Economic Manifestos: Pakistani political parties head to polls with focus on inflation, power bills, climate change

Party flags and banners of election candidates from political parties are displayed on a street ahead of Feb. 8 general elections in Karachi on February 2, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 05 February 2024
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Economic Manifestos: Pakistani political parties head to polls with focus on inflation, power bills, climate change

  • Pakistan, a country of over 241 million people, is grappling with macro-economic instability due to years of mismanagement
  • Amid election campaigns, Pakistani political parties recall their past initiatives and promise a better future in the next five years

KARACHI: As Pakistan prepares to go to national elections in less than a week, prominent political parties have issued their manifestos glazed with ambitious blueprints of an economic turnaround, promising to address historic inflation, reduce power tariff, and introduce reforms in energy and agriculture sectors.

Pakistan, a country of over 241 million people, is grappling with macro-economic instability stemming from lower gross domestic product (GDP), energy shortfall, historic high inflation that continues to bite poor segments of the society, weakening currency, low tax collection, and political instability.

Amid the mounting economic challenges, the South Asian nation is scheduled to hold the elections on Feb. 8 to elect a new government for a period of five years. With electioneering gaining pace with every passing day, political parties have been recalling their past initiatives and promising a better future at charged public gatherings.

Inflation, electricity bills, exports

In its election manifesto, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), widely regarded as a frontrunner in the elections following the return of its leader, Nawaz Sharif, from self-exile in London, has promised to bring down inflation from a staggering 29.7 percent in December to a single digit level.

“By the end of the year 2025, inflation will be in the single-digit, and over the following four years it will be controlled,” the PML-N manifesto reads.

The party has pledged to increase economic growth rate to 4 percent by the end of 2025, 5 percent by 2026, and over 6 percent growth in the following years consistently.

“A buoyant economy with a higher GDP growth will help absorb new entrants into the workforce creating over 10 million jobs in the next five years,” the manifesto reads.

Pakistan’s central bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have projected the South Asian economy to grow by up to 3 percent during the current financial year (July 2023 till June 2024).

Once in power, Sharif’s party claims, it will reduce electricity bills by as much as 30 percent through tariff rationalization, reduced generation costs, eradication of circular debt, and enhanced infrastructure.

The promises come amid a declining tax-to-GDP ratio that stood at 8.5 percent in 2022-23, according to Finance Minister Dr. Shamshad Akhtar, who shared on Tuesday a plan to restructure the country’s tax collecting agency.

Akthar believes the new structure and measures to broaden the tax base as well as integration of data enhancement and technology would lift the tax-to-GDP ratio to 18 percent by 2029.

However, the PMLN has promised to increase the tax-to-GDP ratio to 13.5 percent by the end of year 2029.

Sharif’s party aims to increase exports to more than $58 billion in the next five years by adopting the right policies and take remittance inflows to more than $40 billion annually.

“We will try to fully implement the manifesto, if came into the power,” Sharif, who has thrice been the prime minister of Pakistan, promised at its launch late last month.

Climate resilience, energy transition, housing

The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), led by former foreign minister and Bhutto scion Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, has focused on the climate crisis besides inflation, unemployment and poverty in its manifesto, titled as “Peoples Charter of the Economy.”

“We need to completely reform Pakistan’s development priorities and focus on climate resilience, adaptation and energy transition,” the PPP manifesto says.

The party has pledged to double incomes for daily wage earners by increasing the minimum wage by 8 percent every year and promised at least 3 million climate-resilient homes in the name of women heads of the household under its ‘Housing for the Poor’ slogan.

“The poorest households will be given free electricity up to 300 units through solar generation, and this will be funded through carbon credits,” the manifesto reads.

To finance the ‘People’s Charter,’ the PPP has pledged to do away with 17 federal ministries, expecting the move to save in excess of Rs328 billion ($1.2 billion).

The PPP has promised to roll back over Rs1,500 billion ($5.3 billion) subsidies available to the elite and to re-allocate them to social protection and climate-resilient investments.

Private sector investments

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), led by jailed former prime minister Imran Khan, has identified low saving rates, debt-driven growth, fiscal unsustainability, reduced productivity and an unfavorable environment for private sector investments as major issues facing Pakistan’s economy.

