
Words of caution from Summer Davos
EDITORIAL: It's not every day that the president of the World Economic Forum warns of a 'decade of lower growth.' But that's precisely the message Børge Brende delivered at Summer Davos in Tianjin — a sobering forecast that goes beyond the usual Davos-speak of digital revolutions and climate partnerships. The world, he said, is entering its most geopolitically complex period in decades, and the headwinds facing global growth are intensifying, not fading.
Markets have grown used to brushing off geopolitical shocks. The pandemic was followed by a rapid recovery. Russia's invasion of Ukraine triggered initial panic, but portfolio flows resumed quickly. Even the Israel–Iran war, despite its high stakes, has not yet translated into a prolonged financial crisis. But the accumulation of risks — trade fragmentation, armed conflict, political instability — is beginning to show up in macro projections. Both the World Bank and IMF have now revised global growth forecasts for 2025 downward, from 2.7pc to around 2.3pc.
That may not sound catastrophic, but in a world fuelled by debt and liquidity, even a half-point drag on global GDP has wide-ranging implications. It affects not just trade flows and commodity demand, but sovereign debt sustainability, social stability, and the room central banks have to ease. Brende's warning is timely, not just because of the numbers, but because of the structural shifts underway. The world isn't simply in a slowdown — it's in the early stages of a strategic reordering.
The US-China trade war, once dismissed as a Trump-era anomaly, is now institutionalised policy. China, which still accounts for about 30 percent of global growth, is shifting inward — away from export dependency and toward domestic consumption and digital services. That transition is necessary, but it's not without turbulence. Beijing's real estate market remains fragile, consumer confidence is uneven, and supply chain recalibrations are far from complete. If the Chinese engine sputters, the rest of the world will feel it.
In parallel, the multilateral trade order that underpinned decades of growth is losing traction. New regional blocs, tariff walls, and subsidy races have become the norm. The return of industrial policy may excite national planners, but it fragments global efficiency. When war in one region sends insurance premiums, energy costs, and shipping rates soaring, it becomes harder to pretend these shocks are local. They're systemic—and cumulative.
What's particularly worrying is that none of this exists in isolation. As Brende pointed out, the traditional lines between economic and security policy are now blurred. Conflict doesn't just disrupt supply chains; it drives trade strategy. Currency wars give way to chip bans. Defence deals morph into energy alliances. And through it all, global governance institutions struggle to keep pace.
For developing economies, including Pakistan, this complexity is doubly dangerous. Growth in the Global South has historically ridden the coattails of open trade, capital flows, and commodity cycles. Now, with a flipped interest rate cycle, declining aid flows, and a global turn inward, that model is under pressure. And while the wealthy world debates reshoring and AI regulation, developing countries are facing food inflation, energy volatility, and climate shocks without the fiscal space to absorb them.
The point is not that growth will vanish. It won't. But its sources, reliability, and beneficiaries are shifting. If the coming decade is marked by structural fragmentation and political brinkmanship, growth will become a more selective story—dependent on stability, institutional strength, and geopolitical alignment.
Brende's message, then, isn't just a warning. It's a challenge to policymakers who still act like the post-2008 playbook applies. It doesn't. The new normal is one of overlapping crises, diminishing buffers, and increasingly short market patience. Anyone not preparing for that reality is setting themselves up for failure.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2025
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Business Recorder
2 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Flood project: Pakistan govt seeks $31m financing boost from World Bank
ISLAMABAD: The government of Pakistan has requested the World Bank for increasing the financing envelope by $31 million as well as restructuring of Integrated Flood Resilience and Adaptation Project. The request was made to better align the project with current implementation capacity, performance of the component and operational their readiness, and a stronger focus on resilience. Official sources revealed that the request was based on series of discussions from between senior management of the World Bank, government of Pakistan, and government of Balochistan. The project development objective (PDO) is to improve livelihoods and essential services and enhance flood risk protection in selected communities affected by the 2022 floods. World Bank rates IFRAP implementation as 'moderately unsatisfactory' The proposed additional financing of $31 million and reallocation of US$54 million from other components will support activities under Component 3 of the Parent Project which will increase impact and expand the provision of multi-hazard resilient housing units and livelihoods in Balochistan. The AF will facilitate increasing funding for the housing subsidy grant to 102,000 beneficiaries from the current 35,100. The Additional Financing (AF) aims to scale up housing reconstruction activities in Balochistan Province, covering additional eligible beneficiaries whose homes were affected by the 2022 floods. The affected households were initially identified through the damage assessment conducted by the Government of Balochistan (GoB) and subsequently by the implementing partners of the Project. The AF also includes a Level 2 Restructuring, which reduces the scope of activities under Components 1 and 4 of the Project. It also modifies the Results Framework (RF) to update indicators and targets, including the addition of a relevant World Bank Group