KARACHI – After a year of unemployment and wondering if his family would be better off if he died, Pakistani textile worker Murad Ali has got the spring back in his step. One of thousands laid off by textile bosses last year, the father of four is now back at work and one of those to benefit from a surge in Pakistani exports in the current fiscal year, which ends on June 30.
Experts say rising global commodity prices, a government decision to prioritise power supply to industry and currency devaluation that has made Pakistani products more competitive, have fired an export boom. Compared with the same period last year, the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan says textile exports such as silk rose 25.8 percent and agricultural produce, such as basmati, rose 6.2 percent from July to February 7, 2011.
The textiles sector is one of the key drivers of the Pakistani economy, accounting for 55 percent of all exports and 38 percent of the workforce, according to official figures. Bosses have rehired staff who were laid off, but Ali is only getting a third of the salary as a skilled garment worker that he used to command. “I’m earning less than last year. It is difficult to live a better life due to price rises, but I’m happy,” Ali said.
He has re-enrolled his sons at school but his wife will continue to work as a maid. Money is too tight for her to go back to being a housewife.”The situation has drastically changed in the favour of the country’s economy,” said textile tycoon Mirza Ikhtiar Baig, who employs more than 2,000 workers and predicts exports will rise 10 percent for the fiscal year 2010 to 2011. “Now with demand for Pakistani products rising internationally we are employing more workers.
“Our exports are getting healthier because of an increase in international commodity prices and the government’s will to give top priority to the country’s economy,” said Baig, an adviser to Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani. The Asian Development Bank forecasts GDP growth for Pakistan of 2.5 percent for fiscal year 2011 despite pressures from unprecedented floods in 2010, with a relatively modest rebound to 3.7 percent for fiscal year 2012.
But behind the headlines, experts warn that the exports boom is a mirage that barely even papers over how ailing the economy really is in a country where suicide and bomb attacks have killed more than 4,200 people since 2007. Pakistan suffers from a profound electricity crisis that restricts production to around 80 percent of its needs – a situation that will only worsen as the temperatures crawl higher in the coming months.
The budget deficit has grown to 5.5 percent of GDP, above a 4.9 percent target for the current fiscal year to June 30.