Development Agenda, South
Asia, October 2019
Role of International
Financial Institutions in Development of Pakistan
International financial institutions (IFIs),
generally a consortium of more than one nation. Owners and shareholders are
generally governments or other international institutions. Every IFI has an
objective to assist other countries in need. Due to nature and scope pf each IFI,
they have different objectives. Nevertheless, a common agenda is to help
countries to reduce global poverty and improve people's living conditions and
standards, support sustainable economic, social and institutional development
and promote regional cooperation and integration.
IFIs play significant role in supporting
large scale infrastructure projects in developing countries. They also provide
technical and advisory assistance to their borrowers and conduct extensive
research on development issues. Almost all IFIs generate funds from world's
capital markets as well as from members' contributions, retained earnings from
lending operations, and the repayment of loans. The most prominent IFIs are the European Investment Bank, the World Bank, IMF and Asian Development Bank.
In this article we will discuss role of three major IFIs working in Pakistan,
i.e., World Bank, Asian Development Bank and IMF.
The World Bank, an international
organization, helps emerging market countries to reduce poverty. Interestingly, as name
suggests, it is not a bank in the conventional sense. Instead, it consists of
two development institutions; the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development which provides loans, credit, and grants and the International Development
Association, which provides low- or no-interest loans to low-income countries.
The World Bank Group consists of
three organization with three different portfolios; (1) The International
Finance Corporation (IFC) that provides investment, advice, and
asset management to companies and governments; (2) The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)
that insures lenders and investors against political risk such as war and (3)
The International
Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) that
settles investment disputes between investors and countries.
The World Bank focuses on
improving education, health, and infrastructure, hence provides
low-interest loans, interest-free credit, and grants. It also uses funds
to modernize a country's financial sector, agriculture, and natural
resources management. Its ultimate purpose is to "bridge the economic
divide between poor and rich countries." Thus to achieve this goal, it
focuses on six areas:
· Overcome poverty by spurring growth.
· Help reconstruct countries emerging from
war, the biggest cause of extreme poverty.
· Provide a customized solution to help
middle-income countries remain out of poverty.
· Spur governments to prevent climate
change. It helps them control communicable diseases, especially HIV/AIDS,
and malaria. It also manages international financial crises and
promotes free
trade.
· Share its expertise with developing
countries. Publicize its knowledge via reports and its interactive
online database.
Since 1947, the World Bank
has funded several projects in Pakistan in various sectors/areas. Currently,
Bank is running 43 projects that cover a wide variety of sectors, including
agriculture, governance, education, health, and energy.
Asian Development Bank is another
significant IFI present in Pakistan which is composed of 68 members. Pakistan joined ADB as a founding member in
1966. Similar to World Bank, ADB focuses on 7
core areas through both public and private sector operations, advisory
services, and knowledge support. These seven areas are;
- addressing remaining poverty and reducing inequality
- accelerating progress in gender equality
- tackling climate change, building climate and disaster resilience, and enhancing environmental sustainability
- making cities more livable
- promoting rural development and food security
- strengthening governance and institutional capacity
- fostering regional cooperation and integration\
Pakistan is working with ADB to
strengthen its key infrastructure, social services, and economic growth since
1966. We have obtained $32.2 billion in project assistance since inception. In
the next three years, ADB is supporting
us on energy, natural resource management, urban development, transport
infrastructure, and institutional reforms, as well as re-engagement in
education and health.
Another important IFI
working in Pakistan is International Monetary Fund. Unlike World Bank and ADB
the objectives of IMF are (i) International Monetary Co-Operation,
(ii) Ensure Exchange Stability, (iii) Balanced Growth of Trade,
(iv) Eliminate Exchange Control, (v) Multilateral Trade and Payments,
(vi) Balanced Growth, (vii) Correction of BOP Maladjustments,
(viii) Promote Investment of Capital.
Pakistan has started taking loans from IMF in 1958, nonetheless, the
magnitude of the loans was not substantial at that time. Even from 1980 to 2001
loans from IMF in each program was slightly above than $1 billion. However, in
2008, 2013 1nd 2018 we have taken substantial loans from IMF. Pakistan was
engaged with IMF in 22 programs since 1958 out of which 12 were standby
arrangements (bail outs program) and rest are non-bailouts programs that
includes Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility, Structural adjustment programs
etc.
Interestingly, all IFI-funded
projects are implemented by the borrowing countries. However, all the borrowing
countries need to follow the IFI's rules and procedures in implementing the
funding they obtain. This is done to ensure the guaranteed efficiency and
transparency in the use of IFI funds. Nonetheless, every country has its
own structure and procedures to use that funds which create hurdles in the
spending the money efficiently.
Rules and procedures involve specific
targets which a country is asked to achieve; it could be fiscal austerity,
revenue generation, taxation reforms, energy sector reforms, modernization of
agriculture and reduction in the carbon foot print by adopting to clean and
renewable energy. It is in general argued that conditionality related to
procurement, financial bookkeeping, auditing, environmental issues,
resettlement, and organizational change is needed if development projects are
to be implemented effectively. In fact, such conditionality has always been a
part of development assistance, and some conditionality is in response to
advocacy by NGOs with respect to environmental issues and indigenous peoples’
rights.
Notwithstanding, the controversy
about conditionality relates mostly to policy and institutional reforms such as
fiscal austerity, decrease expenditures especially subsidies and development
expenditures, Increase tax revenues, privatization etc. All of these often
feature prominently in adjustment lending by IFIs. We can argue 24/7 that if
these conditions have worked or totally failed. Meekal Aziz article on “IMF and
Pakistan” argues that No country turns to the Fund when the sun is shining.
Therefore, we need to take stringent measures if there is a problem and this is
what IMF ask Pakistan to do. On the other hand, few also argue that some
conditions are merely an attempt to impose Western free market policies on
developing countries where they are neither appropriate nor desired.
IFIs interventions are most effective
when it supports reforms on which the country is already taking the lead. It is
ineffective when there is little or no political will to undertake the reforms.
Concurrently, IFIs are equally ineffective if they want to address policy that
is against the country’s direction of development or reforms. Especially when country’s
proposed reforms are not addressing the key policy distortions hampering
equitable (pro-poor) growth which is the main agenda of IFIS. In this scenario,
when reforms proposed are inevitable and countries are not willing, the
conditionality pinches alot. Similar scenario was built when in 2013 IMF asked
to devalue the currency but former Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has different
opinion on it. Though the IMF program of that time was successfully implemented
and completed.
In nutshell we infer that IFIs have
supportive role in the development of Pakistan. The support is very effective when
it is in the line of development of Pakistan which also has a political will.
In general, all IFIs want to assist in the upcoming important programs of the
government, e.g., all were trying to assist in implementing Vision 2025 in the
last five years. Divergent programs creates hurdles in the system.
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