It prioritizes long-term economic development and growth driven by productivity gains, private investments, and individual initiatives, according to the party manifesto.

“We believe Pakistan’s major problem is development, so the key objective of our manifesto is to prefer long-term development goal rather than growth,” Muzzamil Aslam, a member of PTI’s economic team, told Arab News.

“The party will prefer productivity growth and export-led growth. We will discourage import-led growth and focus on labor intensive sectors such as agriculture.”

Human capital, agriculture tax

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQMP), a political party mainly present in Pakistan’s commercial hub of Karachi, believes the “economical condition of Pakistan is very severe.”

“Actually, economical condition of Pakistan is very severe but it’s not the crisis of economy. It’s a crisis of the niyat (intention),” Dr. Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui, the MQM-P chief, told Arab News.

The party aims to increase remittances to $100 billion by leveraging human capital mobility within the next five years, promising agriculture tax on income no less than Rs4.8 million and land reforms through constitutional amendments.

‘Vision 2050’

The Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) religio-political party has prepared a long-term economic plan for Pakistan called ‘Vision 2050.’

“After coming into power, we will undertake land reforms and tax big land-holders,” Hafiz Naeem-ur-Rehman, JI Karachi chief, told Arab News, pledging to reduce energy tariffs to support industrial growth.

“A concrete plan will be made to get rid of the loans of the World Bank, IMF and local banks,” the JI manifesto reads.

Concentration of wealth in ‘few hands’

The Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), another religious party, has vowed to prevent concentration of wealth in a “few hands,” elimination of interest-based trade, and modernization of the country’s banking system.

The party has promised to fix monthly salary of laborers that would be equal to one tola (11.7 grams) of gold, which currently costs around Rs215,500 ($768).

The JUI, like other parties, also promised to slash the government’s unnecessary expenditures.


Pakistan fast bowler Amir to miss first T20I against Ireland after visa delay

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Pakistan fast bowler Amir to miss first T20I against Ireland after visa delay

  • Mohammad Amir gets travel visa, expected to join squad from Friday, confirms PCB 
  • Pakistan will play three T20Is against Ireland and four against England this month 

ISLAMABAD: Left-arm fast bowler Mohammad Amir has received his travel visa but won’t make it in time to play the first T20I match against Ireland on Friday, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has confirmed. 

Amir did not travel to Ireland with Pakistan’s squad this week due to visa delay issues. Pakistan will play a three-match T20I series against the Irish side from May 10-14 in Dublin before departing for the UK where they will play against England in a four-match T20I series. 

“Fast bowler Mohammad Amir will miss the first T20I due to delays in the issuance of his visa,” the PCB said in a statement on Thursday. “He is expected to join the side on Friday.”

Amir, 32, came out of international retirement last month for the home series against New Zealand, drawn 2-2. The pacer is eyeing a spot in the 15-man squad for next month’s T20 World Cup in the Caribbean and the United States.

The three-match series in Dublin is also World Cup preparation as both teams are in the same group alongside India, US and Canada.

Amir will bolster Pakistan’s pace battery which comprises the likes of Naseem Shah, Shaheen Shah Afridi, and Haris Rauf. 

Squads:

Ireland: Paul Stirling (captain), Mark Adair, Ross Adair, Andrew Balbirnie, Curtis Campher, Gareth Delany, George Dockrell, Graham Hume, Barry McCarthy, Neil Rock, Harry Tector, Lorcan Tucker, Ben White, Craig Young

Pakistan: Babar Azam (captain), Abrar Ahmed, Azam Khan, Fakhar Zaman, Haris Rauf, Hasan Ali, Iftikhar Ahmed, Imad Wasim, Mohammad Abbas Afridi, Mohammad Amir (unavailable for first T20I), Mohammad Rizwan, Muhammad Irfan Khan, Naseem Shah, Saim Ayub, Salman Ali Agha, Shadab Khan, Shaheen Shah Afridi and Usman Khan.


