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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said Pakistan has “moved further and further behind” its regional peers in terms of living standards, “underscoring the need for urgent policy correction”.

The remarks from the Washington-based lender were mentioned in its staff report released on Thursday night.

“Pakistan has been falling behind its peers in recent decades in terms of income per capita, competitiveness, and export performance. From 2000 to 2022, Pakistan’s GDP per capita grew at average annual rate of only 1.9%.

“By contrast, Pakistan’s peers achieved more than twice this rate: Bangladesh averaged growth of 4.5%, India reached 4.9%, Vietnam 5%, and China a growth of about 7.5%.”

Compared to regional peers, Pakistan’s export growth has been weak, while its competitiveness has declined given an appreciated real exchange rate relative to productivity growth.

IMF official supports reforms in public sector

The IMF noted that the “recent restoration of stability is an opportunity to implement reforms placing Pakistan on a path of sustained, inclusive, per capita economic growth with stronger export capacity”.

Pakistan’s growth underperformance reflects weak contributions from human and physical capital and shrinking productivity, the lender said.

“Economic growth during 2000–20 was mostly driven by physical capital accumulation and an increase in labor hours, with these factors contributing about 1.9 and 1.15% points per year, respectively.

The IMF said that Pakistan’s declining export performance and limited openness to trade challenge the country’s development and external viability.

“Beyond weak exports, Pakistan has struggled to innovate and develop production of more sophisticated export goods, as indicated by its low and declining share of knowledge-intensive exports,” the IMF noted.

Apart from economic indicators, Pakistan’s health and education indicators have significantly lagged behind those of its regional peers, which has also undermined growth, investment, and productivity, said the IMF.

Citing World Bank data, the IMF said that Pakistan’s expenditure on education as a percentage of total expenditure is lower than that of India, Bangladesh, and Nepal.

Aurangzeb says ‘DNA’ of Pakistan’s economy needs fundamental reform for IMF deal to be last one

Moreover, Pakistan’s health expenditure is a significantly lower share of GDP than that of Nepal and Sri Lanka. “Pakistan has the highest infant mortality rate and one of the highest rates of stunting among children under five years of age in the region,” it said.

The IMF said that in order to place Pakistan on a new economic trajectory, the country requires addressing many distortions as well as improving the quality and level of public investment including in human capital.

“Key reforms centers on removing the remnants of the old growth strategy based around protection, preferences, and concessions. This has limited competition and the incentive for innovation and investment, locking resources into low-productivity activities (including through Special Economic Zones), which only survive because the state supports their profitability.

Moving away from stabilisation to industrial sector growth: there is some time

“Removing these detrimental protections will spur competition and innovation as new players enter (including from outside Pakistan) and lead to a productivity-enhancing reallocation of resources, including labor.”

Moreover, to create space for higher investment in physical and human capital, there is a need to reduce the government’s crowding out of private investment and raise additional revenue from undertaxed sectors by removing exemptions and other tax concessions, said IMF.

Comments

200 characters
KU Oct 11, 2024 04:59pm
Oh, thank you for reminding our Pakistani Raj about their subjects. Not surprisingly, they are eulogising education n health again which was supposedly achieved, but in truth ended up in corruption.
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zh Oct 11, 2024 07:34pm
But the living standard of our politicians such a Sharifs and Zardari is much better than that of counterparts.
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IMTIAZ CASSUM AGBOATWALA Oct 11, 2024 11:02pm
Quality of life in Pakistan is poor . Infrastructure is bad , poorly maintained, basic facilities like water , electricity,gas are bad . Quality of manpower is substandard.
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Aamir Oct 12, 2024 03:31am
Pakistan is a highly taxed nation where we are taxed to pay for the luxuries and corruption if the mafias that run this country. How can the people be prosperous
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KhanRA Oct 12, 2024 05:15am
Wait, praying doesn’t magically fix real world problems? The whole basis of our economic model is saying “inshallah”
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Aam Aadmi Oct 12, 2024 07:23am
'...The IMF noted that the “recent restoration of stability....' What stability? The IMF rep. drafted this statement in his Ivory tower. The rest is true and as obvious as it always was.
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ZAB Oct 13, 2024 10:23am
Tnx to BR for providing public comment section. Other big English newspapers either don't give any facility to public comment or it's in overhauling process for last some years. Those opportunist !
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NasirGulzar Oct 13, 2024 12:14pm
Is not the government focusing on imran khan issues instead of reforming the country
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