19.3 C
London
Friday, September 29, 2023
HomePakistan newsPakistan failing in every economic index: key survey

Pakistan failing in every economic index: key survey

Date:

Related stories

UK-India trade deal to skip ‘binding commitments on labour rights, climate standards’

BRITAIN’S proposed trade deal with India will not include...

ArcelorMittal’s Indian joint venture to commission project by 2026

ARCELORMITTAL executive chairman Lakshmi N Mittal has said his...

Eutelsat Group to roll out services in India this year

INDIA’S telecoms major Bharti Enterprises will have a 21.1...

Power of nutrition in a fitness journey

EXPERTS agree that good nutrition is the most important...

Siddharth Kara’s ‘Cobalt Red’: Shortlist spot for mining the truth

THE just-announced shortlist for the Financial Times and Schroders Business Book...

PAKISTAN failed to meet any economic growth targets for the fiscal year 2022-23, according to a key government report released on Thursday (8).

GDP growth was a miserly 0.3 per cent, while agriculture, industrial output, and exports all failed to meet their targets.

Pakistan’s economy has been stricken by a balance-of-payments crisis as it attempts to service high levels of external debt, while months of political chaos have scared off potential foreign investment.

Inflation has rocketed, the rupee has plummeted and the country can no longer afford imports, causing a severe decline in industry.

The country was also ravaged by record monsoon floods last year that left almost a third of its territory underwater, laying waste to vast swathes of farmland and leaving tens of millions homeless.

Pakistan’s standing on the global economic rank of nations has fallen from 24th in 2017 to 47th today, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar told a news briefing while releasing results of the survey.

“That says it all,” he said.

The grim data gives the cash-strapped government little room to introduce populist vote-attracting measures.

The government is also under enormous pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to tighten the purse strings to unlock another last tranche of a vital bailout package.

Under the IMF’s terms, Pakistan had to do away with subsidies on energy and other sectors, allow the rupee to float against the US dollar, raise taxes and duties, and restrict imports.

“It was extremely challenging for the government to carry out such strict reforms and we had a political cost,” Dar said.

“We have averted looming default for now.”

Pakistan’s key economic indicators for the year ending June 30, 2023, show economic growth declined to 0.29 per cent against 6.1 percent a year earlier.

Agriculture, a key driver of the economy, grew just 1.55 per cent, while the industrial sector showed negative growth of 2.94 per cent.

“It was a year of force majeure,” said Ahsan Iqbal, Pakistan’s Planning Minister, adding that the floods had the key impact.

(AFP)

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories