CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: DR. KHALID BIN MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

Pakistan counts cost of protests

Published: 06 Aug 2015 - 01:00 am | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 01:26 am

ISLAMABAD: After securing a clean chit from the judicial inquiry commission into alleged rigging in the 2013 elections, the Nawaz Sharif government has released details of the losses it claims the country suffered due to the Imran Khan-led Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf (PTI) and Tahirul Qadri’s Pakistan Awami Tehrik (PAT) demonstrations last year.
The detailed information gathered from various sectors under the guidance of Finance Minister Senator Ishaq Dar claims that the country was deprived of billions of rupees thanks to the political unrest caused by the two protesting parties.
The information has been placed before the National Assembly during its ongoing session, legislative sources said yesterday.
In Senator Dar’s words, the extended sit-ins staged by the PTI and PAT cost the government implicit and explicit losses.
The list of losses included expenses incurred by the government.
For instance, the supplementary grants amounting to Rs760.5m, which the government had to release to the ministry of interior to make elaborate security arrangements in the capital during the protests were also mentioned in the information.
“It was a burden on the national exchequer,” noted the finance minister.
Senator Dar, who is an accountant by training, also presented a detailed comparison of international money exchange rates which adversely affected the national currency, while the two parties were on the roads against the government.
“The exchange rate which was Rs98.82 on Aug 5, 2014 depreciated to Rs103.19 on Aug 25, 2014, a depreciation of 4.4 per cent which adversely affected the import bill as well as capital loss on foreign liabilities due to rupee depreciation.”
Explaining further, Senator Dar told the lower house of the parliament that foreign exchange reserves, which the government was hoping would reach $15bn by end September 2014, did not meet the target. This delay, he said, was because of delayed inflows of $2.4bn.
The minister also argued that the external public debt, which was Rs5,076bn at the end of financial year of 2014, increased to Rs5,304bn due to the currency depreciation - he said that this was a loss of almost Rs228bn.
The capital market also was affected by the protests, said Dar.
“The market was performing well at 29000 KSE index with market capitalization of Rs7.2tr. Due to the sit in, the capital market loss occurred and it crashed down to 27,000 level KSE Index with market capitalisation of Rs6.7tr.”
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), as per the calculations of Senator Dar’s ministry, also received a hit as inflows declined from $113.6m in July 2014 to $92m in August 2014.
The documents presented to the parliament claimed that the fourth review under the IMF programme was also delayed. However, Senator Dar did add that Pakistan and IMF successfully completed the negotiations on the fourth and fifth review in September, 2014 and the sixth in January 2015.
Predictably, the postponement of the high profile visit of 
the Chinese president also 
figured in the list of heavy losses which the government believed 
it suffered because of Imran 
Khan and Dr Tahirul Qadri’s protests.
The development agreements worth $46bn (a figure that 
the government has quoted extensively) which were to 
be signed in September 2014 during the Chinese president’s visit were finally signed in April 2015. As a result, the development activities were delayed by six months. 
Internews