Shehbaz, 70, the younger brother of former premier Nawaz Sharif, was elected as prime minister on Monday followed by a week-long constitutional crisis after parliament ousted Imran Khan in a no-confidence vote.
“Imran Khan has left a critical mess,” Miftah Ismail, who is
likely to be Sharif’s Finance Minister, told a news conference in Islamabad,
adding the suspended talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) would be
resumed on priority.
“We will restart talks with the IMF,” he said.
Ismail repeated Sharif’s concerns raised in his maiden
speech in parliament at what he described as record deficits his government
will inherit from Khan, who was accused by the opposition of mismanaging the
economy.
Sharif set up a National Economic Advisory Council in his
first meeting on Tuesday.
The IMF had suspended talks ahead of the seventh review of a
US$6 billion rescue programme agreed in July 2019.
Pakistan’s current account deficit is projected at around 4%
of GDP for the current fiscal year (FY22), the country’s central bank said last
week. The foreign exchange reserves held by Pakistan dropped to US$11.3 billion
as on April 01, 2022 as compared with $16.2 billion less than a month earlier.
The central bank last week hiked key interest rates by 250
basis points to 12.25% in an emergency decision, the biggest hike in decades,
citing deterioration in the outlook for inflation and an increase in risks to
external stability, heightened by the Russia-Ukraine conflict, as well as local
political uncertainty.
The bank also revised average inflation forecasts upwards to
slightly above 11% in FY22, ending June 30, 2022.
Dawn, leading English newspaper of Pakistan in its Editorial
on April 12, 2022 has highlighted that Shehbaz Sharif has inherited some daunting
challenges. These include, but are not limited to, a worsening economic crisis,
growing political turmoil, deteriorating relations with the Western powers, and
the resurgence of militancy in some parts of the country.
The Editorial says, “We have no idea whether the ruling
coalition that consists of disparate parties and groups, with often conflicting
political and economic aims, will stick together until the elections are
called. They may have achieved their common goal of ousting Imran Khan from
power, but facets of their long-term plan are still to be revealed.”
“With the PTI quitting the National Assembly and
pledging to build up strong public pressure on its successors for early
elections in the country, it will not be all smooth sailing for the new
administration.”
It continued, “Fixing the broken economy is probably the most
formidable challenge facing Sharif’s cabinet, and he should place it on top of
his agenda. The PTI had inherited a bad economy that it has left in far worse
condition; ordinary people are grappling with elevated double-digit inflation,
as well as wage and job losses, as macroeconomic indicators decline.”
“The crisis of balance of payments is already back, after a
short Covid-related respite, as much-needed multilateral assistance is on hold
because of uncertain political conditions in the country. Elevated
international commodity prices, particularly food and crude oil, are putting
additional pressure on a frail external sector.”
Improving the economy requires tough decisions, such as the
immediate removal of the cap on electricity and petroleum prices and
renegotiating a new loan with the IMF, which will be hard, if not impossible,
without repairing diplomatic relations with the United States and other Western
powers.
The biggest question is, can the ruling coalition take these
politically unpopular but vital decisions?
New elections are not very far off, and Imran Khan’s PTI
will be scrutinising and criticising every move of the new set-up. The populist
announcements, like the 10pc raise in pay and pension of government employees
and the provision of subsidised wheat flour, made by Shehbaz Sharif in his
speech in the House, soon after his election as prime minister, are
indicative of the extreme pressure he must be feeling.
With forbidding political and economic realities on one side
and high public expectations on the other, the coalition government and its
leader do not have too many options on the table as they get ready to deal with
multiple crises, at least not at the moment.
The enormity of the economic and foreign policy challenges
demands a strong government, which is not encumbered by uncertainty over its
future and has the public mandate to take tough and unpopular decisions. The
wiser course would be to reform the electoral laws and move towards new
elections at the earliest.
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