Perilous Times
Floods leave Pakistan in dire economic straits'
Already dealing with a debt of $55 billion and a stagnant economy,
Pakistan must now deal with the costs of relief reconstruction even as
the nation's main sector, agriculture, may not recover in time for the
crucial fall wheat season.
Pakistan floods
People evacuate their lifestock from flooded areas in Dadu, in
Pakistan's Sindh province. About 800,000 Pakistanis remain stranded
amid floodwaters; about 7.5 million have been displaced nationwide.
(Fawad Hussein, EPA / September 16, 2010)
Even before this summer's catastrophic floods, Pakistan's economy was
teetering on the brink. The government's debt had ballooned to $55
billion. The tax base is anemic, and a third of the population fell
below the poverty line.
Now, in the aftermath of the flooding, officials face the daunting task
of preventing complete fiscal collapse. Pakistan's economic bulwark,
agriculture, has been ravaged by the surging waters, which submerged
nearly a quarter of the country's farmland. Experts doubt that the
situation will improve in time for the fall wheat sowing season, which
if missed would trigger massive food shortages in 2011.
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In affected areas, floodwater has swept away 70% of the roads and
bridges. More than 10,000 schools and 500 hospitals have been destroyed
or damaged.
Moreover, millions of Pakistanis who were barely scraping by before the
floods now find themselves homeless and unsure of how to regain the
means to provide for their families.
Analysts fear that an economic meltdown could set off waves of unrest
that the current government, led by President Asif Ali Zardari, would
struggle to contain.
"The likelihood of public protests and a degree of anarchy does exist;
these are genuine fears," says Hafiz Pasha, a former commerce minister
and now an analyst at the Institute for Public Policy in Lahore. "We've
already had two or three years of high inflation and loss of growth,
and there's already discontent within the population. So you have a
dangerous combination."
So far, flood victims have suffered largely in silence, though small
impromptu protests have broken out in places where supplies of food,
drinking water and medicine have been inadequate. However, the prospect
of extended economic stagnation, joblessness and sky-high food prices
could spark a collective anger that would threaten Pakistan's stability.
The United States and other Western nations see a stable Pakistan as
vital to the stability of South Asia. The region faces the shadow of
Pakistan and India's long-running rivalry, the presence of Al Qaeda and
other Islamic militant groups in Pakistan's volatile tribal belt, and
the United States' nine-year war against Taliban insurgents in
Afghanistan.
The United States and other countries have poured hundreds of millions
of dollars into flood relief efforts. Washington has said it probably
will have to redirect toward flood recovery a portion of its five-year
$7.5 billion non-military aid package to Pakistan, money that was
supposed to troubleshoot the country's electricity and water crises.
It's expected, however, that Pakistan will need even more. Prime
Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani recently said the losses from the flooding
could reach $43 billion. As borrowing increases, the inflation rate,
which before the floods was projected to reach 9.5% in 2011, now is
expected to climb as high as 20%. Economic growth is expected to plunge
from a projected 4.5% rate this year to 2.5% in 2011.
Finance minister Hafeez Shaikh recently warned that in two months the
government may not have enough money to pay its employees. The economy,
Shaikh declared, was "heading toward the abyss."
How well Pakistan survives the worst natural disaster in its 63-year
history will depend largely on how quickly its farmers can get back to
work. Agriculture accounts for 43% of the country's jobs, but a fifth
of Pakistan's irrigation infrastructure, livestock and crops have been
destroyed. Hundreds of miles of irrigation canals must be cleared of
silt; seed and fertilizer lost in the floods needs to be replaced; and
hundreds of thousands of homes and silos must be rebuilt.
Experts say the biggest priority in the coming sowing season is the
wheat crop, which accounts for 80% of the farmland.
"If we can't sow wheat in time, can you imagine what kind of shortfall
of food we will have? It will be enormous," says A.B. Shahid, a
Karachi-based economist.
If farmers can't work the land this fall, their first post-flood
harvest would come in August 2011, which would mean a full year without
income.
Faced with the prospect of no farm or home to return to, many of the
7.5 million Pakistanis displaced by the flooding and now living in
camps in cities such as Karachi could choose to stay. That, says Pasha,
could strain already overpopulated urban areas, and ultimately stoke
the kind of widespread discontent that fuels unrest.
"That's already happening to some extent in Karachi," Pasha says. "Once
they congregate in one or two big locations, you have a flashpoint. If
we can't provide for rehabilitation down the road, you may see a large
scale exodus to the cities. And that could increase the potential for a
breakdown."
Zardari has been wrestling with a fragile economy from the moment he
became president.
After Pakistan's longtime military leader, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, left
office in 2008, Zardari took over an economy reeling from the worldwide
financial crisis and on the verge of default. A $7.6-billion bailout
loan issued in November 2008 by the International Monetary Fund was
later ramped up to $11.3 billion.
That loan came with strings attached, including a condition that the
government institute tax changes in a country where most people do not
pay income taxes. The government has yet to make any inroads in
improving its tax base, a failure that experts say has hampered the
country's ability to cope with the recovery tasks ahead.
Unable to tackle reconstruction without outside help, Pakistan is
hoping for another helping hand from the IMF and other international
financial institutions. The terms attached to that assistance, says
Samina Ahmed, South Asia project director for the International Crisis
Group, will help determine whether Pakistan's economy can hold up
during post-flood recovery. On Wednesday, the IMF said it would provide
relief in the form of an emergency $451-million loan with an interest
rate of 1.28%.
"It's important for the international financial institutions to
understand that increasing the debt burden of Pakistan won't pay any
dividends," Ahmed said.
Even if new loans come with soft terms, Pakistan still must repay its
existing IMF loans, a tall task for a country facing economic
stagnation.
"Unless the economy really starts growing and exports start moving
again, I really don't see us having the capacity to repay this debt,"
said Pasha, the economist. "So in that sense, we've already reached an
unsustainable level of debt, particularly after the floods. I'm not
sure we have the capacity to borrow more."