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Sunday, November 17, 2024

Why Pakistan’s Economy is fragile after 72 years?

Can the Pakistani Economy and its failures over the past 72 years be understood only in economic terms like current account deficit and falling exports? A senior investment banker answers with a "Big No". So then what is it that ails Pakistan's economy?

This past weekend, the National Outreach Program asked me to deliver a speech on the subject of my choice. After having written extensively about the temporary ills of our economy, and its causes and solutions for years, I wanted to deliver a speech looking back at the root cause of the disease gripping our economy for 72 years. For the purpose, I delved into the economic figures of our country for the past 72 years.

Everything that I could dig up, I did. Everything that I could exhume, I did. But that was not the challenge. The challenge was to turn quantitative research into an easy to understand qualitative speech which speaks to the common person. Common enough, not to understand the financial jugglery, but intelligent enough to understand the ills faced by our economy. Ills that are NOT economic yet they affect the economy.

Ills that keep any economy fragile. Ills that disrupt the growth which could lead to poverty alleviation. Ills that make the rich, richer, and keep the poor, poorer. Ills — in the presence of which — an economy cannot prosper.

Read more: How Has Covid-19 Affected The World?

These are the ills of an economy that do not directly show up in economic analysis but affect its figures immensely. These are the ills that we need to address and they spread far beyond politics. They drip down into the valleys of any society like a constantly flowing downward stream, every summer, after the glaciers have melted. It is that stream we can control and not the melting of the glaciers. But we put all our efforts into controlling the glaciers. And then wonder as to why we are failing.

We only look at the entire process of economic growth through the famously propagated terms such as The Current Account Deficit, Budget Surplus or Deficit, Foreign Reserves, Export Growth, Unemployment numbers, or whatever jargon mustered up by the people on television, who in actuality are supposed to make matters simple enough to understand, end up making them more complicated so you get lost in the translation of figures for comprehension.

Economies are made up of societies. People. Tribes. Feelings. Behaviors. Psyches. Rifts. Enmities. Likes. Dislikes. Simply put, economies are made up of human beings whose behaviors trigger economic growths or slowdowns.

You cannot just keep developing urban centres and neglect the rural ones. That is the story of Pakistan. More roads, more hospitals. More universities, more applications of technology are implemented in the urban centres than the rural ones

A society with rampant injustices cannot grow. Or a society with immense governmental support in every sector does not fail, usually. So what we need to do is to actually understand the societal structure of a country and then and only then can we suggest a remedy for sustainable growth. You cannot prescribe a medicine without knowing the disease.

And the disease that eats up any economic future is in three parts. Social disease. Political disease and finally the economic disease. We, in Pakistan, have always tried to find the cure for social and economic diseases through political means. Yes, it is the politician who is supposed to fix those ills as well. But without identifying the actual social and economic diseases, we expect wonders from political personalities.

And when we get sick of political personalities we pray for divine intervention or a military solution. The solution is only in a political treatment but with the right diagnosis – the right medication for correctly diagnosed sickness.

Read more: Why world economy is at the brink of collapse? Investment Banker explains

So what are the factors that keep an economy from growing sustainably?

Chronic Human Flight

Otherwise known as the brain drain. No economy can grow when indigenous opportunities are less than foreign opportunities. Education is never the solution alone, education with its post-educational practical applications is the solution. A Ph.D. without a job is not a productive member even with 22 odd years of education, as opposed to a plumber with 12 years of education and a job. So before we run after having more and more educational institutions that look good to the voters, we need to create a policy where employment demand is higher or equal to the number of graduates each year.

Demographic Pressures

You cannot just keep developing urban centers and neglect the rural ones. That is the story of Pakistan. More roads, more hospitals. More universities, more application of the technology in urban centers. This forces the rural population to either migrate to the already pressurized urban centers or travel long distances to avail urban facilities putting immense pressure on transportation, housing, costs, and fuel.

