$1 billion approved by ADB for budget support
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved $1.3 billion for Pakistan including $1 billion emergency budget support to shore up the country's public finances and $300 million to address financial sustainability, governance and energy infrastructure policy constraints in energy sector.
The amount of one billion dollars was approved for immediate budget support to Pakistan. The quick dispersing special policy-based loan is part of a comprehensive multi-donor economic reform program led by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to stabilize Pakistan's economy after a major deterioration in its fiscal and financial position in mid-2018 caused growth to slump and threatened progress in alleviating poverty, said ADB in a statement.
Sources on condition of anonymity told Business Recorder that the loan of $1 billion for emergency budget support has been taken for seven years at an interest rate of LIBOR+ 2 percent. Further, the $300 million loan for energy sector has been taken at 2 percent per annum interest rate that will be paid back in 20 years.
Sources further said that a formal agreement signing ceremony would be held on Monday in the Economic Affaires Division (EAD). Federal Minister for EAD Muhammad Hammad Azhar would witness the signing ceremony. The $1.3 billion is likely to be disbursed next week, sources added.
ADB's financing was approved after the government implemented a series of IMF-supported reforms and actions to improve its current account deficit, strengthen its revenue base, and protect the poor against the social impact of the economic crisis. "The ADB is committed to providing wide-ranging support to strengthen Pakistan's economy and reduce the risk of external economic shocks," said ADB Director General for Central and West Asia Werner Liepach. "These funds will meet the government's emergency financing needs to prevent significant adverse social and economic impacts and lay the foundations for a return to balanced growth."
Pakistan is facing significant economic challenges on the back of a large balance of payments gap and critically low foreign exchange reserves together with weak and unbalanced growth. While the country's economy has a history of boom and bust economic cycles, it reached a tipping point in 2018 after foreign investment shrank sharply in an uncertain political and global economic environment and the ongoing poor performance of state-owned enterprises caused public debt to reach unsustainable levels, the Bank added.
In July, the IMF approved a three-year $6 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF) to finance the government's economic reform program that aims to put Pakistan's economy on the path of sustainable and inclusive growth. The EFF is expected to catalyze at least $38 billion in financing from Pakistan's development partners. The ADB has committed to providing a total of $2.1 billion in policy-based lending during fiscal year 2019-2020 to support the reform program, it added.
The Bank also approved a $300 million policy-based loan that will help the government of Pakistan address financial sustainability, governance, and energy infrastructure policy constraints in Pakistan's energy sector.
The ADB official in Islamabad said that a comprehensive and realistic circular debt reduction plan, assisted by ADB in close coordination with other development partners is the cornerstone of this subprogram.
The financing will support the first of three subprograms totaling $1 billion under the energy sector reforms and financial sustainability program, a key component of a comprehensive multi-donor economic reform program led by the IMF that aims to put Pakistan's economy on the path to sustainable and inclusive growth after a deterioration in its fiscal and financial position in recent years.
"The cash shortfall across the power supply chain in Pakistan, also known as circular debt, has shot up to more than $10 billion and is a longstanding chronic issue ailing the country's power sector," said ADB Director General for Central and West Asia Werner Liepach. "A comprehensive and realistic circular debt reduction plan, assisted by ADB in close coordination with other development partners, is the cornerstone of this subprogram. The plan aims to drastically cut the new flows of circular debt and provides policy directions on addressing accumulated circular debt."
While Pakistan has made significant efforts in recent years to expand its electricity generation capacity and stabilize supply, the country is yet to overcome the challenge of inefficiencies, distortions, and uneven reform progress in the sector. These inefficiencies were estimated to have cost the country's economy up to $18 billion, or 6.5% of gross domestic product, in 2015.
The energy reform program aims to address the underlying causes of circular debt with a focus on improving inadequate tariff and subsidy systems, strengthening energy accounting, and reducing generation costs.
The ADB will finance the program with support from its development partners. The Export-Import Bank of Korea has confirmed it will provide $80 million in co-financing for the first subprogram, the Bank added.
Comments
Comments are closed.