FICTION: Wishful thinking
Looking Back: How Pakistan Became an Asian Tiger by 2050 is Dr Nadeem ul Haque’s latest book. While dismissing the notion of ‘development first,’ the writer argues for reforming the system first, to make the ground conducive to sustainable development.
Written as semi-fiction, the book imagines Pakistan as a developed country by the year 2050. The United Nations, which sets up a commission in 2051 to understand Pakistan’s development model, narrates the story.
The UN’s commission tells us that until 2020, Pakistan was a centralised elitist state marked by high inequality and low social mobility. Grave problems, such as the loss of the country’s eastern wing in 1971 and the Balochistan issue that haunts Pakistan to date are attributed to the elitist state. Businessmen and public servants accumulated rents in this society by way of tax and tariff exemptions, subsidies, perks, plots, privileges and bank loans that need not be repaid. Prevalence of merit was unthinkable.
An economist imagines what Pakistan’s future could be if a revolution of thought began now
Finally the elitist hold broke down and the country stood reformed. In the reformed country, the federal cabinet comprises only 15 persons, the finance ministry only manages the budget, government expenditures remain within the budget and are used only for purposes approved by parliament in advance. The ministry of economy reviews the state of markets, but does not intervene in them. The ministry of strategy and reforms develops the country’s long-term strategy, while the ministry of institutional development frames regulations.
Key decisions, including electricity production and supply contracts, require a parliamentary nod. Judges retire at the age of 75 with no chance of re-employment anywhere. The civil and military bureaucracies are paid handsomely, but only in cash — perks, plots and privileges such as government housing are history.
Pre-empting questions such as who will do it and how this will happen, the book answers that no recognisable agent is behind the change. The people at the helm who facilitated the change had, in fact, bowed to the wishes of the electorate, implying that the electorate had turned pro-reform before the reform happened.
How did the people become pro-reform? The narrative on this aspect is the book’s key message: the role of (research) networks in laying the foundation of reforms. The book explains that a quiet revolution of thought began before the reform happened. Somehow, the government funded independent research, the then-limping think-tanks woke up, and academics formed partnerships and networks. These locally-funded networks, relying on the bottom-upwards approach, flourished or died depending on their ability to generate ideas. These networks, that were not centrally controlled, recommended solutions that suited local culture and ground realties. After a decade or two, parliament began taking these networks seriously — policy guidelines coming from parliament are now rooted in what the networks recommend.