Monday, May 20, 2019

Manufactured progress

Pakistan seems to be a victim of a chronic ailment called the IMF Bailout Syndrome. Our economic planners and ruling elite have over 60 years reduced this country to the status of a patient suffering from depression who goes to a doctor for treatment. Instead of seeking remedial treatment to rid the cause of depression, the patient gets addicted to drugs.This is exactly what the Pakistani state has been doing after seeking almost 20 such IMF bailout packages. Instead of taking measures to raise revenue through direct taxation, the ruling elite prefers to seek more debts to plug the ever increasing deficit. Things have deteriorated to such an extent that plunder has been legalised or regularised. Foundations which were created for purely legitimate welfare of employees were given tax reliefs and exemptions. Now they are involved in multiple profitable ventures. Some of them are in nexus with big land mafia dons who illegally grab forest land and amenity plots, but never get caught. As long as revenue is not generated through direct taxation and investment in the manufacturing industry boosted, Pakistan can never come out of the debt crisis. Exports will only rise when the manufacturing industry survives.Malik TariqLahore

from The News International - Newspost http://bit.ly/30vm8a8

Related Posts:

  • Unfit to drinkIn 2018, samples of drinking water from Civil Hospital Naushahro Feroze were sent to the Pakistan Council Of Research in Water Resources (PCRWR) on the direction of the Sindh water commission formed by the Sindh High Court. T… Read More
  • Irshad RanjhaniThe brutal death of Irshad Ranjhani has left many questions unanswered. What was even more horrifying was the fact that Irshad was not taken to the hospital in a timely manner. If the reports are anything to go by, when the b… Read More
  • A company in lossesFor many years now, PTV has been suffering from different issues, including the regularisation of contract employees and delayed promotions. New developments in the recent past are reducing the transport and medical facilitie… Read More
  • School busesIt is alarming to see such a large number of private cars, vans and wagons parked bumper to bumper across Peshawar Road near Westridge, Rawalpindi picking and dropping school-going children. The same is the case with the main… Read More
  • Food securityAccording to a report of the International Food Policy Research Institute, Pakistan is standing at 106 among 119 developing countries, as the nation faces starvation and lags behind India and even most of the African states.I… Read More

0 comments:

Post a Comment