• Feedback
  • RSS Feed
  • Sitemap
Odisha News, Odisha Breaking News, Odisha Latest News || Ommcom News
  • Home
  • Odisha
  • Nation
  • World
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Videos
  • Science & Tech
  • Photo Gallery
  • ଓଡ଼ିଆରେ ପଢନ୍ତୁ
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Odisha
  • Nation
  • World
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Videos
  • Science & Tech
  • Photo Gallery
  • ଓଡ଼ିଆରେ ପଢନ୍ତୁ
No Result
View All Result
Odisha News, Odisha Breaking News, Odisha Latest News || Ommcom News
Home World

Tough Love: Pakistan Has Gone To IMF For Bailouts 23 Times In 75 Years

OMMCOM NEWS by OMMCOM NEWS
February 26, 2023
in World

New Delhi: Pakistan keeps going to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) again and again. A whopping number of 23 programmes clearly suggests that Pakistan is addicted to the Fund’s tough love.

“In fact, we are the IMF’s most loyal customer,” said Murtaza Syed, former Deputy Governor of the State Bank of Pakistan.

Argentina, with 21 programmes, comes second.

“In contrast, our midnight twin India has only been to the IMF seven times and never since the landmark Manmohan Rao reforms of 1991,” Syed said, Geo News reported.

Running to the global emergency ward 23 times in 75 years is no way to run a country, he added.

“Pakistan has less than $3 billion in foreign exchange reserves today. Our reserves have never exceeded $21 billion in our history. Bangladesh has around $35 billion, India has around $600 billion and China has around $4 trillion. Since the early 1990s, Pakistan has had 11 IMF programmes. Bangladesh has had three. India and China have had none,” Syed said.

Pakistan’s economy has been in crisis for months, predating the summer’s catastrophic floods. Inflation is backbreaking, the rupee’s value has fallen sharply, and its foreign reserves have now dropped raising the possibility of default, economist Madiha Afzal wrote for Brookings.

An economic crisis comes around every few years in Pakistan, borne out of an economy that doesn’t produce enough and spends too much, and is thus reliant on external debt. Every successive crisis is worse as the debt bill gets larger and payments become due. This year, internal political instability and the flooding catastrophe have worsened it. There is a significant external element to the crisis as well, with rising global food and fuel prices in the wake of Russia’s war in Ukraine. The combination of all these factors has spelt perhaps the greatest economic challenge Pakistan has ever seen, Afzal said.

Pakistan must repay $73 billion by 2025, according to Topline Securities, a Pakistani stockbroker, as per a report in the Wall Street Journal (WSJ).

Experts say it can’t meet that obligation, meaning that even if it gets back into the IMF programme, it will still need to negotiate a debt restructuring further down the line. Such a process is a default of sorts, as it involves negotiating debt forgiveness and rescheduling repayments, WSJ reported.

Elections have to be held by October, according to Pakistan’s constitution, so any debt restructuring would be likely to be undertaken by the next government. Unlike Sri Lanka, relatively little of the country’s debt is owed to foreign bondholders, making restructuring simpler. Around one-third of the external debt is owed to close ally China, WSJ reported.

Charles Robertson, the global chief economist at Renaissance Capital, an emerging markets investment bank, said that Pakistan’s debt servicing burden put it in the same category as some developing countries which have already defaulted, such as Sri Lanka, and others vulnerable to default, like Egypt, WSJ reported.

“Pakistan will struggle to get through this year. A default looks likely but it is not a given,” said Robertson, adding, “Pakistan could still take measures to resolve the situation.”

China chose Pakistan – one of its closest allies, with deep military ties and a common rival in India – as a showcase of its investment in developing nations. Beijing has spent about $25 billion here on roads, power plants and a port, WSJ reported.

(IANS)

Tags: International Monetary Fund
ShareTweetSendSharePinShareSend
Previous Post

Mumbai Indians Continue Training Ahead Of Inaugural Season Of Women’s Premier League

Next Post

Another Youth Brutally Murdered In Hyderabad

Related Posts

Donald Trump
World

Trump Says He Is ‘Not Frustrated’ With Netanyahu Over War In Gaza

May 17, 2025
World

India Willing To Remove 100 Pc Tariffs On US Goods: Donald Trump

May 17, 2025
World

Man Who Blinded Rushdie In One Eye Sentenced To 25 Years

May 17, 2025
World

‘Was Woken Up By Army Chief At 2:30 A.M.’: Shehbaz Sharif On India’s Strikes At Pak Airbases

May 17, 2025
World

Pakistan PM Admits Indian Strikes Hit Nur Khan Airbase, BJP’s Malviya Shares Video

May 17, 2025
First Buddhist Chief Justice
World

Lankan Lawyers Extend Wishes To First Buddhist Chief Justice Of India

May 16, 2025
Next Post
hyderabad murder

Another Youth Brutally Murdered In Hyderabad

Accident

Polling Official Killed, 4 Others Injured In Meghalaya Accident

AirTag

US Man Arrested For Stalking Ex-Wife Using Airtag: Report

Khimji
TPCODL
  • Feedback
  • RSS Feed
  • Sitemap

© 2025 - Ommcom News. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Odisha
  • Nation
  • World
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Videos
  • Science & Tech
  • Photo Gallery
  • ଓଡ଼ିଆରେ ପଢନ୍ତୁ

© 2025 - Ommcom News. All Rights Reserved.