Economic Manifestos: Pakistani political parties head to polls with focus on inflation, power bills, climate change

Special Economic Manifestos: Pakistani political parties head to polls with focus on inflation, power bills, climate change
Party flags and banners of election candidates from political parties are displayed on a street ahead of Feb. 8 general elections in Karachi on February 2, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 05 February 2024
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Economic Manifestos: Pakistani political parties head to polls with focus on inflation, power bills, climate change

Economic Manifestos: Pakistani political parties head to polls with focus on inflation, power bills, climate change
  • Pakistan, a country of over 241 million people, is grappling with macro-economic instability due to years of mismanagement
  • Amid election campaigns, Pakistani political parties recall their past initiatives and promise a better future in the next five years

KARACHI: As Pakistan prepares to go to national elections in less than a week, prominent political parties have issued their manifestos glazed with ambitious blueprints of an economic turnaround, promising to address historic inflation, reduce power tariff, and introduce reforms in energy and agriculture sectors.

Pakistan, a country of over 241 million people, is grappling with macro-economic instability stemming from lower gross domestic product (GDP), energy shortfall, historic high inflation that continues to bite poor segments of the society, weakening currency, low tax collection, and political instability.

Amid the mounting economic challenges, the South Asian nation is scheduled to hold the elections on Feb. 8 to elect a new government for a period of five years. With electioneering gaining pace with every passing day, political parties have been recalling their past initiatives and promising a better future at charged public gatherings.

Inflation, electricity bills, exports

In its election manifesto, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), widely regarded as a frontrunner in the elections following the return of its leader, Nawaz Sharif, from self-exile in London, has promised to bring down inflation from a staggering 29.7 percent in December to a single digit level.

“By the end of the year 2025, inflation will be in the single-digit, and over the following four years it will be controlled,” the PML-N manifesto reads.

The party has pledged to increase economic growth rate to 4 percent by the end of 2025, 5 percent by 2026, and over 6 percent growth in the following years consistently.

“A buoyant economy with a higher GDP growth will help absorb new entrants into the workforce creating over 10 million jobs in the next five years,” the manifesto reads.

Pakistan’s central bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have projected the South Asian economy to grow by up to 3 percent during the current financial year (July 2023 till June 2024).

Once in power, Sharif’s party claims, it will reduce electricity bills by as much as 30 percent through tariff rationalization, reduced generation costs, eradication of circular debt, and enhanced infrastructure.

The promises come amid a declining tax-to-GDP ratio that stood at 8.5 percent in 2022-23, according to Finance Minister Dr. Shamshad Akhtar, who shared on Tuesday a plan to restructure the country’s tax collecting agency.

Akthar believes the new structure and measures to broaden the tax base as well as integration of data enhancement and technology would lift the tax-to-GDP ratio to 18 percent by 2029.

However, the PMLN has promised to increase the tax-to-GDP ratio to 13.5 percent by the end of year 2029.

Sharif’s party aims to increase exports to more than $58 billion in the next five years by adopting the right policies and take remittance inflows to more than $40 billion annually.

“We will try to fully implement the manifesto, if came into the power,” Sharif, who has thrice been the prime minister of Pakistan, promised at its launch late last month.

Climate resilience, energy transition, housing

The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), led by former foreign minister and Bhutto scion Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, has focused on the climate crisis besides inflation, unemployment and poverty in its manifesto, titled as “Peoples Charter of the Economy.”

“We need to completely reform Pakistan’s development priorities and focus on climate resilience, adaptation and energy transition,” the PPP manifesto says.

The party has pledged to double incomes for daily wage earners by increasing the minimum wage by 8 percent every year and promised at least 3 million climate-resilient homes in the name of women heads of the household under its ‘Housing for the Poor’ slogan.

“The poorest households will be given free electricity up to 300 units through solar generation, and this will be funded through carbon credits,” the manifesto reads.

To finance the ‘People’s Charter,’ the PPP has pledged to do away with 17 federal ministries, expecting the move to save in excess of Rs328 billion ($1.2 billion).

The PPP has promised to roll back over Rs1,500 billion ($5.3 billion) subsidies available to the elite and to re-allocate them to social protection and climate-resilient investments.

