According
to the international financial press, Pakistanis have
much to smile about today, despite their cricket team's
loss of the series against India. Certainly, according
to the conventional economic indicators, there is
source for some pleasure. Economic growth is up, after
a dismal period of more than a decade, especially
in the commodity-producing sector. Exports have increased
substantially in the past year and the current account
shows ever-growing surpluses.
The exchange rate has largely remained within a narrow
range, unlike the volatility of just a few years ago.
Capital inflows are up, and the relatively small stock
market has zoomed. Budgetary trends are consistent
with the declared targets. While inflation rates have
gone up recently, they are still within manageable
limits.
All this would have appeared unlikely, even a few
years ago. The 1990s was a very adverse decade as
far as the material conditions of most Pakistani people
were concerned. Average growth rates of national income
plummeted in the 1990s to less than 4 per cent per
year compared to the earlier decade's rates of more
than 6 per cent per year. This deceleration in growth
was associated with historically low rates of investment,
as private investment failed to pick up and counterbalance
the decline in public spending.
Industrial growth rates almost halved from 8.2 per
cent to 4.8 per cent per annum. The earlier success
at reducing poverty was reversed in the 1990s, as
the per cent of households living in absolute poverty
increased from 21.4 per cent in 1990-91 to 40.1 per
cent in 2000-01. By June 2001, more than 56 million
Pakistanis were living below the official poverty
line.
Even the growth that did take place was associated
with very inadequate performance in terms of human
development indicators. This was true over the longer
period since Independence, when economic growth rates
were in the region of 5 to 6 per cent per year. The
Pakistani pattern has been characterised as ''growth
without development'', because despite its respectable
per capita growth over the second half of the 20th
century, the country systematically underperformed
on most social and political indicators, such as education,
health, sanitation, fertility, gender equality, corruption,
political instability and violence, and democracy.
Significantly, output growth was also associated with
very low employment growth, at the trend rate of only
2 per cent per annum for the long period 1960-99.
In the 1990s, the growth process became much more
volatile even as the trend rate of growth was lower.
And this growth was based largely on unsustainable
public expenditure using a build-up of public debt.
By the end of the 1990s, total debt-servicing (of
external and internal debt together) accounted for
more than 70 per cent of current government revenues,
which also meant that future expansion could not rely
on debt-driven public spending alone.
One strange feature of the Pakistani economic growth
process was the lack of any direct relation between
growth and employment generation. Output growth was
relatively low in the 1970s, increased in the 1980s
and dropped again in the 1990s. But employment growth
followed the opposite pattern, being at its highest
at 3 per cent over the 1970s and dropping to 2 per
cent in the next two decades.
One important factor in explaining the poor employment
performance was the behaviour of the manufacturing
sector. In Pakistan, as in most other developing nations,
the sector is characterised by a high degree of dualism,
with a large-scale sector that dominates output (producing
two-thirds of the value added in manufacturing) but
employs only 17 per cent of manufacturing workers,
and a small-scale sector that dominates employment
(with 83 per cent of the manufacturing workforce)
but accounts for only one-third of the manufacturing
value added. The output and employment shares of these
two categories have been remarkably stable over time.
The small-scale sector, operating under major and
increasing constraints and with huge disadvantages,
has been relatively moribund in the past decade, and
shows all the characteristics of a refuge labour sector.
As in India, this was largely due to the threat posed
by imports, poor infrastructure conditions and reduced
access to institutional credit. Meanwhile, the large-scale
sector has been plagued by excess capacity (due to
deficient aggregate demand resulting from deflationary
structural adjustment policies, and import penetration)
as well as by increasing capital intensity and in
capital productivity due to newer technologies, which
have had the effect of reducing labour demand.
So, much as occurred in India over the same period,
investment and output growth in manufacturing in Pakistan
tended to be capital-augmenting and labour-displacing.
