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Imports shrink, exports stagnate, FDI plummets: Current account deficit drops 27pc

Rinnegan Sasuke

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KARACHI: The country’s current account deficit (CAD) contracted by 27 per cent to $11.586 billion during the first 10 months of the current fiscal year compared to $15.864bn during the same period last fiscal year, according to latest data released by the State Bank of Pakistan.

The contraction is mainly due to 5pc decrease in total imports even as exports have dropped by around 2pc despite devaluation of the local currency and incentives announced by the government. In addition to that, $1.4bn increase in workers’ remittances also helped prop up overall foreign exchange reserves.

The CAD in April declined to $1.24bn, down 45.4pc from $2.275bn in April 2018.

The government has faced challenges to arrest the widening current account deficit despite bilateral borrowings from Saudi Arabia, UAE and China. However, the funds have proven inadequate to finance the CAD as the country’s reserves have declined to $8.8bn — enough for less than three months of import cover due to external debt servicing according to the State Bank.

The rapid decline in reserves forced the government to approach the International Monetary Fund. The fund, after long negotiations, agreed to a 39-month Extended Fund Facility for about $6bn to restore macroeconomic stability and support sustainable economic growth and ensure additional external financing. However, the agreement comes with strings attached including, some say, commitments to roll over bilateral loans, interest rate hike, further devaluation of the currency, and hikes in utility prices including gas and electricity in the upcoming budget.

The agreement with the IMF is likely to be followed by inflows from other lending agencies including the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank.

The CAD, during the last fiscal year, hit record high of $18.619bn depleting reserves at roughly $1.5bn per month stressing government’s ability to payback liabilities.

However, the government’s efforts to compress imports in the ongoing fiscal year are finally bearing fruit as the total imports dipped to $44.033bn, down 7.87pc against the same period last year.

The government introduced corrective measures such as the imposition of regulatory duties and banning furnace oil imports. Furthermore, after introducing new rules governing imports of used vehicles pushing the import bill has downwards during the period under review.

The challenge for the government lies in reversing the declining trend in exports, which have declined 2pc to $20.099bn despite massive devaluation of 18pc in the rupee’s value during the last 10 months and special incentives for export-oriented sectors including textile..

The government had earlier claimed the impact of currency devaluation will be visible in the exports, anticipating a pickup in foreign sales and a steep decline in imports in the months ahead, however, exports have seen no significant improvement.

Foreign investment halves to $1.4bn
As the government embarks on an arduous journey to fix the economic imbalances with the help of International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout, the foreign direct investment (FDI) halved to $1.376 billion during the first 10 months of this fiscal year from $2.489bn in the corresponding period last year.

The FDI inflows fell to $101.8 million in April, down 42.6 per cent compared to $177.5m in March and plunged by 55.2pc year-on-year compared to $227.5m in April 2018.

Inflows from China, leading investor in the country, declined by 72 per cent to $429m during the July-April period compared to $1.731bn in the same period last fiscal year as major infrastructure-related projects under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor near completion.

However, the United Kingdom and the United States with $156m and $76m respectively also shied away from investing in the country amid record fall in the rupee’s value and economic slowdown.

On the other hand, investment from Netherlands dropped to $67.5m during the period under review from $86.5m in the same period last year.

Sector-wise, construction led the chart attracting $386.8m during the July-April period of 2018-19 followed by oil and gas exploration, financial business, and electrical machinery with $287.3m, $256.6m, and $287.3m respectively.

Power sector, however, witnessed an outflow of $281m during the first 10 months against $1bn FDI in the same period last year followed by net outflow of $144m in the communication sector.

On a monthly basis, inflows in the financial business and power sector led with $22.1m and $19.8m respectively.

The falling FDI is a troublesome for the government as the inflows from foreign countries help prop up the country’s current account balance which has worsened amid declining exports.

