Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek (Merged)

There is still much to do, but we are getting there. :k:

Promise in Pakistan

Newsweek International

March 27, 2006 issue - In the late 1990s Lahore-based businessman Iqbal Ahmed was depressed. Pakistan was isolated internationally and in the grip of a deep recession, and his modest, liquefied-petroleum-gas operation didn’t seem to be going anywhere. “I used to get up and say, ‘What the hell, it’s another day’,” he recalls. “Now I can’t wait for the day to begin. I see a very bright future.” Ahmed has good reason to be optimistic. Two years ago he signed a deal with Houston’s Hanover Energy Co. that has helped transform his LPG extraction plant into the largest and most efficient in Pakistan, with revenues last year of $130 million. Backed by several international investors, Ahmed has bid some $400 million to buy a controlling interest in Southern Sui Gas, one of two state-owned gas production and distribution companies that are being privatized. And he recently signed a memorandum of understanding with Excelerate Energy of Houston to import liquefied natural gas into Pakistan in supertankers. “We’re enjoying a sea change in economic conditions and opportunities,” says Ahmed, 60. “Pakistan is open for business.”

The proof is in the numbers. Last year the country’s GDP growth rate hit 8.4 percent, the world’s second highest behind China, following two years of solid 6 percent growth. This year the economy is predicted to expand by nearly 7 percent. After years of instability, with the government and military trying to distract people from their economic woes by waging jihad in Kashmir and railing against neighboring India, a true middle class is now developing. Economic reforms have given the government money to invest in health and education, and foreign investors are eying Pakistan for the first time. In many ways the country has become the world’s most surprising economic success story. It’s a heady turnaround for a nation that, in the late 1990s, was practically a failed state with near-zero GDP growth. Because of its headlong pursuit of nuclear weapons, Pakistan had become the world’s most sanctioned nation after Libya. International aid had dried up. The government was forced to borrow at exorbitant short-term rates, burdening the country with a crushing $38 billion debt. “We were in a real soup when [Gen. Pervez] Musharraf took over,” says Ziauddin (he uses only one name), the Islamabad editor of the Dawn newspaper. One of Musharraf’s first and smartest moves after his 1999 coup was to appoint Shaukat Aziz, a dapper and urbane international banker, as his economic czar, and to give him a free hand to revive the economy. But what really turned the country’s fortunes around was September 11. “The 9/11 attack was the best thing that ever happened to Pakistan,” says Lahore-based businessman Salmaan Taseer. The United States and Europe immediately lifted all sanctions; Washington gave Pakistan $600 million outright to meet urgent debt payments, and forgave another $1.5 billion in debt. Working with Aziz, America and other creditor nations also rescheduled Pakistan’s heavy debt over a manageable 30 to 35 years. In 2004, the United States pledged $3 billion in economic and military assistance over the next five years, in addition to $100 million for education reform. The EU pitched in, lifting quota restrictions on Pakistan’s main export, textiles.

The newly privatized and cash-flush banks have been on a lending spree, extending loans to capital-starved domestic businessmen and to the Pakistani middle class, which until 2002 had little access to consumer credit. People have snapped up credit cards, and are buying cars and other big-ticket products with easy-credit bank loans. “This is the best government we’ve had in the past 30 years,” says prominent Lahore businessman Syed Babar Ali, who heads some of the country’s biggest joint-venture companies, including Coca-Cola and Nestlé. Foreign investors have been flocking to Pakistan to bid on privatizations and on licenses in the newly opened telecom sector. The sale of two cellular-phone licenses (won by U.A.E. and Norwegian companies) netted the government nearly $600 million. It’s a good investment as Pakistan, with 24 million cell-phone users, is now the world’s fastest-growing wireless market after China. Indeed, Pakistan is expected to receive upwards of $3 billion in foreign investment this year, largely in telecom and gas and oil exploration. The Karachi Stock Exchange recently hit a record high. Bullish domestic investors, too, are snapping up telecom licenses and state assets. Businessman Taseer raised $40 million from Pakistani banks and $25 million from a U.S. venture-capital company in two months as part of his successful bid for a wireless license. He is also building a 350-room Hyatt hotel and shopping-mall complex in Lahore with $40 million in debt and equity that he organized from domestic banks and investors in just six weeks. “This would have been inconceivable before,” says Taseer, 50, a cigar-smoking tycoon who publishes the Daily Times newspaper and is constructing Lahore’s tallest office building. “Not long ago, we would have waited at least three years to get a loan from an international bank. In the last two years there has been more economic activity in Pakistan than in the past 50.”

