Facebook Instagram Twitter
  • E-papers
  • Headlines
  • Featured
  • Opinion
    • Comment
    • Editorial
  • Tech
  • World
  • Satire
  • Sign in
Sign in
Welcome!Log into your account
Forgot your password?
Create an account
Sign up
Welcome!Register for an account
A password will be e-mailed to you.
Password recovery
Recover your password
Search
Logo
Sign in
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
Sign inSubscribe
Logo Business, Economic & Financial News
  • E-papers
  • Headlines
    • PIA to resume London flights on March 29 after six-year suspension

      30/12/2025

      Shehbaz, UAE president review economic cooperation, seek trade boost

      30/12/2025

      SBP orders extended banking hours on Dec 31 for government tax payments

      30/12/2025

      CCoP endorses Rs135bn PIA privatisation deal, cabinet approval sought

      30/12/2025

      FBR outlines safeguards for tax-exempt imports into Gilgit-Baltistan

      30/12/2025
  • Featured
    • Inside PIA’s second coming

      29/12/2025

      The fall of Pakistan’s textiles

      29/12/2025

      How big is Pakistan’s YouTube industry?

      29/12/2025

      Futures markets are the stock market’s equivalent of having your cake and eating it too

      29/12/2025

      What will it take for Pakistan to cash in on exporting meat?

      22/12/2025
  • Opinion
    • CommentEditorial

      Agriculture at crossroads: Are we ready?

      15/12/2025

      Myth-busting the narrative on the 11th NFC Award

      03/12/2025

      Promoting Made in Pakistan

      01/12/2025

      The decline of centralized grids

      24/11/2025

      Pakistan’s economic gridlock: Why ignoring the SME sector keeps the economy stagnant

      20/10/2025
  • Tech
    • Punjab highway patrol launches Cyber Patrol unit for social media monitoring

      24/12/2025

      TPL Trakker revenue drops 43% in 2025

      27/10/2025

      Supernet’s post-connectivity pivot: doubling revenue at the cost of thinner margins

      23/06/2025

      PTCL to modernise data centres in new partnership with DWP(Digital World Pakistan) Technologies

      03/06/2025

      Pak Datacom revenue rises, even as Starlink business remains stalled

      02/06/2025
  • World
    • Microsoft to invest $3 billion in AI and cloud infrastructure in India

      07/01/2025

      Tesla achieves record China sales in 2024 despite global EV challenges

      03/01/2025

      Beijing denies involvement in cyber breach at US treasury dept

      31/12/2024

      Gold prices edge higher amid quiet holiday trading

      24/12/2024

      HSBC, IFC partner to bridge emerging market trade financing gap

      23/12/2024
  • Satire
  • Sign in

Measures put in place to control hike in internal & external debt: Hammad Azhar

Mr Azhar said during the present governments’ tenure, loans increased by Rs 2.3 trillion but still the external and net borrowing was less than the previous year

By
APP
-
01/02/2019
0
209
Facebook
Twitter
Linkedin
WhatsApp
Email

    ISLAMABAD: Minister of State for Revenue Hammad Azhar Thursday said the government measures were steering the economy towards stabilization as the current account deficit was coming down, exports were on the rise and measures were put in place to control hike in external and internal debt.

    “We have to take some tough decisions. The stabilization measures are not popular, and slowdown occurs in the economy. We have to restructure the public sector enterprises,” he said while responding to a calling attention notice of Senator Sherry Rehman in the Senate about Pakistan’s total debt.

    The minister said according to the official debt figures, during the period from June to November 2018, the domestic borrowing was Rs 11 billion less than the corresponding period of previous year.

    The external net borrowing from June to December 2017 was at $ 6.8 billion while in the same period this year, the present government took a loan of $1 billion, he explained.

    Mr Azhar said during the present governments’ tenure, loans increased by Rs 2.3 trillion but still the external and net borrowing was less than the previous year.

    There was an impact due to a devaluation of rupee against the dollar.

    The minister said the economy inherited by the government was not that of Sweden or Switzerland as the current account deficit and budget deficits were high.

    In the sixth budget which the PML-N government should not have presented, the revenue was overstated, and expenditure was understated.

    The previous government set the revenue target of Rs 5400 billion while this year, Rs 1946 billion were to be set aside for paying interest on loans, he noted.

    He said the circular debt rose from Rs 400 billion to Rs 1400 billion by the previous government and the losses of public sector enterprises increased threefold to Rs 1200 billion.

    The government had to retire $9 billion of Paris debt, he said adding state gas companies incurred losses of Rs 157 billion.

    Hammad said since 1971, the last ten years was a period of lowest growth and highest debt taking as the debt grew from Rs 6000 billion to Rs 26000 billion, the current account deficit rose from 2.5 percent and subsequently to 7, 12 and 19 percent and the imports grew by 26 percent.

    He said the devaluation of rupee against the dollar increased loans by Rs 1,333 billion, while similarly due to a devaluation of the dollar during the last year of PMLN government the debt hiked by Rs 1100 billion.

    He said the former finance minister who was not in the country had the audacity to point fingers at the present government for the present state of the economy.

    In the last two years, $25 billion were taken to defend the overvaluation of the dollar by the previous government, he noted.

    Earlier, explaining her calling attention notice, Senator Sherry said Parliament was the source of democracy and in order to become a sovereign country, the government had to take care of the economy and all segments of the population.

    She said rising loans were affecting foreign reserves and decision making of the government. The total external and internal debt of Pakistan had surged to Rs 26.452 trillion, she told.

    The domestic debt had increased by 21 percent since June 2018, adding the budget still could not be balanced due to the rising deficit which had put pressure on everyday prices and essential commodities in use of common man.

    • TAGS
    • circular debt
    • current account deficit
    • Pakistan's economy
    • Pakistan's external debt
    • Senate Panel
    • State Minister for Revenue Hammad Azhar
    Facebook
    Twitter
    Linkedin
    WhatsApp
    Email
      APP
      APP

      RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

      Headlines

      Circular debt in energy sector rises to Rs5.5tr, WB urges further reforms

      Energy

      Musadik promises to keep Rs2310 billion circular debt in check

      Headlines

      Pakistan’s external debt increases by $1.2bn in six months

      Logo

      Business, Economic & Financial News

      Facebook
      Instagram
      TikTok
      Twitter
      • E-papers
      • Headlines
      • Featured
      • Opinion
      • Tech
      • World
      • Satire
      • Sign in

      Subscribe

      To get email updates from Today News.