Saturday, November 15, 2008

Pakistan asks IMF for rescue loan


Pakistan has asked for a loan package from the International Monetary Fund worth at least $7.6bn (£5.1bn), its top economic adviser has said.

Shaukat Tarin, adviser to the prime minister, said the loan would stave off the country's balance of payments crisis and stabilise the economy.

Pakistan needs the money in order to avoid defaulting on international debt.

It had been exploring other sources of funds in order to avoid stringent IMF conditions but failed to find a deal.

Speaking at a news conference in Karachi, Mr Tarin said Pakistan would apply formally for the loan next week.

The government stands to receive $4bn this year as part of the 23-month IMF deal, the AFP news agency reports. It will start repaying the loan in 2011.

Flight of capital

In the past, Pakistani officials have said the IMF would be their last option due to its unpopularity at home


But Islamabad was left with few options faced with the need swiftly to raise billions of dollars in foreign loans to meet debt payments and pay for imports.

The Pakistani economy has grown by 7% to 8% over the last few years, but most of this growth has taken place in sectors such as consumer financing.

By 2006, trade imbalances because of high imports caused the economy to slow down; a subsequent rise in international prices of food and oil worsened the situation.

This led to a fall in the value of the Pakistani rupee and a flight of capital from the country.

IMF conditions entail cutbacks on the size of the government, development expenditure and some politically important subsidies.

Following the recent global financial turmoil, the IMF has agreed loans to several nations to support their economies, among them Ukraine, Hungary and Iceland.

Summit pledge to 'restore growth'


World leaders at the G20 financial summit in Washington have pledged to work together to restore global growth.

They said they were determined to work together to achieve "needed reforms" in the world's financial systems.

US President George W Bush said that finance ministers would now work on detailed reform proposals, and then report back.

Leaders of emerging economies said the summit marked a historic shift of power away from the richer countries.

Mr Bush's successor in the White House, Barack Obama, said in a statement that he was ready to work "together on these challenges" with the G20 when he takes office in January.

"The president-elect believes that the G20 summit... is an important opportunity to seek a coordinated response to the global financial crisis," said a statement issued in his name.

The meeting brought together leading industrial powers, such as the US, Japan and Germany, and also emerging market countries such as China, India, Argentina, Brazil and others - representing 85% of the world economy.

Summit agreements

For the leading emerging economies, the significance of this G20 summit was clear - they now have to be taken into consideration in the management of the global economy.

Brazil's President, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, said: "We are talking about the G20 because the G8 doesn't have any more reason to exist."

Key issues agreed by world leaders at this summit included:

reform of international financial institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
an agreement by the end of 2008, leading to a successful global free-trade deal
improvements to financial market transparency and ensuring complete and accurate disclosure by firms of their financial conditions
making sure banks and financial institutions' incentives "prevent excessive risk taking"
asking finance ministers to draw-up a list of financial institutions whose collapse would endanger the global economic system
strengthening countries' financial regulatory regimes
taking a "fresh look" at rules that govern market manipulation and fraud.
In his address at the end of the summit, Mr Bush said there was no doubt that the financial crisis facing the United States and many other countries was a severe one.

He said it had even been conceivable that the US "could go into a depression greater than the Great Depression".

"We are adapting our financial systems to the realities of the 21st century," he said.

Speaking after the summit, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown said the group had reached important conclusions "about trade, about financial stability and about the expansion of our economies".

'Market principles'

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said the global financial structures created at the end of WWII were now inadequate

It will be necessary to rebuild the whole international financial architecture, make it open and fair, effective and legitimate".

The stalled Doha round of global trade talks should be pushed forward so that a basic agreement can be reached before President Bush leaves office in January, said German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

"If there is the political will, it would be good if we could reach an agreement in the Doha round with the present US administration."

In their joint closing statement, leaders said the reforms would only be successful, if they were "grounded in a commitment to free market principles".

G20 leaders say they will meet again by 30 April, 2009, to review progress.

The next summit looks set to be held in London, with US President-elect Obama attending.

Although no formal decision has been announced, France's President, Nicholas Sarkozy, made it clear that he expects London to be chosen as the venue.

The G20 group of countries consists of 19 leading industrialised and developing countries, as well as the European Union.

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