Even Pakistan’s nascent technology sector—dwarfed by India’s—seems to be taking off. Salim Ghauri, the CEO of Lahore-based NetSol Technologies, says his company’s software revenues this year are expected to jump to $19 million, compared with last year’s $11 million. DaimlerChrysler uses Ghauri’s LeaseSoft auto-leasing and financing software in its operations in eight Asian countries, and Toyota uses it in Thailand and China. “We are competing with the best in the world, and we are coming out on top,” says Ghauri, 51, who set up NetSol in 1996 after he returned from working as an IT consultant in Australia. Still, all is not rosy. Pakistan must modernize its creaky infrastructure, further improve tax collection and, most important, normalize economic relations with India. Government critics say the current boom is not benefiting the country’s poorest citizens, who make up more than one third of its 160 million people. “The rich have become very rich since 9/11, and the middle class is better off, but not the mass of Pakistanis,” says Dawn’s Ziauddin. Aziz counters that a recent government-sponsored survey indicates that the country’s heady growth has reduced the number of Pakistanis living below the poverty line from one third to a quarter of the population (interview). Some bankers and economists warn that the economy is dangerously overheating, due to unsustainable consumer demand and easy credit to both industrialists and consumers. Aziz and the government dismiss the concern—but consumers and the private sector have borrowed more money from the banks in the past two years than they had in the previous 12. Critics argue that growth-spawned inflation, which hit a high of 11 percent one year ago and is running this year at 8.5 percent, is a big reason the poor are not benefiting from the boom. “Inflation is clearly eroding the purchasing power of the poor,” says a foreign banker in Islamabad. This year the price of sugar is up by 26 percent; wheat and potatoes, by 15 percent.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11902379/site/newsweek/

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

Yup, as the article says, the war on 'terror' has been the best thing that has happened to pakistan, since the last Afghan war

However, unfortunatley the US has shown itself not to be a loyal ally, so we don't know how long this will last

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

One of Musharraf's first and smartest moves after his 1999 coup was to appoint Shaukat Aziz, a dapper and urbane international banker, as his economic czar, and to give him a free hand to revive the economy.

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

True, Shaukat Aziz is much more competent than many others, and appointing him was a good thing Mush did.

However it is a shame he surrounded him with a cabinet of some of the most corrupt people in Pakistan, chaudry shujaat, liaqut jatoi, etc

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

Thumbs up for Shaukat Aziz unlike other leaders he so far seems to have been competant in his leadership. For once it seems it's not who you knew but what you can do.

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

abey chup kar yar, try to counter the growth rate news with something worthwhile warna apna rasta naap!

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

if both india and pakistan can solve kashmir problem both can grow at10%
by cutting defense expenditure.

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

Interview: Shaukat Aziz—Riding ‘A Tidal Wave’

Pakistan’s P.M. is bullish on his country, and why not? Per capita income has doubled in only two years.

March 27, 2006 issue - Shaukat Aziz, a suave and savvy 30-year veteran of international banking, has been the architect of Pakistan’s remarkable economic recovery ever since he joined President Pervez Musharraf’s government in 1999. Last week the 57-year-old prime minister talked to NEWSWEEK’s Zahid Hussain and Ron Moreau about the difficulty of restoring the country to economic health. Excerpts:

**What prompted you to start an aggressive reform agenda six years ago? **

The financial situation of Pakistan was precarious. We had high fiscal deficits and debt levels and our ability to pay was suspect. We didn’t have enough money to pay the next month’s oil-import bill. So we started ensuring fiscal discipline, containing expenditures and increasing income. We focused on investment and growth. We bit many bullets to restore credibility. The fundamentals of reform were deregulation, liberalization and privatization.

**How far will you take the privatization process? **

It is not the business of government to be in business. We decided to open everything up. We just sold 26 percent of Pakistan Telecom—which was overstaffed and inefficient—for $2.6 billion. We eventually want nothing in the public sector.

**What’s been the reaction of foreign investors? **

Foreign-investor interest in Pakistan today is very strong. This year foreign investment will be the highest in Pakistan’s history, at close to $3 billion. There are opportunities in agribusiness, IT, telecom, software, hotels, engineering goods and infrastructure. We see Pakistan as a hub for many multinationals.
What’s your reaction to the criticism that GDP growth is not trickling down to the poor? Income is spreading. In the past three years we have seen the emergence of a middle class that is creating demand and driving a lot of the growth. Our per capita income has gone up to $800. Two years ago it was $400. The highest incidence of poverty is in the rural areas where 60 percent of our population lives.

