News

Examining the diesel conundrum

The year 2022 was difficult for oil-importing countries, including Pakistan, as commodity prices shot through the roof. The steep increase in the cost of refined products, such as diesel, placed a significant strain on their trade balances and left consumers feeling the pinch at the pump. With a volatile global market, government officials in Pakistan must take proactive measures to mitigate any p

Analysis: Self-inflicted economic crisis

Enough has been said, written and read about the problems in the country. The blueprints are elementary in developmental economics textbooks. It doesn’t require rocket science knowledge to uplift a debt-stricken country with a GDP per capita of $1,700 to a more respectable $3,000 per capita. While the economic solutions are plenty and multi-pronged but require political will and resolve. Hence,

Govt to come up with mini-budget; what’s next?

As the government finally makes up its mind to come up with a mini-budget and address other concerns of the International Mone­tary Fund (IMF) that are set to further stoke up inflation, the unfolding political uncertainties continue to pose challenges in materialising their reasonable outcomes towards macroeconomic recovery path. Based on the prevailing and anticipated events in the run-up to

We need to pull our own weight

The Shehbaz Sharif-led coalition seems to have learnt it the hard way. His government is reported to have finally requested the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to send over its mission to Islamabad — preferably by the end of this week — for discussions around all the ‘thorny’ issues that have held back progress on its ninth programme review for almost four months, delaying disbursement of the ne

How dollar shortage handed EMIs ‘advantage’ over banks

KARACHI: For Pakistanis, there are many faults in our banks — unnecessary documentation for basic procedures like account opening, inordinate disruptions in digital services, arcane regimes to stifle business growth and lack of appetite to facilitate users, to name but a few. Apparently, there is an addition to the list: exorbitant exchange rates on foreign transactions. And as happens in ti