ISLAMABAD
INT1
International/
EconomyIMF concludes first round of talks to
bail out
PakistanIslamabad, Oct 31 DPA The International Monetary Fund IMF on Thursday concluded the first round of
technical talks in Dubai with Pakistani officials about creating a system to save the south Asian nation from economic collapse, officials said. Pakistan's
government is facing a tightening balance of payments. Its financing gap stands at around $7 billion for the current fiscal year, which ends June 30, 2009. "There are one or two points on which both sides could not evolve consensus," said a
senior official, who was part of the returning Pakistani delegation Thursday. The official, who refused to be named, said the IMF was insisting on raising discount rates by 3 to 4 percent above the existing 13 percent, in order to curtail inflation, which currently stands at over 30 percent. Pakistani authorities, however, believed that boosting interest rates would aggravate inflation, creating chaos in the
nuclear-armed
state, where prolonged power outages and rapidly increasing
electricity tariffs have already triggered countrywide
protests in recent weeks. Under a Special Drawing Rights SDR quota available to Islamabad, Pakistan could get $1.6 billion a year. "This quota
will be multiplied by four to eight times under a special fund created by the IMF to cater for the needs of those
countries that are facing balance of payment difficulties," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The official added that both sides needed to consult with more senior authorities before a decision could be made to approach the IMF formally. The next round of talks will be held in a few days, he said. Pakistan sought
assistance from the IMF only after its closest
friends, the
United States,
Saudi Arabia and
China, showed reluctance to provide the approximately five billion dollars needed to save the
country from economic meltdown. Pakistan's
financial woes were caused mainly by the political
crisis that ended with the resignation of former president Pervez Musharraf in August and dozens of
suicide attacks by Taliban militants around the country. Both drove away foreign investors. Indeed, the
meeting with IMF officials had to be conducted in Dubai because IMF officials refused to visit Islamabad following a Sep 20 suicide bomb attack at the capital's
Marriott Hotel, in which more than 60
people were killed and more than 250 injured. As a result of the political instability, the country's foreign reserves have dropped some 75 percent over the last 12 months, from $18 billion to around $4.3 billion. At the same time, the rupee has weakened by more than 27 percent against the dollar. dpa ns mga ncs--DPAsy471
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