Private sector investments

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), led by jailed former prime minister Imran Khan, has identified low saving rates, debt-driven growth, fiscal unsustainability, reduced productivity and an unfavorable environment for private sector investments as major issues facing Pakistan’s economy.

It prioritizes long-term economic development and growth driven by productivity gains, private investments, and individual initiatives, according to the party manifesto.

“We believe Pakistan’s major problem is development, so the key objective of our manifesto is to prefer long-term development goal rather than growth,” Muzzamil Aslam, a member of PTI’s economic team, told Arab News.

“The party will prefer productivity growth and export-led growth. We will discourage import-led growth and focus on labor intensive sectors such as agriculture.”

Human capital, agriculture tax

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQMP), a political party mainly present in Pakistan’s commercial hub of Karachi, believes the “economical condition of Pakistan is very severe.”

“Actually, economical condition of Pakistan is very severe but it’s not the crisis of economy. It’s a crisis of the niyat (intention),” Dr. Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui, the MQM-P chief, told Arab News.

The party aims to increase remittances to $100 billion by leveraging human capital mobility within the next five years, promising agriculture tax on income no less than Rs4.8 million and land reforms through constitutional amendments.

‘Vision 2050’

The Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) religio-political party has prepared a long-term economic plan for Pakistan called ‘Vision 2050.’

“After coming into power, we will undertake land reforms and tax big land-holders,” Hafiz Naeem-ur-Rehman, JI Karachi chief, told Arab News, pledging to reduce energy tariffs to support industrial growth.

“A concrete plan will be made to get rid of the loans of the World Bank, IMF and local banks,” the JI manifesto reads.

Concentration of wealth in ‘few hands’

The Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), another religious party, has vowed to prevent concentration of wealth in a “few hands,” elimination of interest-based trade, and modernization of the country’s banking system.

The party has promised to fix monthly salary of laborers that would be equal to one tola (11.7 grams) of gold, which currently costs around Rs215,500 ($768).

The JUI, like other parties, also promised to slash the government’s unnecessary expenditures.


Pakistan condemns Israel’s use of communications devices to commit ‘terrorism’ in Lebanon

Pakistan condemns Israel’s use of communications devices to commit ‘terrorism’ in Lebanon
Updated 10 sec ago
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Pakistan condemns Israel’s use of communications devices to commit ‘terrorism’ in Lebanon

Pakistan condemns Israel’s use of communications devices to commit ‘terrorism’ in Lebanon
  • On Wednesday, hand-held radios used by Hezbollah detonated across Lebanon’s south, with 20 people killed
  • Wednesday’s blasts came a day after pagers used by Hezbollah members exploded simultaneously, killing 12

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Thursday “strongly” condemned and called “reprehensible” the use of electronic devices by Israel to attack Lebanon amid spiraling tensions following mass assaults on Hezbollah communications devices this week.
On Wednesday, hand-held radios used by Hezbollah detonated across Lebanon’s south, with 20 killed, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. Wednesday’s blasts came just a day after pagers exploded simultaneously, killing least 12 and leaving nearly 3,000 others injured on Tuesday. 
Hezbollah has vowed to retaliate against Israel, which has declined to comment on the explosions, believed to have been carried out by its spy agency Mossad.
“Pakistan strongly condemns this week’s attacks in Lebanon carried through detonation of electronic equipments,” Foreign Office Spokeswoman Mumtaz Zahra Baloch told reporters.
“Use of cyber and electronic means to commit terrorism in foreign countries is reprehensible.”
She said the attacks showed “Israel’s alarming adventurism in the region,” which was endangering regional peace and security.
“Pakistan reaffirms its support for Lebanon’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and calls upon the international community to take urgent steps to hold Israel to account on its act of international terrorism and violations of international law,” Baloch added.
This week’s operations, which have appeared to throw Hezbollah into disarray, played out alongside Israel’s 11-month-old war in Gaza and heightened fears of an escalation on its Lebanese border and the risk of a full-blown regional war. 
“We are opening a new phase in the war. It requires courage, determination and perseverance from us,” Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said in remarks at an air force base.
The US, which has denied any involvement in the blasts, says it is pursuing intensive diplomacy to avert an escalation of the conflict. 
The United Nations Security Council will meet on Friday about the pager blasts after a request by Arab states.


