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Trade deficit shrinks 13 percent to $26 billion

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SLAMABAD: The country’s trade deficit shrank by 13.1 per cent to nearly $26.17 billion in the first 10 months of this fiscal year, from $30.114bn in corresponding period last year, indicating that government’s corrective measures against trade deficit are bearing fruits.

The decline in deficit — decreasing by $3.944bn in during July-April — is estimated to be around $5-6bn by the end of FY19. This contraction is mainly attributable to a steep fall in the overall import bill even though export proceeds posted a mixed trend during the period under review.

On a monthly basis, trade deficit dipped by 13.77 pc to $2.498bn in April, from $2.897bn over same month last year.

This improvement has also been shared with the visiting International Monetary Fund team in Islamabad currently negotiating details of a bailout.

A senior official of the Finance Division told Dawn that Pakistan is now arguing with the visiting team that soft measures on fiscal side will also yield the desired results. The same official claimed that IMF also acknowledged the country’s position on the external side management.

The average current account deficit in the caretaker government (May-July 2018) before the PTI took charge stood at $2.036bn. Had the trend continued, it could have ended up safely at $24.4bn per annum but reversed in the last few months, they claimed.

The current account deficit declined $969 million per month on an average in September-March but slowed down to an average $636m a month during January-March FY19.

According to the official, the figure will show further improvement in current account when final data are reported for April. As a visible improvement has been seen on current account, the government team is trying to convince IMF over softer measures on the fiscal side to achieve desired results.

Official figures available with Dawn show that the value of imported goods in 10 months was reported at $45.33bn, down 7.87pc or $3.875bn, from $49.205bn. In April, imports fell by 7.01pc to $4.579bn, from $4.924bn in same month last year.

The government believes the corrective measures such as the imposition of regulatory duties on luxury items and automobiles have started bearing fruits. It had also slapped a ban on the import of furnace oil in February. Similarly, the import of used vehicles also dropped significantly owing to change in the mode of import of used vehicles.

Other measures that helped in compressions of imports are improved energy supply, import substitution drive, economic stabilisation, and currency devaluation. Data indicates that measures taken in the two supplementary Finance Acts have firmly taken hold and are now effectively curtailing imports as per the policy regime of the government.

Contrary to this, the account on export side is not satisfactory.

Meanwhile, exports show a paltry growth of 0.38pc in first 10 months of the current fiscal year. In absolute terms, they hit $19.164bn in July-April, as against $19.091bn over corresponding period last year.

The export proceeds posted inched up 2.66pc to $2.081bn in April, from $2.027bn in same month last year. In rupee terms, the growth was 25.5pc during the period.

Since February 2019, exports have been on a downward trajectory with Commerce Adviser to Razak Dawood also sharing his concern over the falling proceeds. “The exports are not showing growth the way we are expecting,” he said in response to a question in a press conference.

The massive 33pc rupee devaluation since July 2018 coupled with cash assistance to major sectors, mainly textile and clothing, wasn’t enough to boost the country’s exports. The government had earlier claimed the impact of currency devaluation will be visible in the export trajectory, anticipating a pickup in foreign sales and a steep decline in imports ithe months ahead.

Published in Dawn, May 12th, 2019

https://www.dawn.com/news/1481761/trade-deficit-shrinks-13pc-to-262bn
 
Great news! Tough times ahead, if Pakistan can weather this storm called the debt trap we can start moving forward.
 
Excellent work from pti government .

Good work but Pakistan really needs to pick up its exports to excel. I believe the manufacturing environment needs to be improved so that Pakistan can take away work from countries such as Bangladesh. However, normal employees need to stop being lazy and become more productive. Ofcourse, Pakistan can also make the agriculture sector more productive by introducing new methods and technologies from abroad.

My vision is long term. I really wish that the educational system is improved in Pakistan and English becomes a norm in cities like Karachi. This would help to set up foreign call centres etc.

If I was PM, I would make sure each province/ city excels in different areas so that we can deliver services/ products abroad.

Anyhow, early days for PTI and they are just limiting the damage that was left by loony toons.
 
A gap between Exports and Imports of $26 billion is still unacceptable. It needs to come down a lot lot more. This gap is just not sustainable. How are we going to bridge the gap next year? By again going to China, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar and then the IMF?

Why did things get to this stage? If this is what the CPEC has done to our economy then Lanat on such an economic slave driven agreement, Malaysia the moment they saw that a chinese agreement was not worth it bailed out of it. Maybe we need to start doing the same and start to live within our means
 
A gap between Exports and Imports of $26 billion is still unacceptable. It needs to come down a lot lot more. This gap is just not sustainable. How are we going to bridge the gap next year? By again going to China, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar and then the IMF?

Why did things get to this stage? If this is what the CPEC has done to our economy then Lanat on such an economic slave driven agreement, Malaysia the moment they saw that a chinese agreement was not worth it bailed out of it. Maybe we need to start doing the same and start to live within our means

We should be thankful to overseas Pakistanis remittances of $18-20 billion every year.

Noora with the help of ministers like Dar/Miftah and Khurram Dastagir got our exports down to $22b and imports to $50b and guess what they had the cheapest oil prices in their term plus CPEC money now if someone call this competence he really need to get his head examined.
 
How much exports increased in last 10 months? IMO deficit should be shrink via increasing in exports.
 
