Pakistan's Economic Revival Stalled by Political Corruption: Report

A report in Pakistan's Dawn newspaper contends the country's economic crisis is a direct product of its corrupt political system, which prioritizes extraction and rent-seeking. The article, by economist Sakib Sherani, criticizes elite panels for pushing economic reforms while ignoring the need for political overhaul. It argues that genuine investment and competitiveness are impossible as long as firms face a dizzying array of external constraints like high costs, corruption, and policy instability. The core conclusion is that fixing Pakistan's economy is fundamentally dependent on first reforming its political governance.

Key Points: Pakistan Economy Needs Political Reform, Says Report

  • Politics is higher than economics in system hierarchy
  • Corrupt political order enables extraction and rent-seeking
  • Elite panels ignore need for political reform
  • Firms operate under crippling external constraints
3 min read

Pakistan must root out corruption to revive economy: Report

A Pakistani media report argues economic recovery is impossible without first rooting out the corrupt political system enabling rent-seeking.

"The bottom line is that economic reform requires political reform. - Sakib Sherani"

New Delhi, Feb 15

Pakistan's economy cannot be fixed without fixing the politics first, as a corruption-ridden government is coming in the way of economic development, according to an article in the Pakistani media.

An economic system is perforce a product of the political system. The political system is higher in the hierarchy than all the other sub-systems; hence, any malfunction there affects all the constituent sub-systems. The degenerating economic order cannot be viewed in isolation from the political economy. It is a function of the political order, kept in place to support the extraction and rent-seeking, the article observes. The two go hand in hand, the article, written by Sakib Sherani in the leading daily Dawn, said.

"Any entity, be it an elite institution or an elite panel of experts, talking about 'deep' economic reform while ignoring or implicitly ruling out reforming the corrupt and misgoverning political order is fooling itself and us. The bottom line is that economic reform requires political reform," it observed.

The article highlights that genuine fresh investment that brings about innovation and efficiency, and improves the country's overall competitiveness, will remain a pipe dream until the extractive, rent-seeking political order that shapes and produces the underlying current economic order is cast aside.

Sherani, a member of several past economic advisory councils of Pakistan, trashes the concept being propagated by an elite panel that "creative destruction" of companies would lead to economic growth.

He pointed out that at the core of the elite policy recommendations is the implicit assumption that the inefficiency and lack of competitiveness in the economy are all internal to the way firms choose to operate, inherent in their business decisions, and independent of external factors. The assumption is that firms have agency over their environment, or that the environment in which they operate is neutral and does not exert any negative influence.

"This is obviously a heroic assumption in the case of Pakistan. And completely off the mark. Formal sector firms in the country operate under the following under dizzying set of constraints such as the most expensive electricity in the region (with frequent interruptions); the highest tax burden (up to 50 per cent plus with the super tax); an over-valued exchange rate; widespread smuggling and under-invoicing that produces a $68 billion supposedly underground (but very much above-ground) parallel economy that undercuts the formal economy," he wrote in the article.

Besides the executive overreach and regulatory burden, there is the cost of corruption and bribes, non-availability of a skilled workforce, training costs for an unskilled and semi-skilled labour force, the product of chronic under-investment by the state, paying for water, security, extortion by local criminal gangs, forced hiring of political appointees, and dealing with frequent policy reversals. This set of constraints is not even exhaustive, the article added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The details about the "dizzying set of constraints" for businesses are shocking. 50%+ tax burden and the most expensive electricity in the region? No wonder their economy is struggling. This is a sobering case study on how corruption and poor governance directly strangle growth and hurt ordinary people the most.
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Priya S
As an Indian, I genuinely feel for the common people of Pakistan. They deserve better governance and a chance at prosperity. The article mentions a $68 billion parallel economy from smuggling – that's a massive hemorrhage of state revenue. Until the powerful elite is held accountable, things won't change. 🙏
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Rahul R
"Economic reform requires political reform" – this is the golden line. You can bring in all the foreign experts you want, but if the root cause (a corrupt political order built for "extraction and rent-seeking") isn't addressed, it's just a band-aid on a bullet wound. A lesson for many nations, not just our neighbour.
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Aditya G
While the analysis is sharp, I respectfully disagree with the implied notion that the system is the only problem. At some point, citizen accountability matters too. When a society repeatedly tolerates or even enables corrupt leaders for short-term gains, it becomes complicit. Change has to come from within the populace as well.
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Nikhil C
The part about firms having to pay for water, security, and deal with extortion is heartbreaking. Imagine trying to run a business under those conditions. Stability and rule of law are the bedrock of any economy. This article should be mandatory reading for all policymakers in the subcontinent.

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