By Naeem Sadiq
The News International
With the demise of the Rs320 million water fountain, built at the taxpayers’ expense, an important chapter of corruption, mismanagement and irrelevance comes to an end. Its pumps and plumbing met the same end as does the remaining wealth of the country–they got stolen. Perhaps we need to build another water fountain that could push the water to still greater heights. it’s a kind of disease that pushes Pakistan to “pretend” prosperity, instead of spending its resources for the benefit of its ordinary citizens. 
Europeans and Americans, Chinese and Arabs, banks and business houses have all refused to come to our aid. This, to my mind, is the best thing that has happened to Pakistan. We now have a brilliant opportunity – to default. We need to say goodbye to our big-time banker economists who, instead of bringing back their own foreign wealth, keep us engaged in jargons like fiscal deficit, capital investment, circular loans, binomial CRR, liquidity injections and financial determinants. Experts often carefully refrain from using easily understood language. Hence, our current location in a compost pit is rarely attributed to simple explanations. For decades our government has been spending far more than its earnings. For decades we have been importing almost twice the value of our exports. For decades we have been ceaselessly corrupt and inefficient. The three put together make a textbook recipe for disaster unlimited.
Pakistan must unambiguously opt for a default. It must choose to publicly acknowledge its true economic condition. It must confess that, despite having already paid back $45 billion in the last 10 years, it still owes $45 billion that are being used by the lenders as a gun to our head. The experience of the past sixty years tells us what exactly will happen to our new loans. They too will meet the same fate. The country will get a few more months on the heart-lung machine. There will be yet another rush for fancy water fountains, Acacia golf courses and Centaurus hotels. The poor would be driven further away from receiving much needed basic services like health, education and justice.
The following are just a few examples of personal luxuries and public mismanagement. Pakistan imported mobile phones worth about $4 billion in the last seven years. India, on the other hand, not just saved its foreign exchange but also enhanced its own capacity by asking Nokia to set up a mobile phone plant at Chennai for a mere $150 million. With an average of sixty ministers (and their equivalents) in each of the last five cabinets, each entitled to an obscene Prado or a land cruiser (often driven without number plates), we imported $131 million worth of glorified polluting machines. The Rs34 billion Benazir Card scheme, seen as a subtle political bribe by many, would be the last straw that will convert a dignified population into beggars. Instead, it could be used for providing job opportunities and creating skill enhancement projects. As if foreign exchange were of no concern, the president and the prime minister are too happy to remain engaged in foreign visits. Our national airline posts Rs38 billion loss in the first nine months of this year, and happily gets away with it. The sixty years of loans have only kept our leaders afloat, and done absolutely nothing for the ordinary people. The loans have encouraged further mismanagement and pilferage. The scale of poverty has gone up, and those not blessed with electric generators alternate between the age of cavemen and to the modern age every two hours. The change at the social level is abysmal. Our women continue to be buried alive or fed to hungry dogs, while we happily consume the inappropriately named $350 million “Access to Justice” loan from the Asian Development Bank.
The real crisis of Pakistan is not financial in nature. Pakistan is facing a trust deficit, the like of which has never been seen before. Rich Pakistanis have moved out an estimated $6-10 billion in the past few months. Just the top ten rich persons (which include the leaders of the two largest political parties) have enough property and money stashed in foreign lands – to enable them to save Pakistan from another shameful surrender to the IMF. Let us plead and petition our leaders to bring back their wealth and make public their accounts and assets. The people of Pakistan will respond in an unprecedented manner by bringing back whatever each of them has. Collectively it will be enough to pay back all our loans and still be left with enough reserves to make a new Pakistan. This trust can only be built if the leaders demonstrate sincerity by their own personal example and also provide constitutional safeguards. There is much less shame in defaulting and than in pretending to be doing well on borrowed money. In the past, our foreign borrowings have been counterproductive and utterly suffocating for the people of Pakistan. Repeating the same mistakes and expecting different results will be disastrous.
The writer is a freelance contributor based in Karachi. Email: naeemsadiq @gmail.com
Also See:
Forget IMF, Pakistan Should Default














4 Comments
November 13, 2008 at 10:17 am
Default means, all our international property and assets in foreign countries will be confiscated. Now, do we have any sincere leader who has the capacity to pick us and rise us from that slum of default? No we don’t! Default will only be one step towards balkanization.
Second, about the water fountain. We must appreciate the positive development. China spend above $40 billion for their Olympics to assert their ‘global power’ despite having millions of poor. They are above $30 million poor in USA, but does that halt USA from making the ‘world’s best monuments’?
November 13, 2008 at 10:30 am
We cant default. If you review our imports and exports… our exports are lower then the imports. After defaulting nobody will conduct business with us, therefore our nation will starve.
@Mirza
Rs320 million water fountain money could have gone to the poor or development which might have been benefit for our generation to come. We cant follow in the footsteps of USA and China, its totally different Its like comparing oranges with apples. It sounds like you were involved in the water fountain development.
November 13, 2008 at 10:49 am
Встреча главы российского правительства Владимира Путина с премьером банки Омска Госсовета КНР Вэнь Цзябао в одном аспекте –валютном – оказалась почти сенсационной. Глава Госсовета Китая заявил, что объединенными усилиями Россия и Китай смогут противодействовать мировому финансовому кризису. А Владимир Путин, со своей стороны, призвал в рамках такого объединения отказаться от использования доллара США при заключении торговых сделок между двумя странами.
November 13, 2008 at 2:52 pm
@ Imran,
The water fountain was developed by funds by CDGK and equally spend on other infrastructure projects. Its just like saying ‘don’t built the infrastructure and spend the money on poor’. This fountain is pride of Pakistan. Yes, let’s bring the corruption money back from Zardari & Nawaz and utilize that on poor.
We had poor even when we built the Minar Pakistan, Mazar Quaid, President house, Parliament and PM house.