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IMF board approves $1.3b loan for Pakistan | The Express Tribune
Global lender okays nearly $1.1b under extended fund facility and $220m under resilience and sustainability facility
The International Monetary Fund board on Monday approved a $1.3 billion loan by granting waivers for missing a few core conditions and securing a fresh commitment from Pakistan to introduce new tax measures to offset the impact of a huge revenue shortfall.
To secure the IMF board meeting date, the Pakistani authorities had agreed to fulfill two prior actions – a guarantee to issue an order to restructure an undercapitalised bank and the publication of the Governance and Corruption Diagnostic Assessment report – the latter costing the government political capital.
The global lender approved nearly $1.1 billion under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and another $220 million under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF), according to the decision that would keep the two loan programmes worth $8.4 billion on track.
The Ministry of Finance had to face criticism from within, as it remained glued to the conditions agreed with the IMF. The bureaucracy of the Finance Ministry played a key role in keeping the programme on track.
The IMF’s programme has stabilised the economy, and the Finance Ministry showed the first primary budget surplus in years and halted the exponential increase in public debt. The prime minister has praised the performance of the economic team, particularly Finance Secretary Imdad Ullah Bosal.
The $1.1 billion is the third tranche under the $7 billion economic stabilisation package, approved on the basis of Pakistan’s economic performance for the January–June period of the last fiscal year.
But to pave the path for approval and continuation of the programme, the board accepted Pakistan’s request for waivers on missing some conditions for the end-June period and also relaxed at least three conditions for the next review.
The IMF programme has brought economic stabilisation, but the structural reforms have yet to take root, even as the national coordinator of the Special Investment Facilitation Council calls for a growth plan.
Government sources said the IMF board waived the quantitative performance criterion of spending Rs599 billion under the Benazir Income Support Programme, as the spending remained below target. However, the central bank overperformed on another condition of building net international reserves after buying $8.4 billion from the local market.
The sources added that the IMF also relaxed the end-December condition on the primary budget surplus due to the impact of the floods and adjusted the target for the filing of new income tax returns and for BISP spending.
The government also missed the conditions on achieving the tax target and on provincial spending for health and education. But it met the conditions on restricting power sector circular debt and on enhancing the maturity of domestic debt to reduce refinancing risks.
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The government managed to meet eight structural benchmarks related to improving areas critical for addressing economic vulnerabilities.
However, it could not achieve a few other structural conditions related to amending state-owned enterprises laws, imposing federal excise duty on fertilizer and pesticides, and timely publishing the Governance and Corruption Diagnostic Assessment report.
The corruption assessment report was published with a lag, which the chairman of the National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance described as an “indictment of the government and the Parliament.”
The IMF board was told that the report’s publication was delayed due to needed consultations with government agencies. The Board on Monday also relaxed the deadline for publishing the action plan by the end of this month to address corruption- and governance-related weaknesses.
The government has assured the IMF that it will amend the SOEs laws by August next year and stands ready to impose the federal excise duty on fertilizer and pesticides as part of contingency measures to offset the revenue shortfall.
The Federal Board of Revenue missed its first five months’ tax collection target by Rs413 billion and has promised to impose a mini-budget from January. However, FBR Chairman Rashid Langrial said last month that although the contingency measures had been agreed with the IMF, there would be no need to trigger them.
Sources said the government also missed the condition of not granting any new tax exemption, as it gave an exemption on the import of sugar, which had first been exported, creating a shortfall in the local market.
The central bank told the IMF board that it exercised its right under the Banking Companies Ordinance to restructure and wind up an undercapitalised bank as part of the IMF prior actions.
The board has been assured that, for the completion of the next review of the $7 billion deal, the government will introduce new tax policy measures, if needed, to offset the revenue shortfall. It has also assured that appropriate monetary policy will continue to keep inflation in check.
However, Lt General Sarfraz Ahmad, the national coordinator of the SIFC, recently urged the central bank to cut interest rates to reflect the groundrealities of low inflation of around 6%.
