Pakistan to seek IMF bailout as forex reserves fall dangerously
Economy

Pakistan to seek IMF bailout as forex reserves fall dangerously

Pakistan’s forex reserves have plunged 40% in 2018 to lowest in almost 4 years. It’s running twin current-account and budget deficits of more than 5% of GDP.

   
Pakistan finance minister Asad Umar

Finance Minister of Pakistan Asad Umar | Bloomberg

Pakistan’s forex reserves have plunged 40% in 2018 to lowest in almost 4 years. It’s running twin current-account and budget deficits of more than 5% of GDP.

Islamabad: Pakistan will seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund as the government seeks to stabilize the economy and plug dwindling finances.

After consulting with “leading economists”, Pakistan will formally approach the IMF for support and Finance Minister Asad Umar will hold talks with officials during the lender’s annual meetings in Bali this week, the Finance Ministry said in a statement late Monday. Umar told Bloomberg in August that the government may need more than $12 billion.

Prime Minister Imran Khan, who came to power after July elections, is under pressure to generate external funding as the country faces the latest in a long line of financial blowouts. It’s the thirteenth time Pakistan has turned to the IMF for support since the late 1980s and the lender said last week that recent government efforts haven’t been sufficient to stem a looming crisis.

“The challenge for the current government is to ensure that fundamental economic structural reforms are carried out to ensure that this spiral of being in an IMF program every few years is broken once and for all,” the Finance Ministry said. “To correct the underlying imbalances, fiscal and monetary actions needed to be undertaken without delay.”

Foreign-currency reserves have plunged 40 per cent in 2018 to the lowest in almost four years, while the nation is running twin current-account and budget deficits of more than 5 per cent of gross domestic product. Authorities have devalued the rupee four times since December.

The government is seeking to curb spending, while the central bank has raised interest rates to the highest in three years to help shore up confidence in the economy. The benchmark stock index fell to the lowest in more than two years on Monday amid worries of the worsening economic crisis. –Bloomberg