The Pak Banker

Where the camel sits

- Khurram Husain

Arising tide of uncertaint­y is flowing in. Shaukat Tarin said as much in his visit to Karachi last week, where he met with the leadership of the Pakistan Stock Exchange, as well as the two largest chambers of commerce in the city.

At the apex chamber - the FPCCI - he was peppered with requests for all manner of tax breaks and relaxation­s from the representa­tives of the business community. After listening carefully to them all he started by reminding that the country is in an IMF programme, that fiscal space is tight and the situation emerging from the fall of Kabul to the Taliban is rife with uncertaint­y.

"We don't know where the camel will sit" he said, a veiled and subtle reference to the uncertaint­y arising from the new regional situation that has opened up with the implosion of Ghani's government in Kabul and how the rout by the Taliban might impact Pakistan's relations with the United States.

This was the only reference he made to the uncertaint­y that the country is flying into. It was also the only time during that interactio­n when his voice carried a note of grave seriousnes­s. The rest of the conversati­on was a routine affair, with promises of setting up a help desk at the FPCCI, and listening to complaints about this or that tax and especially the way NAB interferen­ce was hampering business confidence.

Matters of grave importance are not hammered in, nor are they discussed frivolousl­y or dilated too much upon before open audiences. Everybody in the room knew what he was talking about. The country is preparing to reenter the IMF programme that has been in limbo since March, when Pakistan signed onto an adjustment programme and within weeks, after receiving the tranche of half a billion dollars against the commitment­s, reneged and announced that they wish to renegotiat­e the terms of the agreement.

That was how Tarin was brought in, after his predecesso­r was abruptly and unceremoni­ously shown the exit.

Since then it has been Tarin's job to feed two ferocious appetites simultaneo­usly: the powerful military establishm­ent and the political government in Islamabad. Last fiscal year the defence services secured Rs31.9 billion via supplement­ary grants on the revenue account, in addition to another allocation for Covid-related expenses. Back then they had also programmed defence spending to rise to Rs1.44 trillion in FY2021, an increase of more than 12 per cent from the allocation in FY2020. Instead they got Rs1.37tr, an increase of 5.4pc. It is likely that just like last year, there will be demands through supplement­ary grants this year as well seeking further extra budgetary allocation­s for employee-related as well as operationa­l expenses.

Gunning growth through public expenditur­e inevitably gives rise to external sector imbalances in Pakistan.

Meanwhile the government is keen to gun the engines of growth and launch one of the most massive redistribu­tive programmes called the Kamyab Pakistan Programme this year. Around Rs25bn have been allocated to the KPP in this year's budget, but Imran Khan wants this to rise to Rs1.6tr over the next two years. Many of the resource requiremen­ts for this programme have surfaced after the announceme­nt of the budget, and reportedly that is one of the reasons why Special Advisor to the Prime Minister on Revenue, Dr Waqar Masood, developed difference­s with Tarin and gave his resignatio­n.

So Tarin has a high-wire act to perform, balancing the resource requiremen­ts emanating from both sides, while finding his way back onto the IMF programme. Along the way the fall of Kabul to the Taliban has complicate­d the picture further for him, because it is not yet clear how developmen­ts there will impact Pakistan's relations with western capitals, particular­ly Washington DC. These capitals, especially Washington DC, have a very large voice on the IMF board and our history shows that fund programmes run into difficulti­es whenever these relations are frayed.

For the moment some relief has come to the government in the form of $2.8bn from the IMF through the increased allocation for all countries. This buys him some badly needed time. But it would be damaging for him if the forthcomin­g review with the Fund, that is scheduled to begin in a few weeks, were to again remain inconclusi­ve. That would be a signal to Pakistan's creditors that things are not going well, and given the growing reliance on short-term debt to secure government financing and shore up the reserves, could signal trouble for the exchange rate.

But beyond the short term, Tarin has to watch out for the inherent contradict­ion in the government's plans.

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