The government, in order to avoid a balance of payments crisis, approached IMF to secure a bailout programme. Moreover, portfolio investment outflow was $990.6m during the period under review compared to inflow of $2.45bn during the same period last year.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1483770/i...i-plummets-current-account-deficit-drops-27pc
 
not surprising and unfortunatley things may get a bit worse before they stabilise. people need to understand that 30 years of corruption and mismanagment have lead us to this cliff edge. The last ten years have been the worst. For IK to turn this ship around he needs people to be patient. Afterall they were perfectly happy to give Zardari and Nawaz time to loot and plunder so give some time to IK. The country is in an economic mess..yet we have Bilo and co talking about providing more subsidies and borrowing even more money..insanity!!
 
Gov't should ban all unnecessary imports, including small ticket items which can be easily manufactured or made in Pakistan and the world won't come to an end if they didn't get imported. Especially the crappy low ticket items we get dumped from China. We need to put a complete stop to this as it has totally killed our local industry.

Nobody buys Pakistani made shoes and clothing as everything gets imported from China and cost is more expensive for this same items in Pakistan as it is here in US. The lower quality crappy products dumped into Pakistan form China actually cost more than the higher quality Chinese products in US.

One of the biggest failures of previous gov't, including the much hyped and overrated Mush gov't has been failure to establish local manufacturing and value addition. So instead of making things in Pakistan we just imported them, heck we have commercials made in India, our supposed arch enemy. We even import onions and ginger from India and China. Why can't we grow these in Pakistan.

If any product/company wants access to Pakistani market, they will just have to manufacture those products in Pakistan. Can't believe the geniuses in gov't haven't figured out this basic strategy.
 
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Gov't should ban all unnecessary imports, including small ticket items which can be easily manufactured or made in Pakistan and the world won't come to an end if they didn't get imported. Especially the crappy low ticket items we get dumped from China. We need to put a complete stop to this as it has totally killed our local industry.

Nobody buys Pakistani made shoes and clothing as everything gets imported from China and cost is more expensive for this same items in Pakistan as it is here in US. The lower quality crappy products dumped into Pakistan form China actually cost more than the higher quality Chinese products in US.

One of the biggest failures of previous gov't, including the much hyped and overrated Mush gov't has been failure to establish local manufacturing and value addition. So instead of making things in Pakistan we just imported them, heck we have commercials made in India, our supposed arch enemy. We even import onions and ginger from India and China. Why can't we grow these in Pakistan.

If any product/company wants access to Pakistani market, they will just have to manufacture those products in Pakistan. Can't believe the geniuses in gov't haven't figured out this basic strategy.

Its very basic, all unnecessary items especially items that can also be produced in Pakistan need to be banned, this will support the local industry. Yes its an unfair trade practice which the trading countries will object too but the national interest of Pakistan comes first right now.
 
There were 2 other good news for economy today. Saudis giving oil on deferred payments and a 1200 points increase in stock exchange within a day.
 
Our food imports increased to $6+ billion last year i dont have the numbers for current year but whatever it is this is really shocking for a country known for agriculture and dairy. Oil import i can understand it's necessary but a $6b bill every year for food items?
 
Our food imports increased to $6+ billion last year i dont have the numbers for current year but whatever it is this is really shocking for a country known for agriculture and dairy. Oil import i can understand it's necessary but a $6b bill every year for food items?

Yeah in the recent standoff with India, they threatened to cut off our tomato supply, as embarrassing as it was for Indians to make that threat, it was a bigger embarrassment for us to have been importing tomatoes from India in the first .
 
Plus we should step up the smuggling of cheap Iranian diesel through Baluchistan as this will reduce the oil import bill as well. Particularly now that Iran is looking to find customers for it's oil in light of the latest sanctions. We should exploit this situation.
 
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Yeah in the recent standoff with India, they threatened to cut off our tomato supply, as embarrassing as it was for Indians to make that threat, it was a bigger embarrassment for us to have been importing tomatoes from India in the first .

