Sir Fareed-Economy
Sir Fareed-Economy
Topic: Economy
Devaluation of PKR
The price of PKR against the dollar in the year 2000 was PKR 37 to $1 (USD)
In 2013 PKR 84 to $1
In 2017 PKR 98 to $1
1. Declining dollar reserves resulted into the abnormal depreciation of the pkr
b. Debt servicing
a. Reasons
i. Money laundering
1. The foreign currency is being smuggled abroad
ii. Account holders withhold their dollar amount from the banks
Resultantly, the demand and supply phenomenon is badly affected i.e. the demand of dollar is more
against the depleting dollar reserves.
• The price hike of dollar i.e. the demand is more and the supply is less
Reason #1
How?
Dollar was released by the SB to commercial banks to make the dollar more available i.e. the supply
increased to stabilize the rupee. This is the indirect (or artificial control) of the currency.
Loss?
The $ released to the commercial banks by the SB was taken in the form of loan
Result
The rupee was successfully stabilized artificially but the foreign loan increased tremendously. This
was a central factor for the government to revoke the policy of artificially controlling the rupee.
Therefore, it was of no surprise to see the pkr jump from 98 to 124 within 3 months of the caretaker
government.
Reason #2
Quantitative easing
How?
Dollar
Pound
Euro
Riyal
Yen
But primarily it is the USD. Therefore, whenever the SB prints more notes against the dollar reserves,
devaluation of the currency is the natural outcome.
This happened in 2010 and 2011 wherein PKR 521 bn were printed and in 2013-14, PKR 648 bn were
printed
Outcomes/Impacts
iv. Edible oil, pulses, etc. every imported products became expensive
i. Why?
2. More than 30% of the cotton is imported to meet the demand of the
textile industry
a. Reason
Recall that a foreign loan, of whatever currency, is to be repaid in that currency (i.e. a foreign
loan of USD needs to be repaid in USD). How is it repaid?
Solutions
Short-term solution
b. Increase remittances
• Definition of remittances:
Money sent by the Pakistani diaspora/expatriates through banks and registered money
exchangers is called remittances
• According to 2021, KSA remittances amounted to $7 bn, UAE $5 bn, UK $3 bn, US $2.5 bn,
Oman $1 bn (State bank of Pakistan figures)
For the Pakistani economy, remittances play the major stabilizing role. In 2020-21,
Pakistan had a trade deficit of $30 bn while debt servicing was $14 bn i.e. $44 bn were
gone from the country. However, $29.4 b arrived in remittances and therefore the
shortfall of the dollar was reduced from $44b to $14.6 bn
Stabilizes the dollar reserve and around 6 to 7 million of Pakistani families are dependent
on remittances for their financial needs in the country.
1. Many of these exchangers were involved in terror financing, money laundering or both
2. FIA had a strong crackdown against such money exchangers. However there are exchangers
who are not involved in such practices but people also send money through these money
exchangers
ii. The banking sector must be made more and more competitive so that people send money to
families via banking channels
1. The dollar-rupee conversion rates should not be more lesser than the private banks.
b. Salient features:
ii. Passport copy and business/job details and open within 2 hrs
iii. Make investment in diverse sectors e.g. real estate, stock exchange
1st quarter 2021-22, $8.04 bn received (highest ever amount in the history of
Pak for any quarter)
c. Increase exports and decrease imports i.e. by promoting the production sector
LOAN (s) -
In 2008: 6 trillion pkr out of which foreign loan was 37b dollars
2013: total loan was above 12t pkr out of which foreign loan was more than $ 62b
In the first two fiscal years of the current government, the total loan increased by PKR 9 tr
while the foreign loan surpassed $117 bn
a. Budget deficit
i. In 2020-21 4 tr
Loan= $12 bn
iii. In 2018-19
Loan= $13 bn
Acquiring loans by exhausting commercial and state banks. When internal sources are
exhausted, external sources are sought.
1. To finance projects
Solution(s)
1. Acquire more loan but the process must stop to find breathing space to introduce tax,
industrial, agriculture reforms
a. How?
i. Remittance
ii. More exports
iii. Increase Foreign exports/investment
Trade deficit
How?
Exports= $27 bn
Imports=$ 57 bn
Exports= $24 bn
Imports= >$55 bn
Exports= <$24 bn
Imports= >$59 bn
Why?
• Import of machinery for the construction of high altitude bridges, tunnels, etc.
In FY 2020-21, a major reason for the increase of machinery was textiles. This included $2.6 bn
imports.
#2-Import of Hydrocarbons
Why?
• Because more than 60% of electricity in Pakistan is generated from oil and gas
How?
2007-2016, more than 35% of the mega textile units shifted abroad-mostly to Bangladesh
• Pakistan used to export fruits and vegetables to neighbours and now we need to import it e.g.
apple, tomato, onion
• In 1998 census there were environ 140 m whereas in 2017, 220 m and there was no
correlation on the rise of production sector. Outcome: the attainment of bumper crop in 2021,
yet we have to import wheat and sugar
Impacts:
1. Adopt protectionism
LOAN - 2008: 6 trillion pkr out of which foreign loan was 37b dollars
2013: total loan was above 12t pkr out of which foreign loan was more than 62b dollars
a. Trade deficit was reduced from 35b to 27b
a. Promote industry
Therefore
1. promote industry
a) Textile industry (our strength)- give subsidies, bail out packages, reduce gst (17% to 13%),
reduce electricity tariffs
b) promote electronics: mobile companies coming, automobile companies coming in already China,
Koran most importantly Volkswagen (german) Mercedes, Audi BMX
2. invest in agriculture: (strength again). a) modern irrigation tech, b) more canals c) latest scientific
methods of seed plantations d) qualitative etc
2021: bumper crops of wheat, sugarcane, rice and maize taken but it will be better if we revive cotton
invest in livestock and poultry: so that our meat and milk production could increase and as a result
export will increase