West is considered and icon of economic sustainability and in the west, people who stay back in their villages do so out of choice not otherwise

Fuel in an import-dependent energy policy based country like Pakistan is a huge concern or it should be. Pakistan needs to be developed evenly, not lopsidedly. Hospitals will create jobs for the rural population in addition to reducing other costs incurred on traveling and lodging. Schools will create more jobs for the teachers. Special economic Zones will create employment. And the list goes on and on.

Ethnic And Religious Conflicts

Have you ever seen a country in the world that has grown despite a group of people fighting and killing each other? If you have then you also must have seen fish driving a car. It is simply not possible. The government has a related economic downturn owing to terrorism but never has it related economic slowdown to ethnic & religious differences. From Ireland to Nigeria to Bosnia to Serbia to Congo to Vietnam, and many more, the economies have shown that they do not grow sustainably if there is an ongoing religious conflict. We need to fix these things if we want sustainable economic growth.

Corruption. Corruption. Corruption

Corruption can never be totally abolished. Corruption can only be curtailed. Remember that right from the beginning. But the biggest menace to any economic growth is corruption. It is a nuclear bomb of all bombs that can be dropped against economic growth. The best way in this day and age to fight corruption is to reduce the human interaction of citizens and government functionaries. Digitize the process.

Read more: 7 immediate economic solutions for government 

Automate the systems. Use technology. Reduce people to officer contacts. Make it web-based. Make it convenient for people to access things from wherever they are. Reduce their traveling expenses in addition to reducing corruption and increase their savings which will leave them to increase their spending that will also spur economic growth.

Uneven Economic Development

Cities developed, villages left undeveloped. There is no precedence in history of any country which is developed, has sustained economic growth and has an uneven economic development phenomena. West is considered an icon of economic sustainability and in the west, people who stay back in their villages do so out of choice not otherwise.

They have all the basic facilities, health, education, justice, and transportation available in their villages. They remain a productive part of the economy while living where they please. You will never hear that a citizen is traveling from a suburb of Ohio to Chicago for the treatment of a common disease.

All is not well and never will be. We have to grow within the boundaries of all not being well. No country has ever grown without the external threats. Hitler attacked Europe. France has had wars with neighbors

Or you will never hear that a villager outside Osaka Japan is moving with his family to Tokyo because the schools in his village are of a low standard. Of course, there will always be a difference in the amenities in a city and a village but never a difference in the basic life needs. Until we promote an even economic, infrastructure and basic needs; development within rural areas – we will never witness a sustainable economic growth.

Rising Economic Inequality

Along with uneven economic development comes a rising economic inequality. In a country where we have a substantial portion of our population living in rural areas, economic opportunities can and will be missed by the inhabitants of the rural areas and will keep a major portion of the economy from growing because of a lack of equal economic opportunities.

Business activity, other than just agricultural opportunities, should be provided to the rural inhabitants. In a day and age of almost-here 5G technology and internet access and web-based businesses, skill development for the rural areas is a must. Not everyone needs to become a Ph.D. scholar in order to contribute to a growing economy, the West has never grown based on Ph.D.’s or University graduates alone.

Read more: Economy of Pakistan and The Coronavirus

The West has grown because skill development is taught to the inhabitants of the remotest of areas where they can live and make a living at the same time. Alaska or people in Siberia are no less skilled than Moscow or Montana. We are talking of skills, not education. You may find more highly educated people in an urban environment but basic skills can be found in the remotest of areas of the West where people can comfortably make a living.

Identifying The Reasons For Periodic Economic Decline

Recessions that affect the entire world or depressions that spread across the globe are absolutely different than repeated economic slowdowns like we have had in the past 72 years in Pakistan. Never have we identified what can go wrong when we are having an upwardly mobile economic graph until that graph changes direction and we again end up at where we started from. Our GDP growth has been moving erratically between 3 and 7% since decades upon decades. An average growth rate of only 4.1% but never for more than a period of 5 years historically.

Why?

