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)
Short Url
Updated 05 February 2024
Follow

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.


‘Reprehensible’: Pakistan says Afghan acting consul general ‘disrespected’ national anthem

‘Reprehensible’: Pakistan says Afghan acting consul general ‘disrespected’ national anthem
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

‘Reprehensible’: Pakistan says Afghan acting consul general ‘disrespected’ national anthem

‘Reprehensible’: Pakistan says Afghan acting consul general ‘disrespected’ national anthem
  • Foreign office says Afghan official acted against diplomatic norms by not standing up for national anthem
  • Shakir was attending an Eid Milad-un-Nabi conference in Peshawar where the national anthem was played 

ISLAMABAD: The foreign office said on Tuesday it was “reprehensible” that the Afghan Consul General in Peshawar, Hafiz Mohibullah Shakir, had remained seated as the Pakistani national anthem was played at a conference in Peshawar, saying he had disrespected the patriotic song. 

Videos widely circulated on social media on Tuesday showed Shakir attending the Rehmat-ul-Alameen Conference hosted by Ali Amin Gandapur, the chief minister of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan. The event was held in the northwestern town of Peshawar to mark the occasion of Eid Milad-un-Nabi. 

As the Pakistani national anthem was played and everyone in the room stood up in respect, Shakir and another Afghan colleague remained seated.

“The disrespect of host country’s national anthem is against diplomatic norms,” Foreign Office Spokeswoman Mumtaz Zahra Baloch said in a statement. “This act of Acting Consul General of Afghanistan is reprehensible. We are conveying our strong protest to the Afghan authorities both in Islamabad and Kabul.”

The Afghan government or consulate have not yet commented on the issue.

Traditionally tense relations between Islamabad and Kabul have soured further in recent months amid a surge in militancy in Pakistan that it blames on its neighbor.

Islamabad says militants mainly associated with the Pakistani Taliban group frequently launch attacks from hideouts in Afghanistan, targeting police and other security forces. Islamabad has even blamed Kabul’s Afghan Taliban rulers for facilitating anti-Pakistan militants. Kabul denies the charges.

Last week, CM Gandapur said he would hold direct talks with Kabul’s Taliban rulers to take action against Afghanistan-based militant groups.


Punjab police raid Lahore home of ex-PM Khan aide — party 

Punjab police raid Lahore home of ex-PM Khan aide — party 
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

Punjab police raid Lahore home of ex-PM Khan aide — party 

Punjab police raid Lahore home of ex-PM Khan aide — party 
  • Salman Akram Raja has been PTI secretary general since Sept. 2024, head of legal affairs since August 
  • Unclear why police raided Raja’s home and no confirmation of the operation from Punjab police force

ISLAMABAD: Several members of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) of jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan on Tuesday confirmed raids by provincial police in Punjab on the home of senior party leader Salman Akram Raja.

Raja has been serving as the secretary general of the PTI since September 2024 and as the party’s head of legal affairs since August 2024. It was unclear why police had raided his home but many PTI top leaders have been arrested since the party held a rally on Sept. 8 to demand their leader’s release from prison. Authorities say a law related to public gatherings in the federal capital was violated during the rally. 

“Shame on Punjab Police for raiding residence of Salman Akram Raja sb in Lahore. Alhamdulillah, he is safe,” lawyer Abuzar Salman Niazi, who is a member of the PTI Core Committee, said on X. 

“Such unwarranted police raids show the desperation and shamelessness of this unlawful [government],” Lawyer and PTI leader from Multan, Taimur Malik, said on X. “This raid at Salman Akram Raja’s residence will only increase the resentment against this Govt in the public & legal community.”

There was no confirmation of the raids by Punjab police. 

Earlier this week, PTI lawmakers arrested on Sept. 9 following the rally in Islamabad were ordered released by a local court. The legislators had been charged with violating the Peaceful Assembly and Public Order Act by holding a rally in Islamabad on Sept. 8 that went on longer than the designated time and in which one policeman was injured as PTI supporters clashed with authorities en route to the rally. 

The PTI said a number of the lawmakers were detained from inside the parliament building, triggering protests and condemnation from the party. They were granted bail on Monday submission of surety bonds worth Rs30,000 [$100]. 

Following the arrests, the National Assembly speaker had opened an inquiry into the incident on Tuesday, citing that under Pakistani law, legislators cannot be detained from within the precincts of the parliament without the speaker’s permission.

Khan’s party alleges it has faced an over a year-long crackdown since protesters allegedly linked to the party attacked and damaged government and military installations on May 9, 2023, after Khan’s brief arrest that day in a land graft case.

Hundreds of PTI followers and leaders were arrested following the riots and many remain behind bars as they await trial. The military, which says Khan and his party were behind the attacks, has also initiated army court trials of at least 103 people accused of involvement in the violence.

Khan, who has been in jail since last August, was ousted from the PM’s office in 2022 in a parliamentary vote of no confidence after what is widely believed to be a falling out with Pakistan’s powerful military, which denies being involved in politics.

Since his removal, Khan and his party have waged an unprecedented campaign of defiance against the military and now the PTI is aiming to mobilize the public through rallies to call for their leader’s release from jail in “politically motivated” cases.

The party’s next rally is planned for Sept. 22 in the eastern city of Lahore.


After historic Pakistan win, Bangladesh Tests ‘no dress rehearsal’, says India’s Rohit

After historic Pakistan win, Bangladesh Tests ‘no dress rehearsal’, says India’s Rohit
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

After historic Pakistan win, Bangladesh Tests ‘no dress rehearsal’, says India’s Rohit

After historic Pakistan win, Bangladesh Tests ‘no dress rehearsal’, says India’s Rohit
  • India lead the World Test Championship standings ahead of Australia
  • India will host Bangladesh in a two-Test series starting from Thursday

CHENNAI, India: Captain Rohit Sharma on Tuesday warned his India team there is “no dress rehearsal” in cricket as they face a Bangladesh side fresh from a historic Test series win over Pakistan.

