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US Secretary of State Colin Powell recently called US President George
Bush, Jr. with some good news and bad news about UN inspections for
Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD), “Mr President,
the good news is that Saddam Hussain has agreed to unconditional across-the-board
inspections, the bad news is that he has asked for “Arthur Andersen” to
carry out the inspections.” That joke sums up the backlash of
the ENRON financial scandal that has afflicted a score of previously
untouchable US blue-chip multi-billion dollar companies like Worldcall,
Tyco etc, almost all major international accounting firms like “Arthur
Andersen” are under pressure because of “creative accounting” and/or
fudging financial numbers. When World Bank President Wolfensohn accused
the Ms Benazir Regime in 1996 of fudging statistics, he was being discriminatory,
almost all governments are guilty of this “soft” white
collar crime of inflating their revenues and masking their expenditures,
India regularly puts military pensions and border fortifications under
innocuous “Heads” other than “Defence Expenditures”.
In this new world of accounting “glasnost” it is becoming
harder to mask the financial shenanigans of the kind that this country
(and the world) has been witness to.
The World Bank (WB) Pakistan Country Update 2002, the latest independent
external report on the State of the Pakistan’s economy, advises
Pakistan to continue a credible and apolitical accountability process
to instil the respect for the rule of law. The report highlighted numerous
economic challenges frustrating efforts to lower rising poverty in the
country, however the WB report praised the steady pace of reforms and
achievements on the external account, which has certainly improved the
macro-picture.
Governor State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) Dr Ishrat Hussain recently warned
that populist measures are anathema for economic reforms, in the end
they frustrate good governance. Authoritarian regimes can give good governance
because it is far easier for them to implement reforms than for political
governments. When General Pervez Musharraf took power, the economy was
in a shambles, the major reason being the duality of approach of his
predecessors in political power. Contrary to public perception, the infectious
disease of corruption spread with the nationalization spree of the early
1970s but it was really institutionalized during the non-democratic period
of Zia’s military regime from 1977 to 1985. By killing private
enterprise the first PPP regime (1971-1977) succeeded in beggaring the
country without raising the standard of living of those below the poverty
line. The real “killer” was Bhutto’s nationalization
of commercial banks, all viable and extremely profitable entities before
public sector control. Fortunately for Pakistan, the artificial sustenance
of home remittances by expatriate Pakistanis in the 70s and the 80s fuelled
Pakistan’s economy and prevented it from collapsing. With 1977
came the Zia military regime’s blind reliance on Ghulam Ishaq Khan’s
myopic economic policies. The Pakistan Banking Council (PBC) which ran
the Nationalized Commercial Banks (NCBs) inculcated many corrupt practices
but the NCBs avoided suffering the same rampant public loot as that perpetrated
by un-accountable bureaucrat managers running nationalized industries
and commercial enterprises during the period between 1977 and 1985. The
NCBs became susceptible after 1985 with the advent of democracy. By mid-1990,
there was a general realization that before denationalization (or its
more sophisticated term “privatization”) the NCBs badly needed
to be reformed.
When loans are given without financial viability and merit it is a recipe
for trouble, when the bank knows that the recipient has no intention
of returning the loans then it spells financial disaster. The NCBs competed
with each other to give atrocious loans, sometimes for personal financial
gains by the bankers themselves, but mainly due to political and/or bureaucratic
coercion and/or a combination of all three. While we got a lot of rich
bankers and nouveau wealthy “businessmen”, this proverbial
last straw destroyed Pakistan’s economy. Spending illegal money
within the country would be bad enough, unfortunately for Pakistan the “private
banking” ploy came into play i.e. how to stash illegal money in
numbered accounts abroad, and earn “profit” on the sum “invested” on
the advice of “investment advisors”, a sophisticated means
for money-laundering. And who were these “private” bankers
and “investment advisors”, what was the lineage of these “patriotic” Pakistanis,
how did they manage such easy access to the crooked and the faithless,
what role have they played in beggaring Pakistan? And have they been
taken to task or do they still enjoy universal power within the country?
We will explore the rank chicanery of these PR artistes in subsequent
articles.