Corporate Scorecard FY24–30 indicator. The restructuring does not include any new types of activities, and the Project Development Objective (PDO) remains unchanged. With this AF, the total Project commitment will increase to US$244 million. The need for AF was identified during the implementation of IFRAP. Balochistan was among the provinces most severely affected by the 2022 floods. The Post-Disaster Needs Assessment estimated damage to the housing sector in Balochistan at over $400 million. To address this challenge, the Parent Project was initiated with $75 million equivalent IDA credit for housing reconstruction. However, a significant financing gap remains to fully rehabilitate the damaged housing units in the province. The revised project description is as follows: 12. Component 1 – Community Infrastructure Rehabilitation. This component will finance the rehabilitation of priority community infrastructure damaged by floods, including irrigation and flood protection infrastructure, roads and bridges located in calamity-declared districts of Balochistan. The guiding principle is to build back better with improved infrastructure based on climate risks, improved engineering design standards, and improved construction and maintenance to enhance resilience. The component will also include the technical assistance needed for the design and supervision of the works and for the development of operation and maintenance of the infrastructure. 13. Component 2: Strengthening Hydromet and Climate Services. This component will enhance the PMD capacity to generate and use hydrometeorological information for decision-making, particularly by expanding coverage in the western region, benefiting Balochistan as well as other parts of the country. While financing remains unchanged, cost escalations have reduced the number of Automatic Weather Stations (AWS) from 300 to 110. To ensure sustainability and impact, deployment will prioritize high-risk areas such as flash flood-prone regions in South Punjab and Sindh, aligning with PMD's operational capacity. 14. Component 3: Resilient Housing Reconstruction and Restoration. This component will finance: (i) resilient housing reconstruction grants to beneficiaries for the reconstruction of core housing units damaged by floods; and (ii) institutional strengthening and technical assistance for the reconstruction. It will also support the objective of improved livelihoods generation in the construction sector and allied subsectors. 15. Component 4: Project Management, Technical Assistance, and Institutional Strengthening. This component will support: (i) project management for the FPMU and the provincial PIUs; (ii) technical assistance for M&E, Project Supervision and Implementation Assistance (PSIA), preparation of SoP2, and preparation of community flood resilience plans; and (iii) institutional strengthening through capacity building and drafting a Water Act. 16. Component 5: Contingent Emergency Response. This component facilitates the provision of immediate response to an Eligible Crisis or Emergency, as needed. Following an adverse natural event that causes a major disaster or emergency, the GoP may request the Bank to reallocate project funds to support response and reconstruction. Resources will be allocated to this component as needed during implementation. 17. Results Framework. There are no changes to the PDO. The RF has been updated in line with the revised project design. The indicator 'people with enhanced protection to flood risk' is revised to align with the corporate scorecard indicator 'people with enhanced resilience to climate risks', including its sub-indicators reporting on youth and women. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Express Tribune
7 hours ago
- Express Tribune
$3.7 billion loan deals finalised with China
Listen to article Pakistan and China have signed $3.7 billion equivalent commercial loan deals this week, pulling the foreign exchange reserves back to the double-digits from the critically low level of $8.9 billion in last week. The deals would also help meet a commitment with the International Monetary Fund to close the fiscal year 2024-25 with $14 billion gross foreign exchange reserves. Official sources told The Express Tribune that the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) and the Bank of China have signed a total $1.6 billion deals on Friday. The money will be disbursed by Monday, which is the last day of the current fiscal year. At one stage it appeared that China may not sign the $1.6 billion deals this week, which resulted in hectic backdoor economic diplomacy. The sources said that Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar played a critical role in finalising the deals after he was approached by the finance ministry. Dar first started pursuing the Chinese authorities on May 19 that eventually led to the signing and disbursement of $2.1 billion commercial loan by a syndicate of three Chinese commercial banks this week. A $2.1 billion or 15 billion RMB syndicate financing loan by three Chinese commercial banks matured a few days ago, which pulled the reserves down to $8.9 billion, said the sources. Unlike rollovers of Chinese cash deposits of $4 billion, the Chinese commercial loans have to be first repaid before these are refinanced on new terms and conditions. China has given this $2.1 billion money in RMB currency, which is also reflected in the foreign exchange reserves of the central bank. As a result, the foreign exchange reserves jumped to $12.4 billion on Friday, said the sources. The China Development Bank has given 9 billion RMB, Bank of China 3 billion RMB and ICBC 3 billion RMB. The loan is being extended for a period of three years, said the government sources. There were still $1.6 billion pending amounts, which were slipping to next fiscal year. Ishaq Dar on Friday received confirmation from the Chinese authorities that the remaining two commercial loans have also been finalized and the money will be disbursed very soon, the sources added. In total, Pakistan and China have finalized $3.7 billion worth of commercial loans deals in the past few days. The Friday deal