**What is Pakistan’s biggest economic challenge? **

The challenge is to continue the reforms. It’s a continuous process. Globalization is like a tidal wave. If you ride it, you will go far. If you try to stop it, you will be blown away. We decided to ride it.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11902385/site/newsweek/

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

Mr. Shaukat Aziz - Prime Minister Islamic Republic of Pakistan

http://www.na.gov.pk/Intro_ldrhuse.htm

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

cool dude :lajawab:

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

A man worthy of respect :k:

If he can stay there for another 5-6 years, Pakistan can make the most out of it’s boom.

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

Choudhry shujaat is an angel dropped from heavenss :halo:

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

Now only if microlevel reforms are initiated (for economy, it means halting the exponential rise of inflation).

The FDI you see coming in Pakistan is basically from government shedding somes of its excess (corporations, banks etc) while not a lot of new business is coming in.
It makes sense as why would even me would want to invest in pakistan where taliban / alqaeda can bomb, riot and whatnot (negative image also boosted by real facts).

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

Ok Baboo! Take your Murghi (rooster) in your bughal (armpit) and the 2 pennies you have in your pocket. We'll be OK without them.

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

This will mean a 25% increase in our exports in a year. :k:

**President foresees $18 billion exports this fiscal **

President General Pervez Musharraf has said the government is fully encouraging the foreign direct investment (FDI) and foresaw the total export would reach $18 billion during the current fiscal year. Speaking as chief guest at the Textile Asia 2006 Exhibition Gala Dinner at the Governor house here on Monday, he said the policy of deregulation was paying dividends, as a result the country has witnessed unprecedented foreign investment. The President said during the last six years the economy has been transformed into a vibrant and dynamic state. The GDP, which was 60 to 65 billion dollars, is now touching the $135 billion mark. “We have achieved a record growth rate of 8.4 percent during the last fiscal year and was expecting 7 percent this year,” he added. The President, welcoming foreign delegates, said Pakistan had provided a very attractive environment for investment. He said the profit margin in Pakistan is much higher. He said 600 to 700 foreign companies are doing business in Pakistan and earning 30 to 60 percent profits and some of them even earned up to 80 percent. He said infrastructure is being developed and cited the development of ports, highways and roads in this regard. The President was extremely upbeat on the vast opportunities that Pakistan is offering to foreign investors and looked forward to increasing inflow of FDIs. He said the FDI had grown by 500 percent over the last five years. This flow of FDI would continue in future, he hoped.

He said an upsurge in the country’s export has been witnessed due to privatisation, deregulation and liberalisation. He declared through the process of production, extension and value-addition, even bigger achievements in the export field will going to take place. He was of the opinion that foreign investment creates jobs for people and eliminates poverty. The President appreciated organisers for holding the Textile Asia 2006 Exhibition. He also lauded efforts of the textiles minister Mushtaq Ali Cheema, Sindh governor Dr Ishratul Ibad, Chief Minister Dr Arbab Ghulam Rahim, Sindh minister for industries Muhammad Adil Siddiqui and all others in making the event a success. Speaking on the occasion, Sindh governor Dr Ishratul Ibad Khan said the participation of foreign delegates in the exhibition indicate the growing confidence of foreign investors in the Pakistan’s economy. He said 1250 acres of land has been given to set up Textile City in Karachi, which will create employment opportunities for the people. He assured the province of Sindh would do its best to provide even more incentives for investment here. Textiles minister Mushtaq Ali Cheema, speaking on the occasion, said the country under the leadership of President General Pervez Musharraf was witnessing an economic upswing and the contribution of textile sector to the GDP had increased while it maintained its position as the backbone in the economy.

http://www.brecorder.com/index.php?id=400480&currPageNo=1&query=&search=&term=&supDate=

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

When you have nothing contribute then don't ok?

I suggest you take your own daal and move back to bihar against to live under President rule.

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

soomari, what does chaudhry shujaat have to do with what I said about growth rate. u know, ur reaction after reading this news article was just like how you pinch salt on a worm! jalney waloon ka moo kaalaa, hats off to shaukat aziz.

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

I hope that murgha is infested with birdflu

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

simply put, because Chaudry shujjat, and other ministers run the pak govt(alongside generals), which affects the growth rate and everything else in Pak

Re: Pakistan: A most surprising success story - Newsweek

Bc you came and defended the chaudhris! :halo: