New Pakistan finance minister considers stimulus package to help economy

The stimulus options include incentives in collaboration with the central bank or packages targeted at the poor, said one of the people

Topics
Pakistan  | Economic stimulus | economic growth

Faseeh Mangi | Bloomberg 

Shaukat Tarin, Pakistan Finance Minister
Shaukat Tarin, Pakistan's finance minister, during an interview in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Thursday, May 6, 2021. Pakistan plans to boost spending on large infrastructure projects by as much as 40% to create jobs and foster productivity in an economy

Pakistan’s finance ministry is considering a stimulus package to support the economy, according to people familiar with the matter.

Newly-appointed finance minister Shaukat Tarin is leading the initiative, which can be monetary, fiscal or both, said the people, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private. The talks are initial and nothing has been decided, the people said. No formal proposal exists, Tarin said in response to questions.

The South Asian nation is expected to expand 3.9% in the year ending June from a rare contraction in the previous period. Still, the government is wary of a fresh wave of the coronavirus pandemic derailing its projection. At the same time, the government is looking to renegotiate some terms of a bailout package with the Monetary Fund, including raising power tariffs and some taxes, finance minister Tarin said in an interview last month.

The stimulus options include incentives in collaboration with the central bank or packages targeted at the poor, said one of the people. has already disbursed 203 billion rupees ($1.3 billion) in cash handouts to the poorest segment of society, while the central bank introduced multiple support packages.

Tarin was appointed in April just as started to face a third wave of coronavirus cases, prompting authorities to order a week-long shutdown followed by another in the commercial capital Karachi.

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First Published: Tue, June 01 2021. 06:40 IST
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