| | Pakistan: Business Loses Confidence
 By
Ahmed Rashid
6th September, 2001.
As Pakistan's military
regime attempts to grapple with four years of stagnation, a U.S. economic slowdown
will affect Pakistani textile exports and result in even lower foreign investment.
Foreign investment into Pakistan dropped to its lowest in two decades
in the year ending June 2001. Direct and portfolio foreign investment totalled
just $182 million against $480 million in the previous year. Portfolio investors
withdrew $130 million last year as Morgan Stanley closed down its country fund
and pulled out of Pakistan along with Templeton Emerging Markets' Fund. A U.S
slowdown is already affecting textile exports, which account for 60% of Pakistan's
exports. Textile exports were down 6.5% in July, compared to the same month last
year.
Last year Pakistan aimed for an export target of $10 billion but
could only achieve $9.1 billion, which was still 7% up on the previous year. With
the U.S. accounting for 25% of textile exports, Pakistan will be hard pushed to
sustain even $9 billion in exports this year.Agricultural exports are also experiencing
a downturn with this year's basmati crop unable to find export markets.
The
global trend of lower raw cotton prices has also hit farmers' incomes, which are
already down due to two years of drought which affected wheat and sugarcane crops.But
a U.S. slowdown would lower global oil prices while a weaker dollar will make
imports cheaper and lower debt repayments--much of Pakistan's $38 billion foreign
debt is benchmarked to Libor or U.S. interest rates.
However the real
issue for the military regime, which has promised elections in October 2002, remains
the lack of business confidence in the economy. |