A year after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Pakistan’s economy continues to bleed 

Ukrainian bystanders look on to residential buildings that were destroyed during an attack, in Borodyanka on February 23, 2023. (Photo courtesy: AFP/FILE)
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Updated 25 February 2023
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A year after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Pakistan’s economy continues to bleed 

  • Economists say the conflict cost Pakistan 1 percent of GDP, directly contributing 9 percent to inflation rate 
  • Pakistan will continue to suffer from impacts of Russia-Ukraine conflict until 2027, experts say 

KARACHI: When Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan visited Moscow on February 24 last year, he did not realize that the man he was to meet in Kremlin was about to press the war button and his country would bear its brunt. A year on, the estimates indicate that the war has cost his country 1 percent of its economic growth. 

The Russian invasion, which entered its second year on Friday with no end in sight, coincided with Khan’s visit to Moscow and has hit Pakistan hardest in terms of diplomatic relations with the West and economically at home. 

The conflict disrupted the global supply-chain network and led to an international hike in oil price. It came at a time when the South Asian country was recovering from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and, according to economists, has dented Pakistan’s economy in various ways. 

“The first major impact of the Russia-Ukraine war was that Pakistan’s energy import bill inflated substantially and increased the cost of production which triggered huge inflationary pressure in the country,” Dr. Sajid Amin, a deputy executive director at the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), told Arab News. 

“We estimate that the war has directly contributed 8-9 percent to current inflation rate in Pakistan as oil and food commodities prices shoot up in the global market after a war.” 

The South Asian nation is currently experiencing multi-decade high inflation that was recorded at 27.6 percent in January and is projected to hit as high as 40 percent in coming days. 

“The war has had severe impact in terms of commodity price hikes, termed as the commodities super cycle, which coincided with the opening of the industrial world after COVID and the shortage caused by the Russian-Ukraine war,” Dr. Khaqan Najeeb, a former adviser to the Pakistani finance ministry, told Arab News. 

The increase in Pakistan’s overall energy bill pushed the country’s current account deficit (CAD) beyond $17.4 billion, impacting its reserves that were already dwindling since December 2021, according to Najeeb. 

“Coupled with fund delays, Pakistan’s balance of payment remained challenging and continues to do so even today,” he added. 

Pakistan’s petroleum import bill remained $23.3 billion in the last fiscal year (FY22), which was 105 percent higher than the previous year, while the country has imported energy products worth $10.6 billion during the first seven months of this current fiscal year (FY23), according to official data. 

Economists say 1 percent of Pakistan’s gross domestic product (GDP) has directly suffered because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. 

“The GDP loss that has been globally estimated by many institutions is 1 percent due to the Russia-Ukraine conflict,” Amin said. 

“Our estimates show that it has increased unemployment in Pakistan and pushed roughly 3.5 million people below the poverty line.” 

The conflict, through oil and food price hikes, has severely impacted the life of a commoner in Pakistan. 

“Particularly, the poor segment that spends 60-70 percent of their income on food basket,” Amin said. 

“Those who were close to the poverty line have slipped below the poverty line and at the same time, employment opportunities have diminished amid monetary and fiscal policy tightening.” 

The most important fact, according to Pakistani economists, is that the impacts of the Russian invasion will continue to haunt Pakistan for the next five years. 

“Our estimates suggest that the war impacts will continue to persist until 2026-27, also because of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) program and contractionary monetary policy,” Amin said. 

As cash-strapped Pakistan continues to suffer at the economic front, experts say the country has faced setbacks on the diplomatic front as well. 

“Pakistan has suffered from the almost exclusive focus of the US and Western countries on the war in Ukraine. These countries have little time and energy left to pay attention to other problem spots around the world, including Pakistan,” Husain Haqqani, a former Pakistani ambassador to the US who is currently a scholar at the Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy in Abu Dhabi, told Arab News. 

“The fact that former prime minister Imran Khan chose to stand beside President Putin in Moscow on the day Russia invaded Ukraine further diminished Pakistan’s ties with the West.” 

Haqqani said though Pakistan has move on but the war has caused it economic and political damages. 

“Pakistan has moved on from that moment but the Ukraine war has hurt Pakistan economically as well as politically,” he said. 

“Politically, Pakistan’s loss has come from the lack of ability of major Western leaders to attend to Pakistan and its neighborhood because their attention is on the war in Ukraine.” 

As Russia-Ukraine conflict continues to fuel volatility in the global commodity market, Pakistani authorities are striving to import petroleum products and Russian oil at discounted rates. 

“Pakistan has now tried to take advantage of price tact, Russian crude and refined products. Let’s hope that it does materialize,” Najeeb said. 

“The price that has been quoted informally around $60 a barrel may help bring down Pakistan’s imported energy costs and ease the balance-of-payment pressure as we move forward.” 

Pakistani authorities expect to import Russian refined oil from March this year, expecting that Moscow will provide cheap energy alternates to energy-deficient Pakistan. 
 


