|
News & Articles Here you can share News and Articles that you consider important for the exam |
Share Thread: Facebook Twitter Google+ |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Counting the cost: Rs5b monthly burden on public purse
ISLAMABAD: The government’s decision of reversing the increase in petroleum prices to cool political temperatures has not only sent a wrong signal to international donors, but will also put an additional burden of Rs5 billion a month on the public purse in the wake of widening gap between income and spending.
Independent experts say the government has portrayed itself to be a “lame duck” giving a negative signal to donors that it cannot stand by its own decisions. Experts term the decision the “death of the economic reforms agenda”. “The message international donors have received is that if the government cannot absorb the pressure on petrol prices then how can it take up major economic reforms,” said Dr Ashfaque Hasan Khan, Dean of Business School of NUST. He said the decision will not help control inflation, as the benefit of reversing prices will be lost by borrowing money from the State Bank of Pakistan to give subsidies and cover revenue loss. The government borrowed Rs327 billion from the central bank in six months to finance the budget deficit – a gap between income and spending. The provisional figures show that the budget deficit from July through December soared to 2.9 per cent of the total size of the economy or Rs496 billion. The central bank has labelled the government borrowing inflationary. The reversal of decision comes at a time when the International Monetary Fund has extended the suspended $11.3 billion bailout programme for nine months till September 2011. The fund is currently discussing with Islamabad to send its team for negotiating parameters for a fifth review of the economy and release of $1.7 billion sixth loan tranche. The IMF team is likely to reach Islamabad in the last week of January. Under the IMF programme, Pakistan abolished the oil subsidy regime in 2009. “The government is in minority and it is a political decision, not an economic one,” said Dr Hafiz Pasha, the former finance minister. The Parliamentary Com*mittee will devise a strategy to pass on the increase to the end consumers within a week. An official of the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority said the oil prices are like to surge further in the international market due to a rise in demand in China, Europe and America. He said the current trend cannot be solely termed “seasonal spike”, as China has started generating power by using diesel. The decision may also delay the due 4.3 per cent increase in electricity prices. The government had earlier decided to increase electricity prices by 2 per cent a month aimed at gradually phasing out subsidy. It had enforced a 4 per cent increase in tariff while the third and fourth phase of these staggered spikes are overdue. Officials have estimated Rs224 billion annual subsidy, provided the government fails to phase out subsidy and take crucial decisions relating to the power sector. All this will lead to a soaring gap between the income and spending and a consequent borrowing to bridge it, which is inflationary. Published in The Express Tribune, January 7th, 2011. |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
Neither has surge in petrol prices ever helped decreasing inflation. Though the decision was of political nature as govt couldn't absorb the outstanding political scores by leftist parties in the parliament. But the end consumers, common public, is not concerned with the so-called political decrease. They are concerned with their day to day needs. I am myself a student of finance but to be very honest, all economic terminologies practically flop in pakistan due to one biggest reason that increased unpredictability and haphazardness in the structure which we term as CORRUPTION.
Reversal of prices immediately decreased the fairs of public transport by APTA which shows that increment in petrol prices has direct effect on common man. People are not concerned with parliamentary structures or minority Govt or majority govt. What they are concerned with, is the income to face their day to day expenses which has become so expensive and impossible that can be better described in last year's economic turmoil. SBP is not an autonomous body, under heavy debts being piled up day-day govt affairs are being run by those debts. But it only contributes in unleveling the balances rather fighting back for good governance. The biggest disease and problem, i have found, is the CORRUPTION......IF Govt took some exemplary steps to lessen corruption definitely the hike in inflation and imbalance in revenue and exp will be bearable soon....
__________________
“The greatest discovery of all time is that a person can change his future by merely changing his attitude.” |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
development of pakistan press since 1947 | Janeeta | Journalism & Mass Communication | 15 | Tuesday, May 05, 2020 03:04 AM |
Pakistan Penal Code .. complete | imran bakht | Law | 46 | Wednesday, June 25, 2014 08:18 PM |
Overview Of The Economy | free thinker | Pakistan Affairs | 5 | Tuesday, February 11, 2014 02:24 PM |