Khusro Bakhtiar, Minister for National Food Security and Research, has claimed that the government has not only reduced cross-border smuggling but that the existing shortage was due to failure of Sindh to meet its procurement target. Sindh, sources reveal, procured only 70 percent of the targeted amount, by insisting that it does not have the funds because the federal government has withheld disbursement from the divisible pool, although disbursements of funds to other provinces too suffered similar delays due to fiscal difficulties of the federal government. Bakhtiar further maintained that there is adequate wheat in the country and once supply lines are restored from stocks held by PASSCO its price would decline shortly; nonetheless the ECC allowed duty-free import of 0.3 million tons of wheat by the private sector till end March claiming that domestic output would be able to meet domestic demand by April.
What must be a source of concern for analysts is the routine dismissal by the PTI government of crises by sourcing them to artificial shortages created by mafia/political influentials with the objective of securing runaway profits; however, a government cannot disclaim its own responsibility in taking decisions that allow for runaway profits to be made thereby raising prices and creating the prospect of socio-economic unrest. The 300 billion rupee emergency agricultural policy whose architect was Jehangir Tareen does not deal with long-standing issues prevailing in the farm sector including taking steps to ensure that a few influential people, unfortunately found in all major parties, do not dominate policy.
It is obvious that serious issues of mismanagement in the country remain, particularly with reference to projecting domestic demand and/or adjusting the allowed exports and in the event of a shortage, to import well in time, an example being the failure to import LNG in time to deal with the gas crisis.