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Abstract:By Asif Shahzad ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -Pakistans Finance Minister Ishaq Dar said on Thursday his country was “very close” to signing a staff level agreement with the International Monetary Fund, a critical lifeline for taming a balance of payment crisis.
By Asif Shahzad
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -Pakistans Finance Minister Ishaq Dar said on Thursday his country was “very close” to signing a staff level agreement with the International Monetary Fund, a critical lifeline for taming a balance of payment crisis.
“We seem to be very close to signing the staff level agreement, hopefully, God willing, in the next few days,” Dar said at a seminar in Islamabad.
“I and my team are absolutely committed to complete this program to the best of our ability,” he said, adding: “We have been in the review and I think it has taken longer than it should have in my opinion.”
An agreement would release $1.1 billion to the cash-strapped South Asian economy.
Islamabad has been hosting an IMF mission since early February to negotiate the terms of a deal, including the adoption of policy measures to manage its fiscal deficit ahead of the annual budget due around June.
The funds are part of a $6.5 billion bailout package the IMF approved in 2019, which analysts say is critical if Pakistan is to avoid defaulting on external debt obligations.
Dar said the current crisis was deeper and more complex than the two prior experiences he had overseen as finance minister, but he was confident the economy would be pulled out of the “quagmire”.
He said the reforms in the energy sector, which has piled up more than four trillion rupees ($14.18 billion) in debt, were the most critical to get the countrys economy back on track.
“Power sector has to be structurally reformed and fixed and let me endorse that the issue was and has been very grave,” he said.
The IMF deal would unlock other bilateral and multilateral financing avenues for Pakistan to shore up its foreign exchange reserves, which have fallen to just four weeks worth of import cover.
Islamabad has met most of the lenders demands to clear the review. The last one yet to be fulfilled on the list is an assurance on external financing to fund its balance of payment gap for the current fiscal year, which ends on June 30.
Long-time ally China is the only country that has announced refinancing of a $2 billion loan, and Pakistans central bank has already received $1.2 billion of that amount.
Pakistan had to complete a series of prior actions demanded by the IMF, which included reversing subsidies in the power, export and farming sectors, a hike in energy and fuel prices, a permanent power surcharge, jacking up the key policy rate, a market-based exchange rate, and raising over 170 billion rupee($613.17 million) in new taxation through a supplementary budget.
The rupee depreciated 1.19% against U.S dollar in inter-bank trading on Thursday.
The fiscal adjustments have already fuelled 50-year record high inflation, which hit 31.5% year-on-year in February.
“I believe that we‘ve to work together to control the current inflationary pressures,” Dar said, adding, “they’re unprecedented.”
($1 = 282.0000 Pakistani rupees)
(Reporting by Asif Shahzad; Additional Reporting by Ariba Shahid in Karachi; Editing by Tom Hogue, Neil Fullick & Shri Navaratnam and Sharon Singleton)
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