Things will fall in place eventually In sha Allah.. you just need to believe in IK..
 
Trade deficit shrinks 15.3% to $31.8b in FY19

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) government has managed to narrow down the trade deficit by 15.3% to $31.8 billion on the back of import compression but it failed to enhance exports, which fell even below the level left behind by its arch-rival – the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

Trade figures released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) on Friday showed that exports contracted both on month-on-month and year-on-year basis in June despite over one-third depreciation of the rupee against the US dollar. The PTI government missed its export target by $4 billion as total exports stood below $23 billion at the end of fiscal year 2018-19.

It also missed the trade deficit reduction target by $5.8 billion, although the gap between exports and imports shrank 15.3%.
Overall, the trade deficit, which stood at $37.6 billion in the preceding fiscal year, shrank to $31.8 billion in the just ended fiscal year 2018-19, the PBS reported. In absolute terms, there was a reduction of $5.8 billion in the trade deficit and the entire reduction came from the import side.

Overall imports dropped 9.9% to $54.8 billion in FY19 but the improvement was mainly because of reduction in machinery imports. In absolute terms, the imports contracted by $6 billion, which provided some relief to the government.

However, the real challenge remained the exports, which registered a negative growth of 1% and stood at only $22.97 billion, remaining shy of even $23 billion, during the previous fiscal year. In absolute terms, the exports shrank $234 million.

Adviser to Prime Minister on Commerce Abdul Razak Dawood had vowed to enhance exports to $27 billion on the back of steep currency depreciation and market access to China. However, it did not happen.

Dawood had claimed that Chinese market access would boost exports by an additional $1 billion during fiscal year 2018-19.

Exporters have long been getting subsidised loans, electricity and gas, and are exempted from the normal income tax regime. The central bank has let the currency depreciate by over 40% in a bid to give a boost to exports and curb imports.

The PTI government has provided over Rs30-billion package in the shape of lower gas and electricity prices.

State Bank of Pakistan Governor Dr Reza Baqir said on Thursday there was a need to support the exporters by making them competitive. But “the exchange rate is not the ultimate solution and the ultimate solution has to come from the business by improving competitiveness.”

The government wanted to cut the trade deficit to $26 billion, but it missed the goal by a wide margin of $5.8 billion. The value of export goods was 239% less than the value of imports.

The failure to achieve the export target and reduce the trade deficit to the desired level has made it challenging to meet new fiscal year’s trade targets.

For the new fiscal year, the government has set the export target at $26.8 billion, which will require 16.6% growth. Imports in the new fiscal year are projected to contract 5.5% to $51.8 billion.

The trade deficit is also targeted to be reduced to $24.9 billion in fiscal year 2019-20, a contraction of 21.7%.

The trade balance in June this year as compared to the same month a year ago improved but only because of compression of imports. The trade deficit shrank 29.8% from $3.8 billion to $2.7 billion in June. In absolute terms, there was a reduction of $1.1 billion on an annual basis.

In June 2019, the imports in dollar terms fell to $4.4 billion compared to $5.7 billion in the same month of last year, which reflected contraction of over 22.8%, reported the PBS. But exports also decreased 8.8% to $1.7 billion in June, a net reduction of $165 million.

On a month-on-month basis, the exports fell 18.3% in June over the preceding month. There was a loss of $385 million in export receipts as compared to the preceding month. The imports also posted negative growth of 13.5% to $4.4 billion last month.

Resultantly, the trade deficit contracted one-tenth to $2.6 billion in June over May.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2012150/2-trade-deficit-shrinks-15-3-31-8b-fy19-business/
 
We need to get Exports up, and the govt has quite rightly​ given it a priority but our businesses need to up their game by producing products the world wants. We need to look at the IT sector in particular, we need setup coding academy's​ in all major cities selecting the most capable students to go there , we need to support startups with funding and get some of the bigger players to invest in PK
 
Zombies dancing over shrinking of GDP & trade activities.

GDP not mentioned once in the OP or subsequent reports. Learn the difference between deficit and GDP.

Your messiah, Trump, has been trying to decrease the US deficit but couldn't, instead raised tariffs in hope it would reduce the deficit.

Maybe you are not dancing to the right tune.
 
GDP not mentioned once in the OP or subsequent reports. Learn the difference between deficit and GDP.

Your messiah, Trump, has been trying to decrease the US deficit but couldn't, instead raised tariffs in hope it would reduce the deficit.

Maybe you are not dancing to the right tune.

I hope your messiah tells Trump his golden formula of reducing trade deficit. "If you don't trade, you have no deficit".
 
I hope your messiah tells Trump his golden formula of reducing trade deficit. "If you don't trade, you have no deficit".

Reducing a trade deficit towards a surplus means national debt is reduced.

No trade means deficit increases.

Economics 101.
 
We need to get Exports up, and the govt has quite rightly​ given it a priority but our businesses need to up their game by producing products the world wants. We need to look at the IT sector in particular, we need setup coding academy's​ in all major cities selecting the most capable students to go there , we need to support startups with funding and get some of the bigger players to invest in PK

President Arif Alvi already started an amazing program called Artificial Computing Initiative (PIAIC) check https://www.piaic.org/

It was launched in Karachi first now in Islamabad and Faisalabad and thn they will expand it to other major cities.
 
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