The federal government has promised the IMF that it will regularly adjust electricity and gas prices and reduce the footprint of the state. The central bank also assured the IMF board that it would maintain a flexible exchange rate.
Business
Iran oil attacks trigger 35% gas price spike – and fears of interest rate rises
Britain is to “step up” defensive support for Gulf states after Iran attacked energy sites across the region in a “serious escalation” of the war that could push up inflation and interest rates.
The price of Brent crude climbed as high as $119 a barrel and European gas prices briefly surged by 35 per cent after Iran pounded Qatar’s Ras Laffan energy hub and other Middle Eastern oil and gas infrastructure with missiles.
Interest rates were held at 3.75 per cent instead of the previously expected cut, as the Bank of England warned that the war could push inflation as high as 3.5 per cent by July on the back of rising energy bills, and that rates could rise – creating misery for homeowners.
It came as:
- US defence secretary Pete Hegseth said “ungrateful” European allies should be thanking Donald Trump for the war
- Trump claimed he was unaware of Israel’s strike on Iran’s South Pars gas field
- Oman called the US/Israel attacks a “grave miscalculation”
- Europe’s biggest airlines warned of higher fares
Iran’s attacks were in retaliation to an Israeli strike on the vital South Pars gas field, which drew condemnation from the Gulf states as well as Tehran. It was the first attack of the war so far on an energy production facility. Tehran fired missiles at multiple energy sites across the Gulf, including a Saudi oil refinery, Qatari gas facilities and two more oil refineries in Kuwait.
While Sir Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron called for de-escalation, President Trump threatened to “massively blow up” the South Pars facility if Iran did not halt its retaliatory attacks, repeating his claim that US forces had “obliterated” Iran’s navy and military, adding that the war was “substantially ahead of schedule”. He denied that plans were being made to send more American troops to the region.
John Healey, the UK defence secretary, said Tehran’s tit-for-tat responses threatened to further destabilise the region and Europe’s economies. He called them a “serious escalation”, adding: “They further destabilise the region and we will step up the defensive support that we can offer to those Gulf states.”
British forces are already deployed to the Middle East, with RAF jets flying defensive sorties against Iranian drones across the Gulf and British air defence systems protecting critical infrastructure in Saudi Arabia. UK military planners have also joined US Central Command to help formulate proposals for opening the Strait of Hormuz, a critical trade route for the world’s oil and gas.But there were signs of growing frustration towards Washington’s war aims in the Gulf states, with Oman’s foreign minister claiming that the conflict was President Trump’s “greatest miscalculation”.
In the most scathing attack on Washington’s foreign policy yet by a Gulf state, Badr Albusaidi said “this is not America’s war” and criticised Mr Trump for supporting Israel. Writing in The Economist, he called on American allies to help extricate it from the conflict, which has continued for a third week despite failing to achieve the US and Israel’s stated aim of instigating regime change in Tehran or stopping its nuclear programme.
Meanwhile, the Bank of England has warned that it may have to put up interest rates if the war continues to drive up inflation and unemployment. Its governor, Andrew Bailey, said the impact was already being felt by consumers as petrol prices surge and that he is “ready to act as necessary to ensure inflation remains on track to meet the 2 per cent target”. That would pave the way for a rate hike as early as the end of April.
Bets on the financial markets suggest a 50/50 chance that Britain will face higher interest rates from next month – and the possibility of two more rises by the end of the year.
Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said: “Markets are now pricing in an almost 50 per cent chance that April’s meeting will see rates rise to 4 per cent with the potential for two additional rate hikes by the end of the year. But no one has a crystal ball. No one knows how long the conflict will last or the amount of damage that could be inflicted on crucial energy infrastructure by the time it ends.”
Business
Watch: How oil and gas prices are pushing up the cost of living
From fuel to mortgages, the BBC looks at how oil and gas prices could push up the cost of living.
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US considers lifting sanctions on some Iranian oil
“To put it mildly, this is bananas,” said David Tannenbaum, director of Blackstone Compliance Services, a consultancy specialising in maritime sanctions. “Essentially we’re allowing Iran to sell oil, which could then be used to fund the war effort.”
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