Security, structural weaknesses haunt economy, says SBP

0
637

The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Wednesday observed that growing security concerns and persistent structural weaknesses continue to impede the country’s economic growth that grew at 3.6 percent during the financial year 2012-13 (FY13).
Further, the year under review saw the backbreaking inflation falling to single-digit, 7.4 percent.
The SBP stated this in its Annual Report on the State of Economy for FY13.
The report said soft global commodity prices, downward revision in energy prices and a relatively stable exchange rate allowed the average inflation rate to fall to 7.4 percent in FY13. The rate of price hike, the report said, was much lower than the 9.5 percent target for the year.
According to the report, robust growth in construction activity and capacity enhancement in a few sub-sectors, supported the industrial sector. Global prices helped contain the country’s import bill, and there was some improvement in exports.
Furthermore, higher than anticipated Coalition Support Fund (CSF) inflows, and modest growth in worker remittances, reduced the current account deficit to 1.0 percent of GDP in FY13.
“Notwithstanding favourable developments, growing security concerns and persistent structural weaknesses continue to impede economic growth,” it read.
The SBP report read that challenges in managing public sector enterprises; the need to expand the tax net to untaxed or under-taxed areas; to contain untargeted subsidies; to tackle theft and leakages in the energy sector; to revitalise the private sector; and to increase documentation, were largely unaddressed during FY13.
“In a repeat from the previous year, the budget deficit exceeded the target for FY13 by a wide margin, as the realized deficit was 8 percent of GDP, against a target of 4.7 percent,” said the report.
It added that the resulting pressure to secure financing dominated policy-making throughout the year.
For the third consecutive year, the energy sector was addressed by paying off the circular debt, which pushed the fiscal deficits above the respective targets for these years.
The report said that with inadequate external funding the onus of financing the fiscal deficit fell entirely on domestic sources, specifically the banking system.
The government borrowed Rs 939.6 billion from commercial banks and an additional Rs 506.9 billion from the State Bank.
In effect, the country’s domestic debt increased by Rs 1.9 trillion, a 24.6 percent increase from the end of FY12.
According to the report, the lack of external inflows also created challenges in financing the relatively small current account deficit.
The financial account recorded a net inflow of only US$ 0.3 billion during the year, compared to $1.3 billion last year, and $5.1 billion in FY10.
This, along with significant repayments to the IMF, pulled down SBP’s liquid foreign exchange reserves to a 55-month low of $6 billion by end-June 2013.
While inflation outlook based on October 2013 data, reported earlier, was in the range of 10.5 to 11.5 percent, a more realistic outlook based on latest data shows average inflation for FY14 to remain between 10 and 11 percent.
It further said that the approval of a 3-year ($6.64 billion) Extended Fund Facility from the IMF, and expected financial support from other IFIs, should bring stability to the domestic FX market in FY14.