KARACHI PAKISTAN : Chairman of National Business Group Pakistan, President Pakistan Businessmen and Intellectuals Forum, All Karachi Industrial Alliance, and former provincial minister Mian Zahid Hussain said on Friday that the country’s economy is improving after the downturn.
Presently, the IMF is satisfied, inflation is slowing down after peaking, deficits and the dollar are under control, and the foreign exchange reserves situation is no longer worrying, he said.
Talking to the business community, the veteran business leader said that under SIFC, massive investment agreements are being finalized with Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. At the same time, more game-changer measures are expected after the elections.
All these promising measures will boost industrialization, agriculture, and exports, which will help the country generate employment opportunities and get rid of problems.
The business leader said that there are positive signs that will help the authorities reduce the interest rates and provide some relief to the masses.
Mian Zahid Hussain further said that the most significant credit for saving the sinking ship of the economy goes to the Shahbaz Sharif government because if they had failed to get loans from friendly countries and sign a standby loan agreement with the IMF, the country would have gone bankrupt.
After the loan, the current caretaker government and military leadership demonstrated responsibility. They took tough decisions that resulted in the satisfaction of the IMF, sending a positive message to investors and creditors worldwide.
Now, timely and transparent elections and another IMF program will be a test for our leaders, in which their complete success is necessary and very important for political and economic stability.
Mian Zahid Hussain further said that the current program of the IMF is to save the country from bankruptcy, and more is needed to correct the economy’s direction and pave the way for economic development.
Pakistan’s economy has been so mismanaged in the past that another IMF program can reduce but not eliminate its problems. If responsible policies are continued, failed state-owned enterprises are privatized, and the losses in the energy sector are reduced, the situation will change.
He warned that the old situation will return if economic decisions are taken on political considerations and resources are squandered for cheap fame.