Pakistani PM meets senior World Bank official amid economic crisis

Najy Benhassaine, Country Director World Bank (left) in a meeting with Pakistan's Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar in Islamabad, Pakistan, on September 11, 2023. (Photo courtesy: PMO)
Short Url
Updated 11 September 2023
Follow

Pakistani PM meets senior World Bank official amid economic crisis

  • Conditions for IMF loan have complicated task of keeping price pressures, declines in Pakistan’s rupee in check
  • Inflation rose to record 38.0 percent and rupee has hit all-time lows in recent months, last month the currency fell 6.2 percent.

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar on Monday met Najy Benhassine, country director for Pakistan at the World Bank Group, as the South Asian country reels from multiple economic challenges.

The South Asian nation is embarking on a tricky path to economic recovery under a caretaker government after a $3 billion loan program, approved by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in July, averted a sovereign debt default. But reforms set out as conditions for the IMF loan have complicated the task of keeping price pressures and declines in Pakistan’s rupee currency in check, with the last several weeks marred by nationwide protests over record electricity and fuel prices.

An easing of import restrictions and a demand that subsidies be removed have already fueled annual inflation, which rose to a record 38.0 percent in May. Interest rates have also risen, and the rupee hit all-time lows. Last month the currency fell 6.2 percent.

“The World Bank is playing a role for the development of the backward areas of Pakistan, especially the remote areas of Balochistan,” Kakar was quoted as saying in a statement released by his office after his meeting with Benhassine.

“The first priority of the government is to take the backward areas on the path of development like other parts of the country.”

Pakistan’s economic woes were exacerbated last year as record monsoon rains and melting glaciers displaced some 8 million people and killed at least 1,700 in a catastrophe blamed on climate change. Most of the waters have now receded but the floods cost the economy $30 billion in damages, with millions of homes and thousands of kilometers of roads and railway still needing rebuilding.

“The World Bank played its role in helping and rehabilitating the affected people in the historic floods of 2022,” the PM said. “The government will provide all possible administrative support to complete the ongoing rehabilitation work in the affected areas.”
 


Pakistan says CPEC has helped bridge cultural and language barriers with China

Updated 10 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan says CPEC has helped bridge cultural and language barriers with China

  • Ataullah Tarar suggests Pakistan-China digital platform to counter ‘disinformation’ around CPEC
  • People-to-people ties have remained limited between the two states despite strong official relations

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting Ataullah Tarar said on Wednesday the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) has brought about a “cultural change,” helping break barriers of language and bringing the two countries closer together.

Pakistan and China have longstanding strategic relations, though much of their interactions have traditionally occurred at the government-to-government level through diplomatic, strategic and economic engagements. People-to-people ties between them have mostly remained limited, though the Pakistani minister said there was a gradual shift in the trend in the wake of the multibillion-dollar economic, infrastructure development and regional connectivity initiative.

Launched in 2015, CPEC includes investments in energy, transport, and industrial zones, and has since become a cornerstone of bilateral ties and Pakistan’s long-term development strategy.

“CPEC in Pakistan has broken a lot of barriers. It has broken the barrier of language, and it has broken the barriers of division. It has brought harmony,” Tarar said while addressing a ceremony organized by the Pakistan-China Institute, a local think tank.

“This corridor brought about a cultural change where we had investments coming in, where we had infrastructure being built, where we had industry being built, where we had airports and seaports being developed.”

He said it was “heartening” to see cultural change in Pakistan, such as a Chinese citizen speaking fluent Urdu or a Pakistani citizen speaking Mandarin.

Tarar said the cultural shift had become part of Pakistan’s ethos as the two countries move forward, describing Chinese President Xi Jinping’s 2015 visit as a turning point in reviving the economy.

He also maintained CPEC was targeted by a disinformation campaign, suggesting a digital media platform between Pakistan and China to counter the problem.

“I would suggest that maybe the Pakistan-China Institute can come up with a digital media platform to call out fake news and to label fake news circulating around CPEC,” he said, adding the government would fully support the endeavor.

“I think that will go a long way in not only strengthening the media cooperation but also in getting rid of misinformation and stating the correct facts in a very timely manner,” he added.

Tarar said the initiative will help promote a positive narrative around CPEC 2.0, referring to the next phase of the initiative that aims to focus on industrial development in Pakistan.