TFIGlobal
TFIGlobal
TFIPOST English
TFIPOST हिन्दी
No Result
View All Result
  • Indo-Pacific
  • Americas
  • Canada
  • Indian Subcontinent
  • West Asia
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • The Caribbean
TFIGlobal
  • Indo-Pacific
  • Americas
  • Canada
  • Indian Subcontinent
  • West Asia
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • The Caribbean
No Result
View All Result
TFIGlobal
TFIGlobal
No Result
View All Result
  • Indo-Pacific
  • Americas
  • Canada
  • Indian Subcontinent
  • West Asia
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • The Caribbean

IMF bailout won’t succeed without major cuts in Pak defense budget, says a think tank report

Amit Agrahari by Amit Agrahari
May 18, 2019
in Geopolitics, Indian Subcontinent
While Imran Khan goes out begging all over the world, Pak Army is looting the country

PC: Greater Jammu

Share on FacebookShare on X

European Foundation for South Asian Studies (EFSAS), a prominent European think tank based in the Netherlands has criticized 6 billion IMF bailout package to Pakistan and claimed that it ‘will not succeed without major cuts in the defense budget’. “The IMF requirement that Pakistan’s primary budget deficit, which is the total revenue minus non-interest expenditure, be brought down to 0.6% in next budgetary year from about 2% at present implies that the defense budget would ideally need to be clipped,” wrote EFSAS. However, the think tank also suggested that the all-powerful Pakistani military would not let the government slash the defense budget.

“Given the power dynamics in Pakistan and the country’s track record, it is almost certain that this will not happen and ways will be unearthed by the establishment to circumvent it,” as per EFSAS. The defense budget is more than one fifth or 20 percent of Pakistan’s annual federal budget. The allocation to military spending was increased by 20 percent in the last annual budget which is more than economic growth as well as total budget amount growth. The military spending constitutes the second largest chunk of Pakistan’s federal budget after debt servicing. Due to huge debt servicing and military expenditure burden, the country has very little room left for social spending. According to an analyst, Pakistan spends less than 5 percent of GDP on health and education. 

Also Read

China Expanding Grip in South Asia: A Threat to Regional Stability

Balochistan declares independence, calls for UN forces: A new neighbour of Iran and Afghanistan?

Radioactive mystery shrouds Pakistan’s Kirana hills

The think tank also criticized the IMF for not being able to force a military spending cut on the Pakistan government. “If the IMF was in a position to be intrusive enough to direct Pakistan to free its currency from central-bank control, it could also have directly demanded a cap on the country’s profligate defense budget by stipulating an annually decreasing proportion of the GDP that could be spent on defense,” said EFSAS. “By choosing not to do so, it has all but ensured that its current bailout package will achieve as little as earlier ones did, and that Pakistan will be knocking on its doors yet again, palms open, in the not too distant future. It is not without reason that Pakistan has been under IMF bailouts for as many as 22 of the last 30 years,” it added.

In the 6 billion dollar bailout package, Pakistan will be given money over a period of 39 months, subject to the timely implementation of economic reforms. This is the 13th loan to Pakistan since 1988 and 21st in the last six decades. A very small number of IMF bailouts to Pakistan succeeded and the country is already under a debt of 5.8 billion dollars to the global lender from past bailouts.

The total debt of Pakistan government is around 100 billion dollars which is 35 percent of the country’s GDP in 2018-19. China alone accounts for one-fifth of Pakistan’s total debt as it provides soft loans for China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Pakistan’s currency has breached 150 rupees per dollar mark and the stock market crashed to three year low after the bailout programme was announced. The bailout packages to Pakistan will not succeed until stringent economic reforms like curtailing the defense budget are implemented.

Tags: PakistanPakistani Military
Share202TweetSend
Amit Agrahari

Amit Agrahari

Engineering grad but Humanities and social sciences are my forte. Avid reader of religious Scriptures (Especially Hindu), Lord Shiva devotee

Also Read

Trump mulls troop withdrawal from South Korea, Indo Pacific up for grabs?

Trump mulls troop withdrawal from South Korea, Indo Pacific up for grabs?

May 23, 2025
Netanyahu vs. the West: Gaza War Sparks Fierce War of Words With UK, France, Canada

Netanyahu vs. the West: Gaza War Sparks Fierce War of Words With UK, France, Canada

May 23, 2025
Trump and co float new Pope as a mediator between Russia and Ukraine, will Putin and Zelensky accept?

Trump and co float new Pope as a mediator between Russia and Ukraine, will Putin and Zelensky accept?

May 23, 2025
Iran Warns Israel Against Strikes on Nuclear Sites

Iran Warns Israel Against Strikes on Nuclear Sites Ahead of Fresh US Talks

May 23, 2025
Zelensky rival and former Ukraine MP Andriy Portnov assassinated in Spain

Zelensky rival and former Ukraine MP Andriy Portnov assassinated in Spain

May 23, 2025
Harvard’s Visa Program Revoked by Trump Administration

Harvard’s Visa Program Revoked: Clash Between Trump Administration and Elite University Escalates

May 23, 2025
Youtube Twitter Facebook
TFIGlobalTFIGlobal
Right Arm. Round the World. FAST.
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • TFIPOST – English
  • TFIPOST हिन्दी
  • Careers
  • Brand Partnerships
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy

©2025 - TFI MEDIA PRIVATE LIMITED

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Indo-Pacific
  • Americas
  • Canada
  • Indian Subcontinent
  • West Asia
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • The Caribbean
TFIPOST English
TFIPOST हिन्दी

©2025 - TFI MEDIA PRIVATE LIMITED

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. View our Privacy and Cookie Policy.