Since manufacturing was the lead sector in employment
generation, this then affected the employment possibilities
elsewhere in the economy, and contributed to both
the persistence of low-productivity employment in
the other sectors and the low and declining rates
of employment generation.
The pattern of both income growth and employment over
the 1990s was affected by the economic ''reforms'' introduced
in Pakistan over this period. A very major and direct
role was played in this case by the constraints imposed
on public investment. The investment-GDP ratio declined
from 17.3 per cent in 1998-89 to 14.7 per cent in
2000-01, and this was entirely due to the collapse
in public investment from 8.5 per cent of GDP to 5.6
per cent over the same period. Private investment,
which was strongly interlinked with public investment
and expenditure, faced a deficiency of demand as a
result, and did not rise to meet the emerging slack.
In addition, various other elements of the structural
adjustment programme operated to reduce average growth
rates, accelerate inflation, and thereby increase
unemployment and poverty. The standard package of
structural reforms included privatisation of public
assets, ceilings on wages and employment in the public
sector, cuts in subsidies, cuts in development expenditure,
including on ''social sectors'', increases in user charges
for public utilities and services and frequent devaluation.
This last feature also had the unintended consequence
of reducing the inflow of remittances from foreign
workers, which has been an important source of sustenance
of Pakistan's balance of payments.
Thus, ironically, the macroeconomic strategy based
on Structural Adjustment Programmes imposed and approved
by the IMF and World Bank supposedly to change the
structure of the economy so as to improve the balance
of payments, control inflation and revive growth,
had the opposite effects in practice. This was also
why the incidence of poverty increased over the 1990s,
as the combination of deflationary macro-economic
measures and de-industrialisation following upon trade
liberalisation has made itself felt.
Within a year after Pakistan's third military coup
which brought the military government of General Musharraf
to power, roughly 15.4 million more people were pushed
below the poverty line. Unemployment rose, real wages
fell and income distribution worsened. Human development
indicators, which were poor to start with, worsened
over this period.
The first two years were especially bad because the
insistence on the IMF-style reform measures was combined
with even more economic volatility, the effect of
sanctions by the West because of the nuclear tests,
and then military instability in the region (including
both the US-led war on Afghanistan and the build-up
of troops along the border with India).
However, recent geopolitics has impacted in different
and more positive ways upon Pakistan's economy. In
several ways, the willingness of the Musharraf regime
to be a key ally of the US in the so-called ''war on
terror'' also had substantial effects upon the economy.
It has meant the waiver or rescheduling of more than
one-third of Pakistan's external debt, which provided
much-needed short-term relief. It has led to increased
foreign aid flowing back to Pakistan and the reinstating
of export quotas in textiles and garments. It has
led to a massive increase in remittances (to as much
as 14 per cent of GDP) allowing the build up of foreign
exchange reserves. However, since the domestic investment
rate is still below the savings rate, the inflow of
aid and remittances is not really contributing to
future economic activity, but simply being stored
as foreign exchange reserves.
So the current economic revival is essentially based
on the particular geopolitical position of Pakistan
and the strategic choices made by the Musharraf regime.
Internally, the same economic policies which generated
the desolate decade of the 1990s remain in operation,
which means that the impetus to growth and employment
generation from within the economy are very limited.
Since the current recovery is based so much on the
(fickle) goodwill of the western powers, it is inherently
unstable.
Further, it has still not entailed any real improvement
in the conditions of ordinary people, either in terms
of more productive employment opportunities or better
provision of basic services. As has been the case,
the current growth is essentially benefiting a small
elite that includes both the landed and industrial
classes and the urban professional groups.
There are other sources of instability. The same political
expediency which has dictated the Musharraf regime's
pro-US tilt has also created dissatisfaction and resentment
among important sections of Pakistanis. This means
potential for unrest which can undermine the still
fragile economic recovery.
So maybe, after all, cricket will still be a more
reliable source of pleasure for the average Pakistan
than the economy.
April 19, 2004.
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