Pakistan PM seeks enhanced trade, climate change cooperation with United Kingdom

Pakistan PM seeks enhanced trade, climate change cooperation with United Kingdom
Updated 7 min 49 sec ago
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Pakistan PM seeks enhanced trade, climate change cooperation with United Kingdom

Pakistan PM seeks enhanced trade, climate change cooperation with United Kingdom
  • Shehbaz Sharif highlights Pakistan’s economic challenges in a meeting with British High Commissioner
  • The Pakistan PM will attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa next month

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif urged cooperation on trade and climate change between Pakistan and the United Kingdom during a meeting with British High Commissioner Jane Marriott on Wednesday, reiterating his administration’s commitment to working closely with the British leadership.
Pakistan and the UK have a long and multifaceted relationship, with the latter hosting a large Pakistani diaspora community. Earlier this month, Pakistan’s deputy premier Ishaq Dar embarked on a five-day official visit to London where he held wide-ranging discussions with the new British administration.
The Pakistani premier also accepted an invitation by King Charles III over a telephone call on Wednesday to attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa next month.
“The PM emphasized the need to promote coordination and cooperation on trade and investment, climate change, social connectivity as well as regional and multilateral issues of mutual interest,” the PM Office said in a statement after the meeting.
The prime minister said Pakistan and the UK shared “long and historic” relations that could be expanded through cooperation in various fields. He also highlighted the economic challenges faced by the country and hoped the overseas Pakistanis in Britain would play a key role in strengthening relations between the two sides.
Sharif will attend the Commonwealth meeting from October 21-26.
This will also be the first time King Charles will head the meeting of the global association since his coronation.
Pakistan is a member of the Commonwealth, a voluntary association of 56 countries out of which the vast majority are former British territories.


Pakistani lawyers to convene in Lahore today to protest government’s proposed constitutional amendments

Pakistani lawyers to convene in Lahore today to protest government’s proposed constitutional amendments
Updated 19 September 2024
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Pakistani lawyers to convene in Lahore today to protest government’s proposed constitutional amendments

Pakistani lawyers to convene in Lahore today to protest government’s proposed constitutional amendments
  • Government plans to increase the retirement age of superior judges, change chief justice’s appointment process
  • An organizer of the convention says Pakistani lawyers are gathering in Lahore to uphold judiciary’s independence

ISLAMABAD: A section of Pakistani lawyers has arranged a convention today, Thursday, in the eastern city of Lahore to protest the government’s proposed constitutional amendments that aim to establish a separate federal constitutional court and increase the parliamentary role in the appointment of judges.
The package of reforms, widely believed to include as many as 22 amendments, is also expected to increase the retirement age of superior judges by three years and change the process by which the Supreme Court chief justice is appointed.
The amendments have raised widespread concerns among opposition parties and legal experts who believe they aim to increase the government’s power in making key judicial appointments and deal with defection of lawmakers during house votes.
The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party of jailed former prime minister Imran Khan has criticized the constitutional package, saying it is meant to grant an extension to incumbent Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa, who is widely viewed to be aligned with the ruling coalition and in opposition to its chief rival, the PTI.
“In today’s convention, lawyers from across Pakistan are participating to voice their concerns about the proposed amendments that are clearly an assault on the independence of the judiciary,” advocate Ishtiaq Ahmad Khan, President of the Insaf Lawyers Forum, told Arab News.
The forum is PTI’s wing among the legal fraternity and one of the organizers of the convention along with the Lahore High Court Bar Association.
“We want to let the government know through this convention that they should back out from the constitutional amendments, otherwise the lawyers will hit the streets to lodge their protest,” he added.
While most political parties have their own lawyers’ wings, the legal community’s politics in Pakistan is mainly divided into two major camps: professional and independent groups. The professional lawyers, led by senior advocate Hamid Khan, is aligned with ex-PM Khan, while the independent faction mainly supports the ruling coalition led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.
“This convention is not party-specific,” the Insaf Lawyers Forum’s president added. “Instead, the lawyers are gathering in Lahore for a cause, and the cause is to protect the independence of the judiciary and uphold the rule of law.”
The ruling coalition, comprising the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), is short of at least 13 lawmakers in the National Assembly and four in the Senate to complete the required two-thirds majority for the amendments to pass.
Both parties have since engaged various political players, including the Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Islam of Maulana Fazlur Rehman, to garner support for the amendments.