Pakistan stocks bounce back strongly a day after ‘massacre’ at bourse

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Pakistan stocks bounce back strongly a day after ‘massacre’ at bourse

  • The KSE-100 index gained 3238 points to close the weekend trading session at 109,513 points
  • Stock analysts attribute strong recovery of the market to easing pressure at local mutual funds

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Stock Market on Friday bounced back strongly and gained more than 3,000 points, stock analysts said, a day after it witnessed a “massacre” on the back of significant redemptions from local mutual funds and year-end profit-taking.
The benchmark KSE-100 index gained 3238.17 points to close the weekend trading session at 109,513.14 points. On Thursday, the index plummeted by 5,132 points, or 4.32 percent, to close at 106,274.97 points, compared to Wednesday’s close of 111,070.29 points.
Stock analysts attributed the strong recovery to easing pressure at local mutual funds.
“Likely easing redemption pressure at local mutual funds together with the opening up of attractive valuations encouraged value buyers to reenter the market,” Raza Jafri, head of equities at Intermarket Securities, told Arab News.
Thursday’s slump was led by Hub Power Company Limited, United Bank Limited, Oil and Gas Development Company, and ENGRO, cumulatively contributing a staggering 1,556 points to the index’s overall decline, according to Topline Securities.
The sharp sell-off was triggered by significant redemptions from local mutual funds, compounded by year-end profit-taking by institutions, that dragged the market into a “turmoil,” it added.
The decline came days after Pakistan’s central bank cut its key interest rate by 200 basis points to 13 percent, marking the fifth straight reduction since June.
Yousuf M. Farooq, head of research at Chase Securities, said the market had entered a corrective phase, following a significant rally over the past year.
“We believe that earnings will now drive market performance rather than valuation rerating,” he added.


Pakistan province aims to collect weapons to stem clashes, tribesmen may resist

Updated 5 min 22 sec ago
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Pakistan province aims to collect weapons to stem clashes, tribesmen may resist

  • Kurram, a tribal district near the border with Afghanistan, has been a flashpoint for sectarian tensions for decades
  • Last month’s clashes between Sunni and Shiite tribes have triggered a humanitarian crisis with reports of starvation

PESHAWAR: Provincial authorities in northwestern Pakistan said on Friday they planned to collect heavy weapons to stop sectarian clashes that have killed hundreds, but tribesmen in the historically lawless region said they would not give up their arms.
Kurram, a tribal district of around 600,000 near the border with Afghanistan where federal and provincial authorities have traditionally exerted limited control, has been a flashpoint for sectarian tensions for decades.
Fresh clashes between Sunni and Shiite Muslims erupted last month, triggering a humanitarian crisis with reports of starvation, lack of medicine and oxygen shortages following the blocking of the main highway connecting Kurram’s main city of Parachinar to the provincial capital Peshawar.
Mohammad Ali Saif, spokesman for the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial government, said authorities had decided to dismantle private bunkers — observation posts used in the fighting by both sides — and collect heavy weapons from tribesmen in Kurram to stop the violence.
However, local tribesmen have refused to surrender their weapons, citing concerns about their safety.
“Our weapons are for self-defense, not against the state,” said Jalal Hussain Bangash, a local tribal leader.
Another tribal elder, Zakir Hussain, warned that disarmament would leave the Shiite community vulnerable to attacks. “The government is ignoring ground realities in Kurram,” he said.
“We don’t have medicine in medical stores and edibles in the markets. Previously we would use Afghanistan when the road was closed, but now the Afghan border is also closed for us after the Taliban took over the country.”
Mehdi Hussain, a doctor at the District Headquarters Hospital in Parachinar, told Reuters that more than 80 people, including children, had died in recent weeks due to the lack of medical supplies.
The provincial government and Edhi Foundation have started sending medicines to the region via helicopters.


Pakistan PM orders action against officials aiding human traffickers after Greek boat tragedy

Updated 59 min 38 sec ago
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Pakistan PM orders action against officials aiding human traffickers after Greek boat tragedy

  • Five Pakistani nationals drowned last week after a boat carrying migrants capsized off Greece
  • Four districts of eastern Punjab province identified as ‘most vulnerable’ to human traffickers

