PTI government added $10.4 billion in the foreign loans in the first six months of 2021-22
Government borrowing increased 78% during July-December 2021 compare to the same period last year
Contrary to
the claims of PTI government to reduce the burden of loans, Pakistan’s debts
are rising at fast pace. PTI government is borrowing more than any government
did in the history of Pakistan. The government spokesmen also give the wrong
justification that PTI government is taking new loans to repay the loans taken
by the previous governments of PPP and PML-N. The government is also taking
most expensive loans to bridge the financial gaps.
But the data
of both Ministry of Finance and State Bank of Pakistan contradicts the PTI
claims. The data shows that government is taking new loans to finance the
budget deficit and to build the foreign Reserves.
According to
a report published in Express Tribune on January 27 by Shahbaz Rana revealed
that PTI government has borrowed $10.4 billion as foreign loans during first
six months of current financial year 2021-22.
This amount
is 78% more than borrowed during the same period last year. This growing
borrowing during the current financial year is the clear indication that government
is struggling to close the gap in the budget and current account deficits. The PTI government is also facing problems to
maintain the fast depleting foreign reserves.
Shahbaz Rana
has quoted Ministry of Economic Affairs in the report and provided details of
foreign loans obtained during July-December period. “Gross foreign loan disbursements during
July-December of current fiscal year remained at $9.3 billion.
The
government received $1.1 billion in foreign loans from the overseas Pakistanis
through the Naya Pakistan Certificates, the central bank data showed. The
cumulative gross foreign loans secured in the first half of current fiscal year
were higher by $4.5 billion, or 78%, from the same period of previous fiscal
year, showed the official statistics.”
The Shahbaz
Rana also pointed out that “the highly expensive Naya Pakistan
Certificates-backed loans are a new debt instrument that the PTI government has
added to the list. The $1.1 billion loan from July through December of current
fiscal year was acquired at 7% interest rate in dollar terms. The foreign loans
of $9.3 billion, reported by the Ministry of Economic Affairs, are inclusive of
the $3 billion short-term loan received from Saudi Arabia last month.”
However,
despite the Saudi Arabian assistance, the gross official foreign exchange
reserves dipped to $17.1 billion by mid-January, sufficient to finance hardly
10 weeks of imports.
The
government borrowed $1.1 billion from Dubai Bank, including a fresh contract
for $420 million.
Overall, 84% of the loans, or $8.7 billion, were taken for non-productive purposes like budget financing, crude oil import and foreign exchange reserves’ building. Owing to the increasing reliance on loans to enhance the country’s foreign currency reserves and finance the budget deficit, the cost of debt servicing has gone up significantly.
The average maturity time of external debt deteriorated from last year’s level of seven years to six years and eight months by the end of June 2021. The share of foreign commercial loans has already increased from 11% to 13% in the external public debt.Official statistics
showed that bilateral lending to Pakistan almost dried up in the current fiscal
year, standing at a mere $94 million so far for project financing. This
included $73.4 million in project lending by China. The government has not yet
been able to secure a fresh commitment of $6 billion from China for financing
the Main Line-I railway project of China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).
Pakistan
also obtained loans worth $2.8 billion from multilateral creditors. The Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank released $36 million for project financing.
Amongst
other multilateral development partners, the Asian Development Bank (ADB)
disbursed $1.1 billion during the July-December period, including $488 million
for vaccine procurement.
The World
Bank released $932 million in the six months under review while the Islamic
Development Bank disbursed $805 million for crude oil imports. The Ministry of
Economic Affairs also booked $291 million worth of publicly guaranteed debt,
which China disbursed for Karachi’s nuclear power plants, known as K2 and K3.
The
government also took $10 million in loan from NBP Bahrain to finance the losses
of Roosevelt Hotel, New York, which was owned by the loss-making Pakistan
International Airlines.
Khalid Bhatti
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