Experts warn spiraling inflation may lead to industrial closures, mass unemployment in Pakistan

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Updated 03 May 2023
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Experts warn spiraling inflation may lead to industrial closures, mass unemployment in Pakistan

  • Monthly inflation rose to 36.4 percent in April amid growing energy and food prices, rapid currency depreciation
  • Economists say inflation is hitting low-income segments hard, forcing many consumers to change buying priorities

KARACHI: Rising inflation in Pakistan may lead to industrial closure, mass unemployment and unrest, said industrialists and experts on Wednesday, as monthly inflation measured by the consumer price index (CPI) rose to a historic high of 36.4 percent in April.
The figure released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics earlier this week is said to be the highest since 1964, highlighting a massive surge in food and energy prices amid rapid depreciating of the national currency.
Inflation in Pakistan more than doubled as compared to last year’s 13.4 percent, recorded in April 2022. This year, it surged to 49.5 percent on average in rural and urban areas combined as compared to the 16.7% recorded last year.
According to Trading Economics, an international financial data provider, the situation in Pakistan is even bleaker than Sri Lank, where the inflation rate drastically decreased from 50.4 percent in March to 35.3 percent in April.
“Major factors contributing to high inflation in Pakistan are currency depreciation, continuing impact of international commodity price hikes and taxes imposed on petroleum products at home,” Samiullah Tariq, research director at the Pakistan-Kuwait Investment Company, told Arab News.
However, he maintained that he expected deceleration in inflation in another month.
“Inflation is expected to start receding after a month,” he said. “The big number will start declining because on the external side, the requirement for the dollar has subsided and the current account is in a surplus. This was a balancing act which was inevitable.”
High inflation in Pakistan is eroding the purchasing power of the common citizen and industrialist who have been complaining about falling or stagnant income along with rising expenditures.
President of Karachi Chambers of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) Tariq Yousuf said the situation was leading to more industrial closures.
“I think the effect of inflation has started,” he continued. “The energy prices, particularly, have increased substantially, and due to this, there will be a lot of [business] closures now and people will not be able to survive.”
“Due to high production costs, people are not making profits and their take-home salary remains stagnant,” Yousuf said. “Meanwhile, their expenses have doubled. Naturally, this will lead to more closures, mass unemployment, and unrest in the country.”
The current situation in Pakistan has decelerated the country’s economic growth and leading foreign institutions, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and the Asian Development Bank (ADB), have projected Pakistan’s economic growth to remain 0.5 percent, 0.4 percent, and 0.6 percent, respectively, during the current fiscal year.
Spiraling inflation and low growth rate, according to another economist, are fueling social discomfort.
“The inflationary pressure has continued to persist for four and a half years and low-income segments are deeply affected,” Dr. Ashfaque Hassan Khan, senior economist, told Arab News.
“Those who were givers have now become takers,” he continued, adding that poverty was creating law and order situation which was evident from the rising crime rates in the cities, including Karachi.
“This is the social impact [of inflation],” he said.
Amid high inflation, Pakistani consumers have started changing their buying patterns after losing their purchasing power.
“With fixed income, I am rationalizing my spending with a focus on essential goods,” Mazhar Ali, a media person, told Arab News.
He said he had been forced to look for more income generation avenues to meet his buying needs, especially due to high electricity bills, school fees, and food prices.


Pakistan parliamentary panel discusses rollout of local messaging app for officials next year

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Pakistan parliamentary panel discusses rollout of local messaging app for officials next year

  • Officials say ‘Beep’ aims to provide a secure, locally built messaging platform for government use
  • The committee voices dissatisfaction with Internet services, calls for fair 5G spectrum auction

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani parliamentary committee on Tuesday discussed plans to roll out a locally developed messaging application for government officials next year, even as lawmakers voiced strong dissatisfaction with the country’s Internet services during a hearing marked by complaints over poor connectivity.

Local media reported that the proposed app for secure official communication came up during a meeting of the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Information Technology and Telecommunication, where members also raised concerns about sluggish mobile Internet speeds and the performance of the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA).

Pakistani officials announced last year that local engineers had developed and successfully tested a government messaging platform intended to reduce reliance on foreign applications and strengthen data security. The National Information Technology Board (NITB) said the application — known as Beep — had been successfully undergoing trial runs since 2023.

“The purpose of launching Beep is to provide a secure messaging platform for public sector employees nationwide,” NITB Chief Executive Faisal Iqbal Ratyal told the committee during the hearing, according to Pakistan’s English-language broadsheet Dawn, expressing hope that the project would meet its June 30, 2026 deadline.

In an official statement issued after the meeting, the committee praised the National Information Technology Board, calling its performance commendable and its projects aligned with the broader national interest.

The statement said the committee also expressed dissatisfaction with the PTA’s performance, noting that complaints raised in successive meetings largely related to the quality of Internet services and that no significant improvement had been observed so far.

It said official assessments portraying services as satisfactory did not reflect ground realities, as the public faced “severe difficulties” accessing Internet services, with connectivity in some areas described as almost non-existent.

Lawmakers also called for the forthcoming 5G spectrum auction to be conducted in a fair and transparent manner, reiterated that the auction should be held in Pakistani rupees and said spectrum prices should not be set unnecessarily high.

Any concessions granted to telecom operators, the committee said, must be tied to improvements in network and infrastructure.

Pakistani users across the country have frequently complained of sluggish 4G Internet connections in recent months, citing disruptions to calls on messaging platform WhatsApp.

Last year, media reports said the government was installing an Internet firewall to monitor and regulate online content, prompting concern among digital rights activists.

The PTA has rejected assertions that a national firewall was responsible for disruptions, saying in September that slow Internet speeds were due to outdated infrastructure and rising data consumption.