Money - International
Pakistan sees preliminary economic growth of 3.9pc for 2020/21
A private armed security guard keeps his eyes on a passage as shopkeepers work along a covered cloth market in Karachi June 13, 2013. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

ISLAMABAD, May 22 — Pakistan said yesterday its economy was on course to grow 3.94 per cent in the financial year 2020/2021 that ends in June, almost double the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank’s projections, as it recovers from the worst of the pandemic.

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The planning ministry said its provisional estimate — up from Pakistan’s last forecast of 3 per cent — was based on data for the year so far on growth in the agricultural, industrial and services sectors at 2.77 per cent, 3.57 per cent, and 4.43 per cent respectively.

"This growth in a period in which Covid placed a huge challenge to the economy is extremely gratifying,” minister for planning Asad Umar tweeted.

Yesterday, the ministry also revised down GDP growth for the financial year that ended on June 30, 2020, to -0.47 per cent, from -0.38 per cent.

The IMF has estimated GDP for 2020/21 growing 1.5 per cent and the World Bank estimates growth of 1.3 per cent.

Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government is weeks away from presenting its annual budget which faces tough challenges on the fiscal deficit and an ambitious revenue collection target.

Due to a combination of GDP growth and strengthening of the Pakistani rupee against the dollar, Pakistan’s per capita income jumped by 13.4 per cent this year from US$1,361 to US$1,543, Umar said.

Total GDP increased from US$263 billion to US$296 billion, the highest increase recorded in any year, he said.

The South Asian nation of 220 million people got into a US$6 billion IMF stabilisation programme in 2019 months after Khan’s government delayed it.

Pakistan’s Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin has said the country is in talks with the IMF to seek easing of "tough conditions” on the loan.

GDP growth was 5.8 per cent before Khan took power in 2018 with inflation below 4 per cent, which was recorded in double digit last month. Some US$2.5 billion of borrowing in international bond markets and historically high remittances have recently given some breathing space. — Reuters

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