Pakistan to introduce new SOPs for security of Chinese nationals— interior minister 

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Pakistan to introduce new SOPs for security of Chinese nationals— interior minister 

  • Pakistan has recently witnessed surge in militant attacks on Chinese nationals 
  • A suicide attack in northwestern Pakistan in March killed five Chinese engineers

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s government will craft new standard operating procedures (SOPs) for the security of Chinese nationals working and living in the country, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said on Thursday. 

Pakistan has seen a rise in attacks on Chinese nationals in the country in recent months. A suicide bomber in March rammed his vehicle into a convoy of Chinese engineers working on a hydropower project in northwestern Pakistan. Five Chinese engineers were killed in the attack. 

Pakistan has said it has since then taken steps to enhance the security of Chinese nationals in the country. 

“Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi says new Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) related to the security of Chinese nationals will be crafted and it will be implemented in letter and spirit,” the state-run Radio Pakistan reported. 

Naqvi was speaking to Chinese Ambassador to Pakistan Jiang Zaidong in Islamabad, the state media said, adding that he vowed to bring the perpetrators of the March attack to justice. 

“Mohsin Naqvi said no conspiracy can sabotage the decades-old Pak-China friendship,” Radio Pakistan said. 

Zaidong expressed satisfaction with the measures taken by Pakistani authorities for the security of Chinese nationals. 

The Dasu attack was the third major one in a little over a week on China’s interests in the South Asian nation, where Beijing has invested over $65 billion in energy, infrastructure and other projects as part of its wider Belt and Road initiative.

Chinese interests in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province have also been under attack primarily by militants who seek to push Beijing out of the mineral-rich territory.


Pakistan Navy hands over rescued Iranian fishermen to Tehran on humanitarian grounds

Updated 09 May 2024
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Pakistan Navy hands over rescued Iranian fishermen to Tehran on humanitarian grounds

  • Pakistan Navy ship Yarmook rescued eight Iranian fishermen in March after their ship caught fire in open sea
  • Successful operation example of Pakistan Navy’s ability to deal with all kinds of situations, says army’s media wing

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Navy on Thursday handed over eight Iranian fishermen it had rescued in an earlier operation to Iranian officials on humanitarian grounds, the military’s media wing said in a statement. 

The rescue operation was conducted in March when a Pakistan Navy ship, Yarmook, heard a distress call from a fire-stricken boat in the open sea. Yarmook swiftly acted, the Pakistani military’s media wing said, adding that a successful rescue operation was carried out that saw all eight fishermen rescued and the fire extinguished.

“Pakistan Navy has handed over eight rescued Iranian fishermen to Iran’s diplomatic authorities,” the military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said. 

“The prompt and successful rescue operation is a practical example of Pakistan Navy’s ability to deal with all kinds of situations at sea.”

In February, the Pakistan Navy rescued nine Indian seamen who were stranded in a disabled tug en route to Sharjah.

The vessel, Ocean Tug SAS-5 registered at St. Kitts & Nevis, had been disabled for days near the Indian coast after a failure of its electric generators at a position 167 nautical miles southeast of the Pakistani port city of Karachi, according to Pakistan Navy.


Pakistan says will share concerns about terror groups threatening its security in ongoing US talks

Updated 09 May 2024
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Pakistan says will share concerns about terror groups threatening its security in ongoing US talks

