ISLAMABAD, May 2 — Pakistan and Saudi Arabia yesterday said they would discuss extending the terms of a US$3 billion (RM13 billion) loan to help Islamabad’s faltering economy.
The Gulf nation has long been an intelligence partner of Pakistan as well as a regular source of financial relief for successive governments.
The latest sign of support follows a visit to Saudi Arabia by new Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who has inherited a crippling national debt, galloping inflation and a feeble rupee.
A joint statement said the kingdom would continue to support the Pakistani economy and had discussed "augmenting the US$3 billion deposit with the central bank through term extension or otherwise”.
Saudia Arabia also pledged "to further enhance the financing of petroleum products” at a time when the South Asian country is suffering from frequent power cuts.
The statement comes after recent talks between Pakistan and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) over the release of funds under an existing US$6 billion aid programme that had stalled due to concerns about the pace of reforms.
The cash-strapped nation’s foreign exchange reserves plunged below US$11 billion last month.
"The little financial help we can get from any country would help us given the condition of our economy,” Dr Kaiser Bengali, a veteran economist, told AFP.
"But for how long will we run our economy on loans? This policy is not going to work even for the next five years.”
In recent years, Saudi Arabia has provided Pakistan with US$4.2 billion of support in the form of the US$3 billion loan deposited with the central bank as well as US$1.2 billion in deferred oil payments.
Pakistani Finance Minister Miftah Ismail who had stayed on in Saudi Arabia for "technical-level talks” was due to land back in Pakistan yesterday evening. — AFP
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