Majyd Aziz
A king once asked all the wise
men in his kingdom to travel all around the world and discover the eternal
truth. Years later, they returned and told him that they have found the answer.
It was, ‘and this too shall pass’. Today,
the leaders and office bearers of various Chambers and Associations are
routinely asked at various forums to offer their opinions and views on the
economic situation in Pakistan. More often than not, the representatives of
trade and industry would highlight the difficulties in doing business and would
drone on with a litany of complaints and how these roadblocks were making life
miserable for trade and industry. However, ironically, the nabobs of Karachi Stock
Exchange would continue to maintain their position that everything is
hunky-dory and foreign investors are stepping on one another’s toes to invest
in the self-claimed ‘Best Performing
Stock Exchange in the World”. There is a dichotomy here somewhere. Is
everything super duper on the economic front? Are industry and trade representatives
the perennial cry-babies trying to shift the onus onto Islamabad’s officialdom
or political disposition? There has to be some veracity in both the situations
because just raving and ranting about dire economic issues will not bring sanity
in the business environment.
There is a sense of frustration
within trade and industry that pragmatic and courageous policies are announced
and applauded but generally it seems that policymakers themselves lose interest
and rarely conduct a deep and focused review of the implementation of these policies.
They tend to move on to other subjects with the result that most of the doable
objectives are scattered on the sidewalk because the planner and the implementer
are either not on the same page or, unfortunately, one or both the concerned
officials have been transferred to some other office and the newcomers are
rarely keen to own the policies. Ergo, it’s back to square one.
There aren’t any bombshells or hare-brained
policies either proposed by trade and industry or even by the army of
consultants, mostly foreign, who descend on Islamabad with tried, hackneyed or
even radical game plans. Notwithstanding all the expert advice, theoretical
from consultants and practical from businessmen, the issues and problems
continue to remain the same. Or, as the French say it, plus ça change, plus c'est la
même chose.
So what are the issues that
continue to be the main thrust of all government-private sector heartburning? Invariably,
the enumeration begins with the chronic shortages of electricity, gas and
water. SITE Karachi industrialists will also highlight the deterioration of the
roads in SITE. Load shedding and power outages are so frequent that, as the joke
goes, Pakistanis are ready both for Heaven or even Hell. The approval of CNG
stations to provide affordable fuel for vehicles may have had its initial
benefits but when greed and discretionary powers become the approving methods,
then the proliferation becomes disastrous. So has been the case with CNG
stations. Public vehicle transporters and even private car owners rushed to get
their vehicles converted. Like the Ponzi
Scheme, this too gave a short term relief while the loot was going on
unabated, and today, there are long lines outside CNG filling stations on the
days when gas is available. People have accepted this hardship too. Water has
always been a big bucks item for the tanker
mafia in urban areas while it has become a bone of parochial contention
among provinces on the national front.
While infrastructure shortages
and losses are discussed, debated and even cursed, the representatives of trade
and industry get bogged down every post-Budget time trying to understand what
exactly the Finance Minister had in mind while announcing the amendments,
changes, and additions in the tax regime. What is so comical about the whole
opera is that tax consultants, chartered accountants, and businessmen seldom
seem to understand what FBR has proposed. To most of the businessmen, all this
is gobbledygook, and so the harried business representatives band together and
make the usual trips to Islamabad to try to understand what on God’s green
earth, FBR officials really want to do.
The so-called Global War on
Terror, with all its ramifications, with all its devastation, and with all its
costs has been a nightmarish event in the nation’s history. This war has put
Pakistan in a precarious position and the ensuing result has been the regrettable
branding of the Citadel of Islam as ‘epicenter
of terrorism’ by forces and people hostile to the very concept of Pakistan. The law and order situation was allowed to
deteriorate by politicians, law enforcers, and those in command of the security
and safety of citizens. No one was willing to keep the bull out of the china
shop. Citizens are still left to the mercy of extortionists, kidnappers,
gangsters, suicide-bombers, and petty goons lurking in every nook and corner.
It seems that those who could control the situation were themselves involved in
playing a macabre game and that the impact of this game was shredding the moral
fiber of this country.
There is massive unemployment
with even talented people not getting quality employment opportunities, there
is bad governance with government unable to maintain, provide and sustain the
social infrastructure, politics has not come out of the juvenile stage,
smuggling, under-invoicing and mis-declaration are hot money-making ventures
and are blatantly carried on with neither fear nor apprehension, land is
encroached through the strength and influence of political parties and
government officials, there are guns and ammunition everywhere, there is no
fiscal stability, and people with money are buying bullet-proof vehicles,
hiring more and more uniformed guards, and daily transferring $250 million out
of this country to safer havens.
More ominously, all of the above
are direct result of the corruption syndrome. Today, corruption is the norm not
the exception. Citizens know that and they have resigned to the fact that the
piper has to be paid and thus the piper gets his pound of flesh. 190 million denizens of the Islamic Republic
of Pakistan have also discovered the eternal truth: ‘And this too shall pass’