Russia offers agricultural technology to Pakistan, agrees to modernize fertilizer plants

Russia offers agricultural technology to Pakistan, agrees to modernize fertilizer plants
Updated 19 September 2024
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Russia offers agricultural technology to Pakistan, agrees to modernize fertilizer plants

Russia offers agricultural technology to Pakistan, agrees to modernize fertilizer plants
  • Russian deputy minister of industry says his country can train local farmers to boost productivity
  • Pakistan and Russia are scheduled to hold 5th Joint Working Group meeting on 26th September

ISLAMABAD: Russia has offered the latest agricultural technology to Pakistan, agreed to share expertise to modernize fertilizer plants and provide training to local farmers to boost productivity, as the government in Islamabad has identified agriculture as a priority sector to strengthen the national economy, according to the state media.
Agriculture has long been the backbone of Pakistan’s economy, but farmers have faced increasing difficulties in recent years due to climate change, which has caused unpredictable weather patterns.
Earlier this year, Pakistan, struggling to boost export revenues, sought China’s help to modernize its agricultural sector during Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s five-day visit to that country.
With Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexey Overchuk currently visiting Pakistan, officials from both countries are exploring collaboration in this critical sector.
“Russia will provide modern agricultural machinery to Pakistan in order to boost crop yields and enhance agricultural productivity,” reported Radio Pakistan as Russian Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Aleksei Gruzdev met Federal Minister for Industries, Production and National Food Security Rana Tanveer Hussain in the federal capital.
Gruzdev also interacted with Pakistan’s Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan separately, saying that his country was “keen to offer expertise in modernizing Pakistan’s fertilizer plants and provide training programs for Pakistani farmers.”
The two sides focused on strengthening economic cooperation and exploring new bilateral trade opportunities.
The Russian deputy minister also highlighted his government’s interest in expanding exports or railway machinery and metal products.
The two Pakistani ministers highlighted the significant but untapped potential of trade between both countries.
Pakistan and Russia are scheduled to hold the 5th Joint Working Group meeting, which is scheduled for the 26th of this month.


Pakistan reports 18th polio case of the year, as government calls surge ‘devastating’

Pakistan reports 18th polio case of the year, as government calls surge ‘devastating’
Updated 19 September 2024
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Pakistan reports 18th polio case of the year, as government calls surge ‘devastating’

Pakistan reports 18th polio case of the year, as government calls surge ‘devastating’
  • PM’s focal person for polio eradication calls the disease preventable as the new case emerges from Quetta
  • She calls the development an ‘outcome of missed vaccination opportunities in parts of Balochistan’ province

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan reported another polio case from the southwestern city of Quetta on Wednesday, raising the total number of affected children to 18 this year, as a senior government official called the development “devastating” and stressed the urgent need to ensure nationwide vaccination coverage.
Pakistan is one of only two countries, alongside Afghanistan, where polio remains endemic. Despite years of anti-polio campaigns, Pakistani authorities continue to face challenges such as parental refusal and security concerns due to militant violence that have hindered its eradication efforts.
Earlier this month, the federal capital, Islamabad, reported its first polio case in 16 years, highlighting the disease’s alarming resurgence and the ongoing risk it poses to children across the country.
“It is devastating to see another child affected by a disease that can be completely prevented through vaccination,” Prime Minister’s Focal Person for Polio Eradication Ayesha Raza Farooq said in an official statement. “This new case from Quetta highlights the risk and the need to rapidly increase population immunity to further curtail the spread of virus.”
“What we are seeing is the outcome of missed vaccination opportunities in parts of Balochistan which have allowed the virus to thrive and survive over time,” she added.
Farooq said the government was doubling down on its efforts to strengthen surveillance and vaccination outreach in all affected districts, particularly in Balochistan province where the latest case has been reported.
The coordinator of the National Emergency Operations Center for Polio Eradication, Anwarul Haq, also highlighted the need to reach children in every corner of the country.
“Vaccination campaigns, like the one we implemented last week, are critical in our fight to end polio, and we cannot afford to miss any child,” he said.
“Every house must be reached and every child vaccinated,” he added.
Haq appealed to parents, community leaders and influencers to join hands with the government in the national mission to protect children against the disease.