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The practice of having near zero current account balance continues. In February 2024, the current account posted a marginal surplus of $128 million, and the 8MFY24 deficit stood at $999 million- down 74 percent compared to same period last year. The full year deficit is likely to remain below $2 billion. The story is simple, and it has been recounted here multiple times. The import compression and demand destruction are real, and actual imports demand is lower than the restricted imports demand from last year. This situation is perhaps likely to prevail till the SBP reserves are built to a comfortable level, and till then the revival of economic growth and employment generation will remain a dream. On the exports side, the performance in agriculture is better (food exports are up by 60 percent in 8MFY24 to $4.7billion),which is not letting the exports fall, and the economic growth this year is due to revival of agriculture sector.On the other side, textile and other manufacturing exports are falling mainly due to higher energy prices and record high interest rates. Then there is a marginal decline in services exports and home remittances even though the number of people moving abroad is rising,while ICT (and freelance) export services are on a rise due to sluggish domestic economy and currency depreciation over the last two years. The dichotomy in the numbers and general trend is perhaps due to continued capital flight out of the country which is restricting the growth of formal remittances while service providers also tend to keep a chunk of their money abroad. If the government seeks to instill investors’ confidence, and reduce the pace of capital flight,its only hope is home remittances and ICT exports, which can grow at a strong enough pace to result in a current account surplus, helping build SBP reserves, and allow the government to run policies for growth revival. Till then, zero CAD and near zero growth stimulus policies shall continue. In 8MFY24, the imports (based on SBP data), are down by 9 percent to $34.1 billion. The decline is across the board barring machinery sector, where the backlog of machinery clearance and surging demand in mobile phones is keeping the imports growth in green. However, in some sectors, the numbers are even lower than the restricted demand from last year. For example, in automobile good part of FY23, the CKD imports were capped at 50 percent of the imports in FY22, and so far in FY24, the demand is even lower – based on PBS data, transport imports in 8MFY24, is down by 23 percent from 8MFY23 and 62 percent from 8MFY22, to stand at mere $1.1 billion. And the cars production in 8MFY24 is down by 69 percent from 8MFY22. The story of petroleum is not encouraging as well – the imports (SBP) in 8MFY24 is down by 21 percent from 8MFY23 to $10.0 billion. And quantity sales are down by 30 percent in 8MFY24 from the same period in the peak year (8MFY24). This is a significant dent in demand and the tale is not much different in many other sectors – such as chemicals and metals. In exports, the lucky break is coming from rice exports which are keeping the growth high in food exports which is up by 60 percent to $4.7 billion in 8MFY24 on SBP data, and within it the rice exports are up by 78 percent to $2.4 billion. The rice bonanza is mainly due to export ban from India which has given Pakistan a windfall. Nonetheless, food exports, barring rice, are up 45 percent in 8MFY24, as currency depreciation, and better crops are doing the magic. The concern is in textile and other manufacturing exports which have dipped, and the prospects are not very encouraging going forward, as high energy prices have caused low value-added textile (spinning and weaving) uncompetitive, and the energy prices are likely to increase further in the next fiscal year. Moreover, high interest rates are making life not easier as well. No amount of currency depreciation would be enough to solve the energy puzzles, as energy prices are linked to dollars. Thus, to boost textile and other manufacturing exports, the energy sector mess must first be solved, and circular debt ought to be controlled without further increase in the power prices. The trend in services exports is encouraging, as IT exports are up by 15 percent to $2.0 billion in 8MFY24. The general trend is that more and more people are moving towards this sector, and freelancing is on the rise. However, not all exports are reflected in numbers, and similar is the story of remittances. The story of economic stability has to be sold to all, as some of the remittances and services exports are netted against the capital flight. If the capital flight stops, the inflows improve. Thus, revival confidence is imperative if the current account and balance of payment situation is to improve meaningfully, enabling economic growth.

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Interview with J.K. Khalil, Cluster General Manage...
31.03.24 11:55
by brecorder.com

Interview with J.K. Khalil, Cluster General Manager, MENA East, Mastercard

‘Women-led businesses in Pakistan get a boost with Strive Women’ Mastercard has announced a new initiative that aims to strengthen the financial health and resilience of small businesses in Pakistan, with a special focus on those led by women. Business Recorder talks to J.K. Khalil, Cluster General Manager, MENA East, Mastercard about what this means for women - and the economy - in Pakistan. J.K. Khalil is the General Manager of MENA East responsible for the UAE, Pakistan, Qatar, Kuwait, and Oman at Mastercard. He has over 18 years of tech, banking, consulting, and payments experience, having held many roles across multinational banks, top-tier consulting firms, and tech start-ups. In his previous role at Mastercard, he was the General Manager of MENA Central, and before that, he was the Mastercard Advisors region lead for MENA Central. He holds an MBA with distinction from the University of Chicago (Booth). He also holds a Computer Systems & Networks Engineering Degree from St. Joseph University in Beirut. Following are the edited excerpts of the conversation he had with BR Research: BR Research: What is Strive Women and what was the rationale behind the initiative? J.K. Khalil: Strive Women is a four-year program led by CARE International and supported by the Mastercard Center for Inclusive Growth that aims to strengthen the financial health of women-led small businesses in Pakistan. The initiative will reach 1.5 million entrepreneurs through campaigns while directly supporting more than 100,000 entrepreneurs – the majority being women – to grow and scale their businesses and enhance their economic potential. Statistics show that micro and small enterprises are the backbone of Pakistan’s economy. Indeed, there are more than five million SMEs in the country, representing 40% of GDP. However, while 1 in 5 men in Pakistan are engaged in entrepreneurial activities, only 1 in 100 women are active on this front, so there’s a lot more we should do on this front. Women entrepreneurs often remain underserved, or entirely unserved, by financial and non-financial service providers. According to the World Bank, only 13% of women in Pakistan have a financial services account, and only 11% of them have ever made or received a digital payment. Strive Women will seek to develop methods that can help small business owners balance both household and business cash flow, prepare for and manage financial shocks, and increase women’s decision-making power. Clearly, there is huge potential to boost the economy in Pakistan – and empower its women – by promoting, enabling, and supporting female entrepreneurship via initiatives that align with Pakistan’s National Financial Inclusion Strategy. Strive Women aims to do just that. BRR: Is the initiative entirely new for Mastercard in Pakistan? J.K Khalil: Here’s been a lot of good work and results on which this initiative builds. For example, the Ignite program is an existing collaboration with CARE International, funded by the Mastercard Impact Fund that helped...

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