An Analysis of Pakistan’s Vulnerability to Economic Crisis (original) (raw)

An Analysis of Pakistan's Vulnerability to Crisis

2008

The objective of this study is to analyze the vulnerability of Pakistan's economy to crisis by evaluating the sustainability of its external and fiscal positions in the recent past. Following the emergence of current account deficits and fiscal imbalances in the last two fiscal years, skepticism on ...

How External Shocks and Exchange Rate Depreciations Affect Pakistan? Implications for Choice of an Exchange Rate Regime

2005

A structural vector autoregression (VAR) model shows that external shocks are important in driving economic fluctuations in Pakistan and their importance has increased since September 11, 2001. The primary source of external shocks is foreign remittances, while foreign output has a limited effect. Keeping fixed external factors, an exogenous real exchange rate depreciation shock lowers output-a positive effect on real net exports (largely resulting from import compression rather export expansion)-is more than offset by a decline in domestic demand. The absence of common shocks with major trading partners, the importance of remittances, conventional expansionary effects on the trade balance following a real currency depreciation, and only limited evidence that credibility of anti-inflationary policy would improve with a currency peg support greater exchange rate flexibility. However, the rather large contractionary effects of real exchange rate depreciation on domestic demand suggest that greater exchange rate flexibility could destabilize aggregate output.

The Impacts of Financial Crisis on Pakistan Economy: An Empirical Approach

Financial crisis is an economic situation in which the economy of a country faces some unanticipated downturn or recession, price fluctuations, current account deficits and uncertainty on foreign sector. Main objective of this paper is to measure the long run econometric association between key macroeconomic indicators of financial crisis in Pakistan economy. Secondary data was collected from the annual reports of state bank of Pakistan, economic surveys (2000-2014) and from the IMF database for the period of 2000 to 2014 which latterly transformed into quarterly data for better estimation. Vector Auto-regression (VAR) estimation with the lag length of one with all related applications have been employed in this research to check the long run association among the variables included in the research. Result explains the significant long run associations among the GDP, Inflation, Balance of Trade and Current Account Balance. After applying the augmented Dickey Fuller test it is revealed that the data is facing the problem of non-stationary. To make the data stationary, first difference has been used to make the data stationary and enabling it for further uses. Using the results of VAR estimation system equations also have been generated. In order to check the individual significance of the equations ordinary least square method (OLS) has been used in the research. Result explains that most of the probability values are less than five percent. Further all the R squared values relevant to estimated model are quite high which represent the goodness of fit. The corresponding probability value of F statistic, is less than five percent for all the cases, witnessed the jointly significance of the variables included in the study.

PAKISTAN’S ECONOMIC IMBROGLIO IN POST 2008

The analysis of economic crisis indicates that there is a considerable shift of public resources from social sector to defense sector and security affairs. This shift has changed the development priorities and financial resources have been taken away from socio-economic sector. Supply bottlenecks including gas and power load shedding are considered as a major factor affecting private investment and economic growth. Terrorism has taken a high toll on Pakistan’s economy which leads to slow economic growth, low investment, high rate of inflation, and higher levels of fiscal deficits. Low economic growth and decline in private investment also leads to higher rate of unemployment, which further aggravated the economic situation of the country.

Impact of 2008 financial crisis on pakistan

This paper uses quarterly data of 15 years from 2001-2015 on trade indicators in which imports, exports, interest rate, exchange rate, commercial loans & GDP is included, we try to check the impact of financial crisis of 2008 on Pakistan’s trade specially exports, we use a simple way to estimate it by using OLS method on second level leg values, we have total 58 observations after adjustment of data. We find that there is no such impact of 2008 global financial crisis on Pakistan’s exports due to major goods which were exports from Pakistan is food, and raw cotton, industrial sector was effected but its part in the economy is not much to effect overall system, we also elaborate the reasons by which Pakistan stable itself during that crucial time, some was nature’s help and some was past steps which helps Pakistan to run efficiently.

Pakistan, Growth, Dependency, and Crisis

THE LAHORE JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2011

Compared to the historical and even contemporary experience of India, Pakistan has long been regarded as a “dependent” economy. Gross domestic product growth in Pakistan is typically argued to be contingent on external factors: trade, financial flows, and the interdependence of asset markets. Beyond the rhetoric, there is only ambiguous and contradictory empirical evidence to support this view. This paper offers a new methodology, that of case studies of growth and stagnation, to test the hypothesis of dependency. The results show that growth in Pakistan is influenced by external factors, but that growth is driven primarily by the dynamics of the domestic economy.