India lead the World Test Championship (WTC) standings ahead of Australia, where Rohit’s team will tour for a five-match series later in the year.

But first they host Bangladesh in a two-Test series, starting with the opener in the northern Indian city of Chennai from Thursday.

India are clear favorites but the visitors recently celebrated a landmark 2-0 series sweep in Pakistan.

“There is no dress rehearsal kind of stuff happening here,” Rohit told reporters, cautioning against minds turning too quickly to Australia.

“Every game is important because of what is at stake — the WTC table is quite wide open,” Rohit added. “We want to win here, and start the season on a high.”

The skipper added: “In terms of preparation, in terms of readiness, I feel we are quite ready for this game, and what lies ahead of us.”

India’s last Test series was at home earlier this year when they beat England 4-1.

India won the T20 World Cup in June, their first International Cricket Council title in 11 years.

But there was “no way” his players would “relax and sit back” as a result, the 37-year-old Rohit said.

“Us cricketers, we have got limited time to play the game, to make an impact in the sport that we play,” he said.

India will host New Zealand for three Tests in October and November, before traveling to Australia, the current World Test champions.

“Every team likes to beat India. Let them have fun,” said Rohit of a Bangladesh team on a high after their first win over Pakistan.

“We need to win the match and that’s what we are here for.”


Paramilitary official killed while preventing armed robbery in Pakistani southern district

Paramilitary official killed while preventing armed robbery in Pakistani southern district
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

Paramilitary official killed while preventing armed robbery in Pakistani southern district

Paramilitary official killed while preventing armed robbery in Pakistani southern district
  • Rangers team was on patrol when it encountered ongoing robbery attempt, inspector killed in exchange of fire
  • Crime rates are high across Sindh, with over 60 percent of its crime taking place in the provincial capital of Karachi

KARACHI: A paramilitary Rangers official was killed while trying to prevent an armed robbery in Shaheed Benazirabad District on Tuesday, police said, amid a rise in crime in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province.

Tanveer Hussain Tunio, the Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) in the district, told Arab News a Rangers team was on patrol duty when officers encountered an ongoing armed robbery attempt.

“They intervened to arrest the suspects, and during the exchange of fire, a Rangers officer got injured who later succumbed to his wounds during treatment at hospital,” the SSP said. 

“Both suspects have been arrested, and an investigation is underway.”

The deceased official has been identified as Sharak Rizwan, according to a report on the incident submitted to the Sindh inspector general police.

“Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi has saluted the sacrifice of Rangers Inspector Sharak, who was martyred in an attack by unknown assailants in Shaheed Benazirabad,” state news agency APP reported. 

“Expressing heartfelt condolences to the bereaved family, the Minister said during this time of grief, nation stands with the martyred inspector’s family and shares their grief.”

Crime rates are high across Sindh, with over 60 percent of crimes taking place in the provincial capital of Karachi, the country’s commercial hub and largest city. 

The metropolis of 20 million that hosts the stock exchange and central bank has for decades been beset by armed violence. While an armed campaign led by the military against gangs and suspected militants in the city brought down crime rates after 2013, violence and crime rates have been on the rise again since last year, with shooting deaths in muggings and robberies once again becoming a daily headline. 

In July, Karachi was ranked by Forbes as the second-riskiest city for tourists, with a rating of 93.12 out of 100, second only to Venezuela’s Caracas, which had a score of 100, while Myanmar’s Yangon ranked third with a score of 91.67 out of 100.

According to data from the Citizens-Police Liaison Committee, at least 90 people have been killed in street crimes in Karachi this year while at least 50,000 crimes were reported in Karachi between January and August.


Pakistan clinch Asian hockey bronze medal, India beat China in final

Pakistan clinch Asian hockey bronze medal, India beat China in final
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

Pakistan clinch Asian hockey bronze medal, India beat China in final

Pakistan clinch Asian hockey bronze medal, India beat China in final
  • This is India’s fifth Asian Champions Trophy title
  • Pakistan won 5-2 against Korea to end their campaign

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan scored a stunning 5-2 win against Korea to end their campaign at the Hero Asian Champions Trophy with a bronze medal on Tuesday at the Moqi Hockey Training Base in China, the International Hockey Federation said, as India defeated China in the final of the tournament.

It was goals by Sufyan Khan, Hannan Shahid, and Rooman that led to Pakistan’s victory while Jungjun Lee and Jihun Yang scored for Korea.

After a poor start, Pakistan, who were handed a disappointing loss in the semifinal by hosts China, made great amends to their game to bounce back in the second half of the match to clinch a thriller.

“We are very happy to finish the tournament on a good note. Definitely, it would have been great if we had won yesterday’s match (against China) and played the final against India today but we made a number of errors,” Sufyan Khan was quoted as saying after the game by the International Hockey Federation. 

“Today, we didn’t start very well but during the half-time break, our Head Coach Tahir Zaman shook us up in his own style and instilled confidence that we can bounce back.”

Meanwhile, the Indian Men’s Hockey Team registered an emphatic 4-1 win over Korea in the semifinal of the championship and advanced to the final against China, whom they beat 1-0, thus retaining their Asian Champions Trophy crown.

Jugraj Singh scored the only goal of the match in the 51st minute, after a frustrating game for India, as they came up against a well-organized, stubborn Chinese defense.

This is India’s fifth Asian Champions Trophy title.