April 16, 2023
1 min read

Big rise in poverty in Pakistan

The report says Pakistan’s economy is under stress with low foreign reserves and high inflation…reports Asian Lite News

The World Bank sees poverty in Pakistan will inevitably increase with pressures from weak labour markets and high inflation, according to a media report.

The World Bank warned that further delays in external financing, policy slippages, and political uncertainty pose significant risks to the macro poverty outlook.

In the absence of higher social spending, the lower middle-income poverty rate is expected to increase to 37.2 per cent in 2022-23, according to the World Bank report on the macro poverty outlook for Pakistan, Dawn reported.

Given poor households’ dependency on agriculture, and small-scale manufacturing and construction activity, they remain vulnerable to economic and climate shocks.

Official remittance inflows also fell by 11.1 per cent, partly due to the exchange rate cap that made informal non-banking channels preferable. Any decline in overall remittances would reduce households’ capacity to cope with economic shocks, adding pressure on poverty, warns the report, Dawn reported.

The report says Pakistan’s economy is under stress with low foreign reserves and high inflation. Activity has fallen with policy tightening, flood impacts, import controls, high borrowing and fuel costs, low confidence, and protracted policy and political uncertainty. Despite some projected recovery, growth is expected to remain below potential in the medium term.

Health and education outcomes are also at risk as the high inflation and reduced incomes could lead poor households to lower school attendance and food intake, cautions the outlook, Dawn reported.

With high public consumption, economic growth increased substantively above potential in FY22 at the cost of growing imbalances that led to pressures on domestic prices, external and fiscal sectors, the exchange rate, and foreign reserves.

These imbalances were exacerbated by the catastrophic flooding in 2022, surging world commodity prices, tightening global financing conditions, and domestic political uncertainty.

ALSO READ: Pakistan’s inflation to rise to 29.5% in FY23

Previous Story

War over Taiwan inevitable, say US generals

Next Story

Nepal names N.P. Saud as new Foreign Minister

Latest from -Top News

Bhutan King Takes Holy Dip at Maha Kumbh

So far, around 35 crore devotees have taken a holy dip at the Triveni Sangam….reports Asian Lite News Bhutan’s King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck participated in the Maha Kumbh festivities in Prayagraj

Modi Set for White House Visit

The invitation comes days after a recent phone call between the two leaders on January 27…reports Asian Lite News Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to visit the White House next week

US Faces Ire Over USAID Shutdown 

US President Donald Trump’s adviser and head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) Elon Musk said on Monday that Trump had agreed to shut down USAID, the main agency for foreign
Go toTop

Don't Miss

India slams Pakistan’s drone delivery of arms in borders

Indian officials have reported drones coming in from Pakistan to

Pakistan Protests Attack on Frankfurt Consulate

The video being shared on social media depicts the protesters