Yea we really need to focus on dairy, textile and agriculture sector otherwise we got nothing much to export for now and only remittances and loans are keeping us alive for now. We really destroyed these sectors in last few decades.
 
Plus we should step up the smuggling of cheap Iranian diesel through Baluchistan as this will reduce the oil import bill as well. Particularly now that Iran is looking to find customers for it's oil in light of the latest sanctions. We should exploit this situation.

Irani foreign minister is coming tomorrow and saudis announced to give oil on deferred payment today now connect the dots...
 
Irani foreign minister is coming tomorrow and saudis announced to give oil on deferred payment today now connect the dots...

Yeah let's hope we keep the smuggling under the radar so as to not get foul of US and Saudis.
 
not surprising and unfortunatley things may get a bit worse before they stabilise. people need to understand that 30 years of corruption and mismanagment have lead us to this cliff edge. The last ten years have been the worst. For IK to turn this ship around he needs people to be patient. Afterall they were perfectly happy to give Zardari and Nawaz time to loot and plunder so give some time to IK. The country is in an economic mess..yet we have Bilo and co talking about providing more subsidies and borrowing even more money..insanity!!

I understand that in a democracy the opposition has to talk about the negatives, but I would state that these are entirely predictable numbers.
The gdp growth will shrink as we move away from literally eating ourselves in to insolvency to tightening belts further. the key metric here is the current account deficit. I believe the deferred Saudi oil facility kicks in from next week, so we will see more declines in the CAD. Its good but painful.
 
I understand that in a democracy the opposition has to talk about the negatives, but I would state that these are entirely predictable numbers.
The gdp growth will shrink as we move away from literally eating ourselves in to insolvency to tightening belts further. the key metric here is the current account deficit. I believe the deferred Saudi oil facility kicks in from next week, so we will see more declines in the CAD. Its good but painful.

yes, and should be welcomed.

I agree.
 
I remember when stock exchange was dropping folks on here who have PHDs from London School of Economics and post-doctoral in economics from Harvard were telling us how PTI government has totally failed on the economic front and how previous governments were "corrupt but competent".


Meanwhile the stock exchange has risen nearly 3000 point in last three days (which is greater rise in 2-3 days than all the way back to 2009). So if falling stock exchange meant failing economy, does rapidly rising stock exchange mean rapidly rising economy? Can anybody help me out my knowledge of economics is far inferior to some people on here.
 
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I remember when stock exchange was dropping folks on here who have PHDs from London School of Economics and post-doctoral in economics from Harvard were telling us how PTI government has totally failed on the economic front and how previous governments were "corrupt but competent".


Meanwhile the stock exchange has risen nearly 3000 point in last three days (which is greater rise in 2-3 days than all the way back to 2009). So if falling stock exchange meant failing economy, does rapidly rising stock exchange mean rapidly rising economy? Can anybody help me out my knowledge of economics is far inferior to some people on here.
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]- You raised the fact that a falling stock market is a sign of a failing economy- can you explain whats going on
 
I remember when stock exchange was dropping folks on here who have PHDs from London School of Economics and post-doctoral in economics from Harvard were telling us how PTI government has totally failed on the economic front and how previous governments were "corrupt but competent".


Meanwhile the stock exchange has risen nearly 3000 point in last three days (which is greater rise in 2-3 days than all the way back to 2009). So if falling stock exchange meant failing economy, does rapidly rising stock exchange mean rapidly rising economy? Can anybody help me out my knowledge of economics is far inferior to some people on here.

Stock exchange news drop was a breaking news on channels but the sudden rise is just another normal day for them...
 
There are better ways than the stock market to judge the performance of the economy. You can look at the proportionate contribution of wage earners in the national income to judge the economy. You can look into the median household income and median household net worth judge the performance of the economy. But we don’t generally talk about these things do we?
 