Why have we not been able to have sustainable growth of our GDP for 22 or 18 or even 12 years in a row of above 6%? Because our policies are ad hoc. Because we expect miracles from political leaders instead of sustainable economic policies. We have never demanded that our policies of all of the above reasons that I have mentioned are implemented. We are too busy supporting our party leaders instead of supporting sustainable economic policies and holding them accountable for its implementation.

Interference Of External Political Agents/Foreign Hands

Not a single decade has ever passed in Pakistan when we did not have an external hand wanting to destabilize Pakistan. And this is not paranoia. This is a reality. For the ones who doubt this reality can visit the American CIA website and read the declassified documents about Pakistan going back to the early 1950s where the CIA admits its interference in our domestic affairs. Then came the KGB, The NDS, The RAW, The Mossad and the list grew and grew.

This is the way the world works. We cannot blame others. What is needed is that we have a mechanism in place to combat all these menaces at hand. Economic growth cannot come if we are busy fighting foreign forces, covertly like Khulbushan Yadev or overtly like The Soviet-Afghan war. We need to remain neutral. We need to concentrate on our internal economic growth before we take political sides.

It’s about time that us Pakistanis wake up and look at the real reasons for the lack of sustainable economic growth. It about time that we educate each other as to what our vote demands in return from our politicians

We need to educate our masses from a young age at schools about how the world in ran, ugly and the uglier realities of this world. We need to stop sugarcoating things to our younger generations that “All is well”. All is not well and never will be. We have to grow within the boundaries of all not being well. No country has ever grown without external threats. Hitler attacked Europe. France has had wars with neighbors.

Japan has been at loggerheads with China. The world is full of examples of external interferences. We are no exception. Yet the world has grown economically and we are still busy playing the victim card for 72 years. We need to wake up. The morning has arrived. Wake up. Rise and shine.

Rise Of The Political Elites

Nothing is a bigger problem for any economy than the rise of the political elites who directly or indirectly benefit monetarily a country’s economic activity while fronting as public servants. When power is concentrated within a few hands to grant contracts and licenses, to themselves through front companies or to their cronies for a bribe, then economic inequality is created and a sense of discouragement takes birth.

Read more: Pakistan Economy: History and Required Reforms 

Two things happen then, either you become a crony of those political elites or if have still have your conscience intact, you flee the country for better economic opportunities or you remain in the country while your capital is invested in some other country.  In a developed country, you do not need to know a politician or be close to the political elite to compete for business on a level playing ground.

One of the biggest ills of any economy is when the political elite start to control the economy. It is a metaphorical death of economic growth. Until this is addressed with an iron fist, until examples are made out of those political elites who have choked the economic growth and only benefitted themselves, until punishments are rendered, our economy will never grow sustainably. We will always remain hijacked in the hands of the political elites and this vicious circle will continue for another 72 years.

Unchecked Powers

Unchecked powers in any society may they be political powers, judicial powers, economic powers, social powers or any other form of an advantage over the other is the biggest hindrance to economic growth. What reforms have we brought in Pakistan in the past 72 years to address unchecked powers? None. We wake up after we are robbed. We rise with slogans after the state has been looted.

We come onto the streets post an embezzlement story. Why in this day and age of technological based, errorless checks and balances reporting, we are still crying after the spilled milk. We need reforms. We need to address this problem today. If we want our economy to grow sustainably and if we want our future to be bright we need reforms for putting checks on the power of the ones who abuse it.

Read more: A Locked down Economy: Where Can You Invest In The Midst Of A Storm?

Economy and unchecked powers are like acid rain and a flourishing crop. They do not mix together. They are enemies of each other.

It’s about time that Pakistanis wake up and look at the real reasons for the lack of sustainable economic growth. It about time that we educate each other as to what our vote demands in return from our politicians. Unless we know what the disease is, we will keep choosing the wrong Doctors (Read: Politicians) and keep complaining about not being cured. It is as simple as that.

Mir Muhammad Ali Khan is a finance expert, author of 4 books, and has published over 800 articles. He was the first Muslim founder of an Investment Bank on Wall Street, New York. Twitter: @MirMAKofficial. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Global Village Space.