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Today's Paper | November 18, 2024

Updated 04 Oct, 2022 09:52am

Pakistan’s economy ‘expected to slow down’ amid global downturn

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s economy is expected to slow down this year after the strong bounce last year from the Covid-linked contraction in 2020, according to a report of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) released here on Monday.

Mounting debt burden and falling foreign exchange reserves had already pushed Pakistan into negotiations with International Monetary Fund (IMF) even before the situation turned critical as devastating floods killed thousands of people, ruined crops and destroyed infrastructure across the country, stated the UN’s ‘Trade and Development Report 2022’.

About the record-shattering floods in Pakistan, the report mentioned that this illustrated the vicious circle of climate disaster and austerity into which vulnerable developing countries risk falling, as global warming accelerates amid insufficient international climate support for countries whose per capital CO2 emissions remain a fraction of advanced countries.

The global slowdown, the report said, was ringing alarm bells across the developing world, while for South Asia, UNCTAD expects a weakening economic expansion in 2022, as inflation increases on the back of high energy and food prices, exacerbating balance of payment constraints and forcing several governments to restrict energy consumption.

UNCTAD report shows Turkiye as well as Pakistan face bond yields around 10 percentage points relative to US 10-year treasury bills

In India, the largest economy of the region, economic activity is being hampered by higher financing costs and weaker public expenditures, resulting in a deceleration in GDP growth to 5.7 per cent in 2022.

As the government announced plans to increase capital expenditure, especially in the rail and road sector, policymakers would be under pressure in a weakening global economy to reduce fiscal imbalances, and this could lead to falling expenditures elsewhere. Under these conditions, it stated, economic growth is expected to drop by one percentage point to 4.7pc in 2023.

Moreover, the combination of elevated prices for imported commodities, depreciating local currencies and tightening global financial conditions have only intensified already acute levels of debt distress faced by a number of countries, most disruptively in Sri Lanka. For 2023, UNCTAD expects the region’s growth rate to decelerate further to 4.1 per cent.

This year’s sell-off in emerging market dollar-denominated bonds is exacerbating debt distress across several economies of South and Western Asia. Besides Sri Lanka, Lebanon has also fallen into sovereign default, Afghanistan remains in debt distress, and Turkiye as well as Pakistan currently face bond yields close to or above 10 percentage points relative to US 10-year treasury bills.

The UNCTAD report said the world economy was expected to grow 2.5pc this year. This is more than one percentage points below the rate projected in last year’s report and prospects appear to be worsening with growth expected to decelerate further next year to 2.2pc, leaving real GDP below its pre-Covid trend by the end of 2023.

According to the report, an unduly rapid tightening of monetary policy in advanced economies in combination with inadequate multilateral support could turn a slowdown in to recession, triggering vicious economic circles in the developing world with the damage more lasting than after the global financial crisis or Covid shock.

In Western Asia GDP growth is expected to decelerate to 4.1pc, with sharpening contrast between fossil energy-importing and -exporting countries, owing to high commodity prices. In the former, the higher import bill for both fuel and food products is putting a significant strain on the economy, and the situation is aggravated by the tightening of international financing conditions. As a result, households are being squeezed, particularly by food prices, with very limited state support.

Meanwhile, in energy exporters, higher fiscal revenues from higher prices and boosted by significant increases in oil production volumes in line with the OPEC+ agreement’s gradual relaxing of output restrictions, has provided governments the room to extend relief to households from inflationary pressures. But UNCTAD does not expect these windfall gains to last for long as growth is projected to decelerate to 2.9pc in 2023, depressed by weakening external demand.

UNCTAD estimates growth in Saudi Arabia will reach 6.6pc in 2022, before declining to 3.9pc in 2023. The above-average performance driven by increased oil export earnings will continue to help finance the government’s ambitious public investment plans, particularly for large-scale infrastructure projects.

Yet continued tightening of monetary policy in 2023 to respond to US policy will prove a drag on growth.

Turkiye’s economic expansion has already decelerated abruptly to 2.4pc this year and will remain at that level in 2023. Weakening global demand and higher prices for imported commodities will cause deterioration in the current account deficit; meanwhile, inflation topped 70pc by mid-2022, and this will dampen consumption growth.

The sharp depreciation of the lira has added further upward pressure on prices and increased the costs of servicing the country’s considerable foreign-currency denominated debt.

Published in Dawn, October 4th, 2022

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