  • Pakistan and United States are holding Pakistan-US Counterterrorism Dialogue in Washington
  • Pakistan has said suicide attack that killed five Chinese workers in March was planned in Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Foreign Office said on Thursday Islamabad would share its concerns regarding terror groups that threatened its security with Washington as the two countries hold counterterrorism talks in the United States this week. 
The three-day talks, which commenced on Wednesday and will conclude on May 10, are part of the Pakistan-US Counterterrorism Dialogue. The Pakistani delegation is led by the Additional Secretary United Nations division at the foreign ministry, Syed Haider Shah. 
The initial round took place last year in Islamabad, where discussions centered on the counterterrorism landscape in Pakistan and the wider region.
“The counterterrorism talks between Pakistan and the United States are ongoing and the two sides will discuss issues related to security and countering violent extremism and combating terrorism financing,” foreign office spokesperson Mumtaz Zahra Baloch told reporters in a weekly briefing in Islamabad, saying terrorism posed a collective threat to the international community. 
“It is important for Islamabad to share its concerns about terrorist groups that threaten its security with its interlocutors during these dialogues and this is a priority for Pakistan when we engage in these talks,” she added.
The FO statement comes two days after Pakistan’s military said a suicide bomb attack that killed five Chinese engineers was planned in neighboring Afghanistan, and that the bomber was also an Afghan national. 
Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have soured in recent months as Islamabad says Kabul is not doing enough to tackle militant groups targeting Pakistan from across the border. Kabul says rising violence in Pakistan is a domestic issue for Islamabad and has denied allowing the use of its territory to militants.
Gaza 
At Thursday’s press briefing, the Pakistan foreign office also condemned Israel’s attack on a Jordanian aid corps for humanitarian assistance to occupied Gaza.
“It is not just a flagrant violation of the obligations of the occupying power but a dangerous provocation that may lead to further escalation of tensions in the region,” Baloch said, condemning the invasion and seizure of the Rafah border crossing in southern Gaza by Israeli forces in what Islamabad said was defiance of international warnings and acceptable international behavior. 
“With its latest actions, Israeli occupation authorities have once again demonstrated their contempt for international humanitarian law as they continue to pursue an abhorrent policy of genocide and extermination in Gaza,” Baloch added.
Pakistan-Saudi Arabia relations 
Amid a flurry of visits between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, including by the Saudi foreign minister and a high-powered business delegation to Islamabad and two visits by the Pakistani prime minister to Riyadh, the foreign office spokesperson said Pakistan and Saudi Arabia were engaged in a “robust dialogue” on cooperation in diverse domains, including in the energy sector.
“The two sides are also engaged in discussions for increased Saudi investments in Pakistan,” she added.
Baloch highlighted Pakistan’s emphasis on increased engagement, particularly with the Middle East, to attract foreign investment, saying the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) set up last year to oversee foreign financing was implementing measures to offer incentives to foreign investors in support of this effort.
Pak-Iran Gas pipeline
Baloch said the Iran-Pakistan (IP) gas pipeline was a “priority” for the country and reiterated that the South Asian nation would decide on the issue based on its own interest.
“Pakistan will take decisions based on its own national interest, and the Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline is a priority for Pakistan,” she added.
The two countries signed an agreement to construct the pipeline from Iran’s South Fars gas field to Pakistan’s Balochistan and Sindh provinces in 2010, but work on Pakistan’s portion has been held up due to fears of US sanctions.
In March, Islamabad said it would seek a US sanctions waiver for the pipeline. Washington, however, has said it does not support the project and cautioned about the risk of sanctions in doing business with Tehran.


Pakistan advance to Sultan Azlan Shah Cup final for first time since 2011 after beating Canada

Updated 09 May 2024
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Pakistan advance to Sultan Azlan Shah Cup final for first time since 2011 after beating Canada

  • Pakistan made a dramatic comeback in the last match when they faced a 2-0 deficit in the first 17 minutes
  • Green Shirts will face Japan again in the final on Saturday after drawing a match with them in the tournament

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan have surged into the final of the Sultan Azlan Shah Cup 2024 after making a dramatic comeback in their last match against Canada, setting the stage for a thrilling showdown with Japan on Saturday.
The Green Shirts have had a notable history in the international men’s field hockey tournament held in Malaysia. Over the years, Pakistan have secured the championship three times, occurring in 1999, 2000, and 2003.
However, their performance remained on a decline in recent years, making it the first time Pakistan have advanced to the tournament final since 2011.
“Pakistan and Japan have qualified for final of the 30th Sultan Azlan Shah Cup Hockey tournament,” the state-owned Radio Pakistan reported on Thursday. “The final match of the tournament will be played on Saturday in Ipoh, Malaysia.”
In their last match against Canada on Wednesday, Pakistan faced a 2-0 deficit in the first 17 minutes, though the players showed resilience and prowess to help the squad make a comeback and clinch a narrow 5-4 victory.
Currently leading the table after four matches with three victories and a draw, Pakistan will face Japan in the final match. The two teams drew their previous game after putting in all their effort to defeat each other.
Malaysia and New Zealand trail behind, tied with six points each, occupying the third and fourth spots respectively in the tournament standings.