There are better ways than the stock market to judge the performance of the economy. You can look at the proportionate contribution of wage earners in the national income to judge the economy. You can look into the median household income and median household net worth judge the performance of the economy. But we don’t generally talk about these things do we?

Agree with you but the issue is opposition and media both were using stock exchange point drops news 24/7 against Govt from last few months but after the sudden rise it's just another normal day for them.
 
Agree with you but the issue is opposition and media both were using stock exchange point drops news 24/7 against Govt from last few months but after the sudden rise it's just another normal day for them.

No one is stopping the government from alleviating the discourse on the economy.
 
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I remember when stock exchange was dropping folks on here who have PHDs from London School of Economics and post-doctoral in economics from Harvard were telling us how PTI government has totally failed on the economic front and how previous governments were "corrupt but competent".


Meanwhile the stock exchange has risen nearly 3000 point in last three days (which is greater rise in 2-3 days than all the way back to 2009). So if falling stock exchange meant failing economy, does rapidly rising stock exchange mean rapidly rising economy? Can anybody help me out my knowledge of economics is far inferior to some people on here.

[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]- You raised the fact that a falling stock market is a sign of a failing economy- can you explain whats going on

If you guys want to be treated seriously, you need to do a minimum amount of thinking and research before you post. Yes, the KSE100 has risen sharply the past two days. A bit of research will show that does not mean the PTI government's economic performance is to be commended. Your reasoning is like the US mainstream media which puts out headlines that the Trump-led world is coming to an end every time the DJI falls, but then goes mum when it rises.

The KSE100 at 35K is still about a massive 34% down from the peak of 53.5K it reached in June 2017, and about 21% down from the local maxima of 44K in June 2018 (just prior to the elections). Undoubtedly a lot of destruction of Pakistani wealth has occurred over the past 2 to 3 years.

Screen Shot 2019-05-23 at 6.35.17 AM.jpg

https://markets.businessinsider.com/index/kse_100

As always, no replies unless there is an intelligent reply... peace.
 
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If you guys want to be treated seriously, you need to do a minimum amount of thinking and research before you post. Yes, the KSE100 has risen sharply the past two days. A bit of research will show that does not mean the PTI government's economic performance is to be commended. Your reasoning is like the US mainstream media which puts out headlines that the Trump-led world is coming to an end every time the DJI falls, but then goes mum when it rises.

The KSE100 at 35K is still about a massive 34% down from the peak of 53.5K it reached in June 2017, and about 21% down from the local maxima of 44K in June 2018 (just prior to the elections). Undoubtedly a lot of destruction of Pakistani wealth has occurred over the past 2 to 3 years.

View attachment 91650

As always, no replies unless there is an intelligent reply... peace.

It flew over your head didn't it? Not surprised [MENTION=1269]Bewal Express[/MENTION] :afridi
 
Undoubtedly a lot of destruction of Pakistani wealth has occurred over the past 2 to 3 years.

Our neighbors are so concerned about our internal issue i wish they had spend more time researching why extremism in India is on rise...

Talking about 2/3 years of destruction when their fav Nawaz Sharif was ruling...
 
If you guys want to be treated seriously, you need to do a minimum amount of thinking and research before you post. Yes, the KSE100 has risen sharply the past two days. A bit of research will show that does not mean the PTI government's economic performance is to be commended. Your reasoning is like the US mainstream media which puts out headlines that the Trump-led world is coming to an end every time the DJI falls, but then goes mum when it rises.

The KSE100 at 35K is still about a massive 34% down from the peak of 53.5K it reached in June 2017, and about 21% down from the local maxima of 44K in June 2018 (just prior to the elections). Undoubtedly a lot of destruction of Pakistani wealth has occurred over the past 2 to 3 years.

View attachment 91650

https://markets.businessinsider.com/index/kse_100

As always, no replies unless there is an intelligent reply... peace.

Maybe you need to reference the full discussion( about the stock market on a different thread) before you butt in.
 
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