10/29/2008 (11:07 am)

Pakistan needs IMF loan

Filed under: finance |

Pakistan must secure a loan from the International Monetary Fund within a week, the German foreign minister said Tuesday, as the country scrambles for aid to avert a run on its currency and a default on its international debt.

Without help, the fight against terrorism in the nuclear-armed nation could be complicated by out-of-control price increases, fewer jobs and rising public anger in the country of 160 million people.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Tuesday that Pakistan’s problems were so urgent it had no choice but to seek an IMF loan.

"I can only hope that the decision is taken quickly, because a loan in six months or six weeks will not help, but only if it is approved within the next six days," Steinmeier told reporters after talks here with Pakistani officials. "Then one can perhaps avoid the most difficult situation in Pakistan."

While Pakistan has already approached the IMF to help solve its balance of payments crisis, it has held out hope that it can raise about $5 billion from other lenders — avoiding an IMF austerity program.

Steinmeier said Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, and other countries were discussing a separate package of assistance for Pakistan to boost faltering economic growth.

"That is the only way to stabilize the situation," Steinmeier said. Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said Steinmeier had been "very supportive" of Pakistan in talks with its foreign backers one hour cash loan. He did not mention the IMF.

High oil prices and dwindling overseas investment have left Pakistan with a yawning balance of payments deficit. The gap is draining its foreign currency reserves and pushing it toward a default on its international debt.

Pakistani officials had hoped to persuade allies such as the United States and Saudi Arabia, as well as institutions including the World Bank, to provide soft loans or accelerate pledged development aid.

But with many governments preoccupied with the global banking crisis, Pakistan has received no firm public commitments of assistance. An IMF program would be politically unpopular in Pakistan because it likely will come with tough conditions.

The government insists it already has taken action to slash unsustainable subsidies on food and fuel — measures that hurt in a country where about three-quarters of the population live on no more than $2 a day.

There is speculation that an IMF loan might come with demands to slash the government’s own budget, including defense spending. In a sign of the times, the army on Tuesday halted work on a new general headquarters in the capital, saying it "shares the nation’s quest for economic stability through a spirit of sacrifice."  

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