion ($900 million) from first revolve (June-September 2013). They also had more than Rs 220 billion ($2 billion), spared/left over from bulk note printing of Rs 850 billion which they did between June and July 2013. By end of February 2014, the Sharifs had more than Rs 320 billion in personal coffer. If they buy dollars for that, by dividing them with 111–they could get $2.882 billion. But by lowering the dollar value to $1= Rs 99 they will now get $3.233 billion. This means that this dollar devaluation will now get them an extra $351 million within nine months of their rule (June 2013 to March 2014). What a satanic business, isn’t it?

 

 

With an unparalleled experience of three decades in banking/business frauds–the Sharifs are in a strong position to manipulate the State Bank and other five main Pakistani banks (National, Habib, MCB, Allied and UBL). They have all major stock exchanges under control and SECP (Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan) is spineless.

 

 

Soon, the Sharifs will print more Pak rupee notes at the Security Printing Press, and will buy the dollars/pounds from every money exchange shop in the country.

 

 

Lets see if the dollar sustains at $1= under Rs 100, during the next three months. What I think is–they will devalue Pak rupee again to $1= Rs 111 (even beyond) after the budget.
They also intend to pocket $5 billion from sale of 18 major state enterprises. By the end of 2014–they will have made $10 billion from the business of governing Pakistan through a corrupt/rotten system called Mian/Zardari democracy.

 

 

They know they can NOT win the next general election–whenever they are. Asif Zardari also knows that PPP will not come to power either, in near future. What Nawaz is doing is–hiding Zardari regime’s brazen malfeasance, and in turn the PPP is supporting the Sharifs’ obnoxious ‘democracy’.
 
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