The performance of the economy in two months of this fiscal year has raised
questions about the pace of the growth. A key issue is: how would the external
sector fare?
Exports are not growing at the desired pace. Foreign portfolio investment has
remained negative so far and is unlikely to reach the last year’s level more so
because the prospects of generating foreign exchange through euro bonds are not
so promising.
The privatisation process has come to a halt. Foreign direct investment and
workers’ remittances continue to show a strong growth but the investment may
falter because of the political uncertainties. The real sector of the economy
has so far shown mixed trends. In agriculture, cotton production is likely to
reach 14 million bales despite the attack of mealy bug and curl leaf virus. The
production of wheat, rice and sugarcane are also likely to remain strong though
rice production might see a nominal decline due to heavy monsoon rains and
flooding. Water availability is at its peak and there are no chances of major or
minor crops suffering because of its shortage.
In the industrial sector, there are signs that production would decline because
of high cost of finance, labour and utilities. In the last fiscal year, large
scale manufacturing sector had risen 8.4 against 10.7 per cent a year ago. No
data about LSM production for the first two months of this year is available but
industrialists say and exports’ volumes suggest that full capacity utilisation
is not there.
Statistics on the performance of the services sector are also not available. But
banks and financial institutions might continue to show strong results. Despite
all moral suasion by the State Bank, the banking spread is still at 730 basis
points, far higher than in India and other regional countries. This gives the
banks a lot of opportunity to make huge profits. Some banks are likely to earn
handsome profits as those which have completed the process of mergers and
acquisitions are now geared to enter into new businesses. Two of these areas are
agricultural and SME financing.
In July-August FY08 banks’ lending to agricultural sector rose 18 per cent to
Rs25.8 billion. Bankers say their farm lending would rise further in coming
months but they also realise that recovery of farm loans would be a problem this
year. Farmers have suffered cash equivalent losses of billions of rupees because
of rains and floods.
Disbursement of bank credit to the entire private sector has slowed down.
Bankers and business indicate that the appetite for private sector credit is low
due to a slower growth in industrial activity. The banks have also tightened
credit appraisals to prevent borrowers from using part of the bank credit in
making speculative investment in stocks and real estate.
No data about private sector credit off-take in this fiscal year is available.
But the recently released SBP statistics show that in the last fiscal year the
private sector borrowed Rs366 billion from banks, down from Rs402 billion a year
earlier and below the target of Rs390 billion.
On the other hand, the government borrowing from banks for budgetary support
totalled Rs102 billion in FY07 up from Rs67 billion in FY06 but lower than the
target of Rs120 billion set for FY07. Fortunately, the government managed a much
better borrowing mix in the last fiscal year. It borrowed Rs160 billion from
commercial banks and retired Rs58 billion worth of SBP loans, thus mitigating
the impact on inflation. A year earlier the situation was in total contrast: the
government had borrowed Rs135 billion from SBP and retired Rs68 billion loans of
commercial banks thus fuelling the flames of inflation.
From this fiscal year onwards, the government is bound to keep its inflationary
borrowing from the central bank within limits determined jointly by the SBP and
the ministry of finance. This coupled with the overall tightening of the
monetary policy has so far kept inflation below the targeted level of 6.5 per
cent for this fiscal year.
But the problem is that food inflation is still much higher than overall CPI
inflation, which means that inflation is hitting the poor harder. The
mishandling of wheat crisis and the resultant price hike shows that handling of
inflation through administrative means remains a far cry.
In the first two months of this fiscal year the rupee remained somewhat
firm—thanks to sufficient inflows of foreign exchange through various channels.
But in the third month it started to fall more rapidly as the outflows outdid
the inflows.
Between July 1-September 28 the rupee shed 23 paisa or 0.4 per cent of its value
against the dollar. On September 28 the rupee closed at 60.70 a dollar down from
60.47 on June 30.
— Mohiuddin Aazim





























