Total income reached to Dh5.607 billion compared to Dh4.431 billion, a solid expansion of 26.5 per cent YoY
Pakistan and the visiting International Monetary Fund mission are struggling to arrive at a consensus on fiscal adjustment plans, sources said on Monday, in talks aimed at unlocking critical funds needed for the ailing South Asian economy.
The mission has been in Islamabad since January 31 to sort out the differences over fiscal policy that has stalled the release of more than $1 billion from $6.5 billion bailout package signed in 2019.
The IMF funding is crucial for the $350-billion economy facing a balance-of-payments crisis with foreign exchange reserves dipping to less than three weeks of import cover.
The two sides disagree on their data on the fiscal gap, two finance ministry officials with knowledge of the talks told Reuters.
The IMF says the primary deficit is 0.9 per cent of GDP, or around Rs840 billion ($3.06 billion), but according to Islamabad it stands at 0.45 per cent, or around Rs450 billion ($1.64 billion), said the officials, who declined to be named as the talks were confidential.
“There is a clear difference in data,” said one of them.
They said Islamabad is expecting a deal by February 9.
Observers say the funds are needed to avoid defaulting on external payment obligations, while the lender’s green signal is vital for any other external funding.
The finance ministry and the IMF country representative did not respond to Reuters request for comments.
STUMBLING BLOCK
Pakistan’s 2022-23 budget in June estimated the primacy deficit to be 0.2 per cent of GDP and fiscal deficit 4.9 per cent of GDP.
The country has already shifted back to a market-based exchange rate and hiked fuel prices — measures demanded by IMF. But analysts say the steps will increase crippling inflation, which is already up 27.5 per cent year-on-year in January.
The big pile of energy sector debt — over Rs4 trillion ($14.55 billion), including Rs1.6 trillion in the gas sector — is another stumbling block in the talks, officials said.
They said Pakistan has submitted a plan to cut the debt in phases though price hikes and dividends from gas companies, but the IMF is demanding a clearer path forward.
Over Rs900 billion in gas sector subsidies for financial year 2022-23 are also on the chopping block, they said, adding that Pakistan has agreed to withdraw export sector subsidies.
If issues are resolved, Pakistan will introduce a finance bill in parliament to generate revenue, like a one-off flood levy on luxury imports, windfall levy on banks and duties on cigarettes and carbonated drinks, as well as to cut expenditures and development funds. — Reuters
Total income reached to Dh5.607 billion compared to Dh4.431 billion, a solid expansion of 26.5 per cent YoY
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