The Pak Banker

Pakistan’s current account remains in deficit

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Pakistan's current account deficit country's higher foreign expenditur­es compared to income - remained elevated at $773m in July 2021 in the wake of a spike in imports, which were partly necessary to achieve higher economic growth of 4.8% in current fiscal year 2021-22.

Besides, a decline in workers' remittance­s and sluggish growth in export earnings (in dollar terms) compared to import payments also widened the current account deficit and sparked concern.

According to experts, a steady and robust inflow of remittance­s and receipts under the Roshan Digital Account (RDA) coupled with a spike in IT export earnings are vital to contain the current account deficit.

Any slowdown in inflows amid higher import payments and foreign debt repayments will place Pakistan's external sector at a high risk during FY22. "The current account deficit in July was in line with the central bank's projection of 2-3% of GDP (gross domestic product) for full fiscal year 2022. This is no negative news," BMA

Capital Executive Director Saad Hashmey said while talking to The Express Tribune.

State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) Governor Reza Baqir projected the current account deficit at 2-3% of GDP for FY22 and termed it sustainabl­e. The increase in the current account deficit would support the uptick in GDP growth to 4-5% in FY22.

"Downward trend in internatio­nal commodity prices including iron ore, copper, palm oil and crude oil is expected to keep the current account deficit sustainabl­e, subject to inflows through remittance­s and IT exports," added PakKuwait Investment Company Head of Research Samiullah Tariq.

The current account turned in a deficit of $773 million in July 2021 compared to a surplus of $583 million in the same month of last year, according to data reported by the central bank.The July deficit, however, was less than half the deficit of $1.62 billion in June 2021.

"This deficit ($773 million in July compared to $1.6 billion in June) is in line with SBP's expectatio­ns of 2-3% of GDP ($6.5-9.5 billion) as economic activity continued to progress," the SBP said on its official Twitter handle.

"Despite the recent increase in the current account deficit, the position of SBP's foreign reserves continued to strengthen on a monthly basis," it added. "This is in contrast to past trends and it is supported by country's market-based exchange rate system."

Hashmey said that there was realisatio­n at the government level that imports were growing beyond sustainabl­e levels and Prime Minister Imran Khan had taken notice of that.

"It is for the first time that any government is taking interest in fixing faults in the external economy," he said.

Besides, the government and the central bank have played a pivotal role in attracting higher foreign currency inflows through workers' remittance­s and the RDA, he said.

"We should acknowledg­e their role in fixing the internal and external economy. The increased inflows over the past two years allowed the economy to grow in FY21 despite the challenges posed by the Covid-19 pandemic," he said.

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