Pakistan’s new finance minister, Ishaq Dar, will work to rein in inflation and cut interest rates, he said on Wednesday, calling the rupee currency undervalued and promising a solid response to resolve the South Asian nation’s worst economic crisis.
In his fourth time in the role, the chartered accountant must tackle a balance of payment crisis, foreign reserves that cover a month’s imports barely, historic lows in the rupee, inflation exceeding 27% and the aftermath of devastating floods.
We will control inflation,” Dar told reporters in televised comments after his swearing-in, referring to the deep-seated challenges ahead. “We will lower interest rates.”
He warned currency market speculators, saying the Pakistani rupee was undervalued.
“Our currency is currently not where it should be; it is undervalued,” said Dar, who is known to favour intervention in the foreign exchange market to keep the rupee stable.
I hope the speculators will stop. I think they already have it, and we are seeing the rupee rising,” he added. “No one will be allowed to play with the Pakistani currency.”
Dar got the job after his predecessor, Miftah Ismail, a member of parliament’s upper house, became the fifth to quit in less than four years amid persistent economic turbulence.
The rupee has been gaining firmly ahead of his appointment, and stocks responded positively before Wednesday’s swearing-in.
WRECKED ECONOMY
The senior politician belonging to the ruling party of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif flew to Islamabad on Monday night after ending five years in self-exile in London.
In 2017, he had been facing corruption charges he says were politically motivated, but an anti-graft court suspended warrants for his arrest last week, enabling his return.
On Wednesday, the court extended the suspensions.
“I told the court that my passport was revoked,” Dar said after appearing in court.
“I wasn’t able to travel for the last four years,” he added, describing the legal action against him as political victimisation by the previous government of Prime Minister Imran Khan.
Khan’s party denies this.
Analysts say Dar’s key mandate is to halt inflation that mainly stems from his predecessor’s unpopular decisions to stick to preconditions set by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), including rolling back subsidies made by Khan’s government.
Sharif’s coalition government says it inherited a wrecked economy after Khan’s ouster in a vote of no-confidence in April, a charge the former premier denies.
As the new government took over, the IMF’s $6 billion bailout package agreed in 2019 was in the doldrums because of the lack of an agreed policy framework.
Last month the IMF board approved the programme’s seventh and eighth reviews, allowing the release of more than $1.1 billion.
The tranche, said former finance minister Ismail, was likely to be boosted after Pakistan sought help to remedy economic losses of an estimated $30 billion caused by the unprecedented floods.
The government has said that the disaster could cut GDP growth below 3%, down from 5% estimated for fiscal 2022-23.