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The 90s decade disastrous for Pakistani economy

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June 16, 2000 

 

ISLAMABAD (AP) - The 1990s was a disastrous decade for Pakistan's economy according to the annual economic survey released Thursday which said that the number of poor people has nearly tripled.

     

According to the 1999-2000 Economic Survey, an annual review of the country's economy, there are now 44 million people living below the poverty line, unable to consume even the basic minimum nutritional food, compared to 17 million in 1987-88.

     

"Declining economic growth, persistence of severe macro-economic imbalances, lack of social safety nets and poor governance in the 1990s have had adverse affects on the country's poor and most vulnerable," said the survey released by the Finance Minister Shaukat Aziz at a news conference in the federal capital.

     

Pakistan also marched into the 21st century with a military regime that threw out the civilian government in a bloodless coup in October 1999 charging rampant corruption and economic mismanagement.

     

The army promised to revive an economy that was teetering on the brink of bankruptcy.

     

According to the survey progress on that front has been made with the last fiscal year showing an increase in exports, a bumper cotton crop, a drop in inflation, a slight increase in investor confidence and a marginal increase in the manufacturing sector.

     

However, the army government has run into powerful opposition to its attempts to document Pakistan's economy and increase its tax base.

     

Pakistan's army ruler Gen. Pervez Musharraf earlier called it "shameful" that only 1.2 million people in a country of 140 million people pay taxes.

     

In the last one month the army government has been struggling to survey businesses, document their inventory and their sales.

     

Businesses have fiercely resisted calling daily strikes, virtually paralyzing the country and losing millions of dollars a day in lost revenues.

     

In Pakistan most transactions are done on a cash basis to avoid payment of taxes and smuggling is a thriving business that the government says denies the exchequer billions of dollars a day in lost revenue from customs duties and sales taxes.

     

Musharraf has refused to bow to the pressure of the business community, which has successfully stymied attempts by previous governments to document their business and force them to pay taxes.

      

The military government also says it will impose a 15 percent sales tax effective on July 1. Businessmen say they will resist.

     

The Economic Survey, released just two days before Pakistan hands down its budget on Saturday, says that there has been a slight recovery in growth with the gross domestic product growing by 4.5 percent in the last fiscal year compared to 3.2 percent in the previous and an average of 4 percent for the second half of the 1990s.

     

he only good news out of the 1990s was the slight drop in the deficit to 6.4 percent in the second half of the decade. However that came about by seriously cutting development expenditures in a country where the literacy rate is barely 30 percent and much less among women.

     

The recent recovery in the growth rate is being credited to a bumper cotton and wheat crop which means the agriculture sector will grow by 5.5 percent compared to 1.9 percent in the last fiscal year.

     

"One of the most positive developments of the outgoing fiscal year has been a strong rebound in exports," says the economic survey.

     

Also according to the survey the last fiscal year saw a slowdown in monetary growth. Money supply grew by 3.2 percent between July 1999 and March 2000 compared to 9.4 percent the full previous fiscal year.

     

As well the limping economic recovery has been helped by a stabilized currency which saw drastic and successive devaluation's in the last half of the 1990s, according to the economic survey.


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