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday directed action against government officials who were facilitating human traffickers, his office said, following the death of five Pakistani nationals in a migrant boat capsize off Greece.
The boat tragedy, which occurred last week, underscored the perilous journeys many migrants undertake due to conflicts around the world. In the case of Pakistani nationals, the movement is mostly driven by economic reasons, with many young individuals attempting to reach European shores in search of better financial prospects.
Sharif presided over a meeting on Friday to discuss the measures the government needed to take to prevent human trafficking, which he said had brought disgrace to Pakistan worldwide.
“PM directs identification of Federal Investigation Agency officials involved in facilitating human traffickers and strict action against them,” Sharif’s office said in a statement.
The participants were briefed on the Dec. 14 boat incident off Greece and the steps taken to combat human trafficking, including parliamentary efforts to improve legislation on the issue.
The prime minister was informed that only five Pakistanis had been identified so far, while the identities of the others were still being verified, according to his office. The Pakistani embassy in Athens was in constant contact with Greek authorities regarding the migrant boat incident.
“For information and assistance regarding boat accident, Pakistan Embassy in Athens can be contacted on helpline +30-6943850188 and Ministry of Foreign Affairs Crisis Management Unit number 0519207887,” the statement read.
Sharif directed government authorities improve coordination to prevent human trafficking, highlighting that the Gujranwala, Gujrat, Sialkot and Mandi Bahauddin districts of Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province were the “most vulnerable” to traffickers.
He ordered action against officials who conducted a delayed investigation into those responsible for a 2023 boat capsizing incident in Greece that involved hundreds of migrants, including 262 Pakistanis, according to the statement.
The migrants drowned when an overcrowded vessel capsized in international waters off the southwestern Greek coastal town of Pylos. It was one of the deadliest boat disasters ever recorded in the Mediterranean Sea.
Sharif directed authorities complete the ongoing investigation into human traffickers at the earliest and submit a report in this regard.


Pakistan plans to set up 35 special economic zones to facilitate businesses, industry

Updated 20 December 2024
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Pakistan plans to set up 35 special economic zones to facilitate businesses, industry

  • Pakistani officials say over 200 B2B agreements reached with several Chinese companies, signed MoUs worth $70 million
  • PM Shehbaz Sharif calls for accelerating work on regulatory reforms to provide a conducive environment for businesses

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan plans to establish 35 special economic zones (SEZs) to facilitate businesses and industry, officials said on Friday, amid Islamabad’s efforts to boost foreign investment.
The statement came at a meeting of Board of Investment (BOI) officials, presided over by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, to review progress of various ongoing projects, according to Sharif’s office.
Officials briefed the prime minister that they had conducted a survey of the 35 SEZs under the Geographical Information System (GIS) and had extensive data to accelerate the progress of projects in these zones.
More than 200 business-to-business (B2B) agreements have been reached with several Chinese companies and memorandums of understanding (MoUs) worth $70 million have been signed, they added.
“Work on regulatory reforms should be accelerated to provide a conducive environment for business in the country,” Sharif was quoted as saying by his office.
“An effective and comprehensive roadmap should be created for the completion of B2B agreements with international investors and the implementation of signed memorandums of understanding.”
Pakistan, which has been facing an economic crisis, has been making attempts to boost foreign direct investment in a bid to support its $350 billion fragile economy, with Islamabad seeing a flurry of high-level exchanges with China, Saudi Arabia, Japan, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, Qatar and other countries in recent months.
During the BOI meeting, PM Sharif instructed officials to set investment targets that could be achieved at the earliest.
“Effective marketing of investment opportunities in Pakistan is essential to attract foreign investors,” he said. “Construction of business facilitation centers, organization of road shows and other such measures are very important to bring foreign investment to the country.


Pakistan announces tariff cuts on imports under Azerbaijan trade deal

Updated 20 December 2024
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Pakistan announces tariff cuts on imports under Azerbaijan trade deal

  • Imports from Azerbaijan exempted from all kinds of customs and regulatory duties from Dec. 16
  • Pakistan and Azerbaijan signed trade agreement in July during President Aliyev’s visit to Islamabad

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has waived off customs and regulatory duties on imports from Azerbaijan under the Pakistan-Azerbaijan Preferential Trade Agreement, the finance ministry said in a notification this month.

During Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev’s two-day visit to Pakistan in July, both nations agreed to enhance the volume of bilateral trade to $2 billion, vowing to strengthen ties and increase cooperation in mutually beneficial economic projects. They also signed the Pakistan-Azerbaijan Preferential Trade Agreement to boost economic cooperation through the reduction of tariffs on goods like Pakistani sports equipment, leather, and pharmaceuticals as well as Azerbaijani oil and gas products.

“The federal government is pleased to exempt with effect from Dec. 16, 2024, the import into Pakistan from Azerbaijan of the goods specified,” the finance ministry said in a notification. adding that imports from Azerbaijan would be exempted from all kinds of tariffs including customs duty, additional customs duty and regulatory duty. 

“Provided that where the rates of customs duty, additional customs duty, and regulatory duty [...] are higher than specified rates, the lower rates [...] shall apply,” it added.

The tariff concessions cover items including shelled hazelnuts or filberts, apricots, vegetable saps and extracts, non-stemmed tobacco, polyethylene, propylene copolymers, casing, tubing, drill pipes and refined copper wire with a maximum cross-sectional dimension exceeding 6 mm.

In recent weeks, there has been a flurry of visits, investment talks and economic activity between officials from Pakistan and the Central Asian nations as well as other transcontinental and landlocked countries like Azerbaijan as Islamabad seeks to consolidate the South Asian nation’s role as a pivotal trade and transit hub.