There has been substantial “economic revival” since Oct 1999
but to give all the credit to the Musharraf regime would not be entirely
fair to the political regimes that preceded them. With the economic sword
of doom hanging over them, first Mian Nawaz Sharif in 1991, and then
alternately Ms Benazir and Mian Nawaz Sharif, made moves to reform the
economic imbalances, nudged along forcefully by the World Bank and the
IMF. Ms Benazir persevered with the creeping independence of the Central
Bank as mandated by former World Bank employee Moin Qureshi during his “Caretaker” stint
as Pakistan’s PM in 1993. While Mr VA Jafarey did a good job as
her Finance Advisor, Senator Sartaj Aziz (and his successor Senator Ishaq
Dar) did an outstanding one for the Mian Nawaz Sharif government. In
the face of their leader’s profligacy they held their ground and
thus saved the economy from irretrievable damage. Sartaj Aziz made drastic
changes in the NCBs to retrieve the abysmal economic situation. With
good advice from SBP Governor Yaqub Khan, he dismantled the Pakistan
Banking Council (PBC) in 1977, among the (five) financial reforms was
SBP’s autonomy. The government turned to expatriate Pakistani bankers,
acquiring the services of the superb Moinuddin Khan from Standard Chartered
to revamp the Central Board of Revenue (CBR) and two outstanding Citibank
executives, Shaukat Tareen for Habib Bank and Zubyr Soomro for United
Bank. All three sacrificed their upwardly-mobile careers for the sake
of their country. Though extremely hard to attract an effective team
of banking professionals attuned to modern practices, they managed to
cajole other Pakistani expatriates enjoying excellent jobs abroad to
return home to lower salaries (and perks) and rank uncertainty, using
personal friendships to appeal to their patriotism and sense of duty.
Some home-based jobless black sheep did slip in, for the most part the
team members selected were outstanding.
Restructuring was a totally new discipline for (late) Moinuddin Khan,
known as a strategic planner par excellence and logistical genius in
banking circles, nevertheless he turned CBR around to an extent. History
must record that Finance Minister Sartaj Aziz enacted the first reforms
by the Mian Nawaz Sharif government in 1991 but the trio, Moinudin Khan,
Shaukat Tareen and Zubyr Soomro, should also be credited for seriously
starting on the road back to a semblance of economic sanity in 1997.
Unfortunately for Pakistan, Mian Nawaz Sharif’s sincere intent
ultimately came to grief at the altar of populism.
The first to fall from favour was Moinuddin Khan, his CBR made the (political)
mistake of targeting some of Mian Nawaz Sharif’s friends and (fellow)
politicians as major tax evaders. Shaukat Tareen was almost put on ice
because he would not sanction dubious loans, worse he tried to recover
loans, what cheek! Similar pressures started being applied on Zubyr Soomro.
Because of Pakistan’s liberal foreign exchange policies (annunciated
to his credit by Mian Nawaz Sharif), Pakistanis abroad (and within Pakistan)
had deposited about US $ 10 billion in our coffers. The extravagant spending
of each of the alternate political governments of Ms Benazir and Mian
Nawaz Sharif over the past decade had eaten this up. May 28, 1998 brought
the Catch-22 watershed of all of Pakistan’s financial problems.
With Pakistan’s exploding the bomb in retaliation to India’s
nuclear initiative of several weeks earlier, the economic planners braced
themselves for large scale withdrawals. With nothing in the treasury
to stop a “run” on the banks, the government froze “foreign
exchange” accounts and thereby sent Pakistan’s financial
credibility into a tailspin. Money shies away from uncertainty, we became
literally bankrupt. While the financial responsibility has eventually
been made good, the damage was done, confidence in Pakistan’s financial
commitments was badly eroded.
Mian Nawaz Sharif was a populist trying to be a reformer, his populism
won out to the detriment of Pakistan. Senator Ishaq Dar who replaced
Senator Sartaj Aziz as Finance Minister combined with SBP Governor Yaqub
to get the best deal possible from IMF in the circumstances, it was not
good enough to rescue Pakistan economically. The May 28 foreign exchange “freeze” was
the final nail in Pakistan’s economic coffin, we staggered along.
What the military regime inherited on Oct 12, 1999 was a gigantic economic
mess. The only bright spot, the reforms enacted were slowly taking hold
but many more were needed and at a more drastic pace. This could only
be possible under authoritarian rule, this the Musharraf military regime
provided on Oct 12, 1999. Could Musharraf’s team have done better?
(to be continued) |