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Pakistan bracing for austere budget under IMF, finance chief says

May 25, 2019
Adviser to Prime Minister Imran Khan on Finance, Revenue and Economic Affairs Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, left, gestures during a press conference next to special assistant to the Prime Minister for Information and Broadcasting Firdous Ashiq Awan, in Islamabad, on  Saturday. — AFP
Adviser to Prime Minister Imran Khan on Finance, Revenue and Economic Affairs Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, left, gestures during a press conference next to special assistant to the Prime Minister for Information and Broadcasting Firdous Ashiq Awan, in Islamabad, on Saturday. — AFP

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan is preparing a belt-tightening budget to tame its fiscal deficit, the de facto finance minister said on Saturday, adding that both civilian and military rulers agreed austerity measures were needed to stabilize the economy.

But Hafeez Shaikh, Prime Minister Imran Khan's top finance adviser, declined to say whether the military's hefty budget would be cut following last week's agreement in principle with the International Monetary Fund for a $6 billion loan.

The IMF has said the primary budget deficit should be trimmed by the equivalent of $5 billion, but previous civilian rulers have rarely dared to trim defense spending for fear of stoking tensions with the military.

Unlike some other civilian leaders in Pakistan's fragile democracy, Khan appears to have good relations with the country's powerful generals.

More than half of state spending currently goes on the military and debt-servicing costs, however, limiting the government's options for reducing expenditure.

"The budget that is coming will have austerity, that means that the government's expenditures will be put at a minimum level," Shaikh told a news conference in the capital Islamabad on Saturday, a few weeks before the budget for the 2019/20 fiscal year ending in June is due to be presented.

"We are all standing together in it whether civilians or our military," said Shaikh, a former finance minister appointed by Khan as part of a wider shake-up of his economic team in the last two months.

In the days since last week's agreement with the IMF, the rupee currency dropped 5 percent against the dollar and has lost a third of its value in the past year.

Under the IMF's terms, the government is expected to let the rupee fall to help correct an unsustainable current account deficit and cut its debt while trying to expand the tax base in a country where only 1 percent of people file returns.

Shaikh has been told by the IMF that the primary budget deficit — excluding interest payments — should be cut to 0.6 percent of GDP, implying a $5 billion reduction from the current projection for a deficit of 2.2 percent of GDP.

The next fiscal year's revenue collection target will be 5.55 trillion rupees ($36.88 billion), Shaikh told the news conference, highlighting the need for tough steps to broaden the tax base. — Reuters


May 25, 2019
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