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EDITORIAL: Ideally, the government should have already known what the recent PIDE (Pakistan Institute of Development Economics) study revealed last week; that Pakistan’s poverty rate increased from 38.6 percent to 39.5 percent over the last five years.

No doubt this is the result of two critical factors. First, Covid rampaged through the international economy and sent millions of people tumbling below the poverty line all across the world, Pakistan being no exception.

Then, the compulsion of an active IMF programme to avoid outright default and helplessness in front of its “upfront conditions” pumped cost-push inflation in times of already record inflation and unemployment and made millions more much poorer.

Ideally, the government should also know that this trajectory is only going to get worse. Because Covid may have gone but the need for the Fund, which will force yet more taxes and cut even more subsidies, is still there.

And just when everybody is done celebrating signing the next EFF (Extended Fund Facility) and a very likely interest rate cut by the SBP (State Bank of Pakistan), the same story of bailout conditions bloating utility bills and stoking inflation will come back with a vengeance.

But since the government does not seem too concerned about this trend, it’s also unlikely to be prepared for the squeeze, which will raise poverty all over again, that is just round the corner.

Interestingly, the PIDE study also presented the first multidimensional index to measure “digital poverty” in Pakistan. Consisting of three dimensions – ICT (Information and Communication Technologies) availability, affordability and access, and literacy – the report concluded that about half the country’s population “severely lacks digital literacy”.

This is a chilling confirmation of the fact that even those that are able to escape poverty and get an education are often cut off from the progressive mainstream. And that, in turn, explains why almost half the country also hovers just above or below the poverty line.

This is a very difficult situation and there are no easy fixes. That much is understandable. Yet it’s still unforgivable that the government is not taking it nearly seriously enough.

Even now it’s only talking about how the IMF programme is necessary to keep default at a distance. It’s still not willing to accept that the bailout will come at a very high price for most people of the country. That’s why nobody has a plan.

Sadly, this is exactly what to expect when bitter turf wars dominate the political landscape and politicians sell dreams on the campaign trail only to come to power to settle personal/political scores and bolster their power bases.

With taxes and cost of utilities about to rise very soon, there’s little doubt that the next such report will paint an even gloomier picture of Pakistan’s poverty trends.

And, in the absence of any effective preventive measures, the poor, miserable lower classes have no choice but to brace for another fiscal mauling.

If this does not jolt the government into some sort of action, nothing will.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2024

Comments

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Fatima Jun 02, 2024 03:28am
Nothing will jolt the government,unless it affects their personal wealth
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Faisal Kandhro Jun 02, 2024 04:38am
It's hard to believe poverty is above 39%. Informal economy of Pakistan is 450B+ according to PIDE, per capita income should be around 4k USD. So what figures should we believe now from PIDE?
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Faisal Kandhro Jun 02, 2024 04:40am
Smartphone production in Pakistan 2 crore per year. We've produced 10 crore smartphones in last 8 years, we're not exporting. Over 20cr people use mobile phones according to telecom industries.
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Faisal Kandhro Jun 02, 2024 04:41am
Jazzcash has 44 million accounts, tell me how is Pakistan's half population lack digital literacy?
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KU Jun 02, 2024 10:19am
Surreal, PIDE has to publish poverty update while govt celebrates propaganda success, its expected. The state of poor health facilities is alarming too and law/order is crumbling, do we deserve this?
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Zia Ullah Khan Jun 02, 2024 11:48am
This report is very faulty if it reports only one percent rise in poverty over last five years. Even a common person can see the poor increasing substantially in last one year.
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zh Jun 02, 2024 07:51pm
Pakistan can only address poverty through population control; no plan currently exists to tackle the issue.
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Fazal Jun 04, 2024 05:09am
Agreed and its quite clear that the people in power have least concern over the rising poverty and the people suffering from day to day inflation. They just come to enjoy the lavish life on our money
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Javaid Ahmed Jun 06, 2024 03:20pm
As long as we keep blaming covid, IMF, India, Israel and other imaginary enemies, the needle will keep comming back.
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