included a $1.3 billion loan of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC). The ICBC had given the loan two years ago at floating interest rates, which translated to around 7.5%. The Bank of China's $300 million loan was also finalized and will be disbursed in Chinese currency. The move to delink loans from the US dollar is not Pakistan specific rather it is part of the overall Chinese policy to decouple its economy from the US currency. Pakistan remains dependent on Beijing for remaining afloat, the friendly nation that is constantly rolling over the $4 billion cash deposits, $5.4 billion worth commercial loans and $4.3 billion trade financing facility. The ADB-backed $1 billion foreign non-Chinese commercial loan was also disbursed last week. During the week ended on 20th June, the SBP reserves decreased by $2.7 billion to $9.1 billion due to external debt repayments, mainly repayment of commercial borrowing, according to a statement that the central bank issued on Friday. During the current week, SBP has received commercial loans equivalent to $3.1 billion and multilateral loans of over $500 million, it added. The foreign exchange reserves slipping to below $9 billion mark underscores the vulnerability of the fragile external sector stability. Heavy dependency on foreign borrowings should also be a matter of concern for the government. The rupee-dollar parity has again started coming under pressure after the central bank went on a heavy buying spree, said the sources. There was also a shortage of foreign currency in the market, which was leading to depreciation of the rupee and compelling commercial banks not to open letter of credits for the imports. Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb has said that the foreign exchange reserves would close over $14 billion by the end of this fiscal year. Islamabad has also sought the rescheduling of the government's concessional loans, preferential buyer credit, and the buyer's credit from the Export-Import (Exim) Bank of China. China has not agreed to reschedule the buyer's credit loans, they added. China has shown willingness to reschedule $1.8 billion worth of government concessional loans and the preferential buyer credit by next month. These loans have been taken for various projects and are over and above the commercial financing that Chinese banks have given to Pakistan.


Express Tribune
8 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Govt reverses tariff cuts on imports
Listen to article The federal government has approved a partial reversal of its earlier decision to completely abolish or reduce regulatory duties on about 285 imported products in the next fiscal year, partially rolling back a move that had placed a dozen industries at a disadvantage. Previously, the government had planned to abolish or substantially reduce regulatory duties on approximately 1,984 tariff lines under a new policy aimed at slashing protection for local industries by 52% over five years. According to sources, of these tariff lines, 285 will now undergo further changes, and new duties will be notified by Monday. The Tariff Policy Board on Friday approved the rationalisation of regulatory duties on finished goods. This will also reduce the projected revenue losses from the tariff rationalisation plan — from Rs200 billion to Rs174 billion. The original intent was to cut import duties on raw materials and semi-finished goods. However, the government also ended up reducing duties on finished goods, which are locally produced. While there is consensus that industries should not receive undue protection, completely exposing them to Chinese competition was also deemed unwise, given the need to protect jobs. Sources said the government has moved a summary for cabinet approval via circulation. Once notified, the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) will issue a statutory regulatory order on Monday to revise duty rates. "This was a much-needed U-turn, as the previously finalised duty rates had placed local industries on a path to closure," said a member of the steering committee. He added that the government has decided the regulatory duty reduction in the first year will be lower than initially planned. For example, instead of eliminating the regulatory duty on polyester fiber entirely, the product will now be subject to a 2.5% duty. Under the revised policy, the average applied tariff rate will decrease from 20.2% to 9.7% over five years — a 52% drop. Initially, the government had planned for the average tariff rate to fall to 15.7% in the first year, cutting the protection wall by 22.3%. This was to be achieved by reducing the average customs duty to 11.2%, additional customs duty to 1.8%, and regulatory duty to 2.7%. Sources said the decision was reversed after some members of the steering committee informed Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif that, contrary to the assumptions of faster export growth, exports might grow slowly — potentially eroding Pakistan's already thin foreign exchange reserves. The original tariff reduction plan was prepared by both foreign and local consultants, who, critics say, lacked knowledge of ground realities. The secretary commerce told the National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance that macroeconomic projections — such as higher export growth and slower import increases — were prepared by the World Bank. Following revisions, the number of tariff lines on which regulatory duties will not be changed in the first year has increased from 828 to 970. As a result, 142 tariff lines are being moved to slabs currently charged at 20% or less. Earlier, the government had planned a 20% reduction in regulatory duties on 602 items. Now, the one-fifth reduction will apply to only 538 tariff lines, with 64 lines excluded from this round of cuts. A major change affects the original plan of a 50% reduction in regulatory duties. Instead of halving duties on 551 tariff lines, the government will now apply the 50% reduction to about 473 lines. The remaining 78 lines — mostly related to finished goods — will see no change. Rana Ihsaan Afzal, the Prime Minister's Coordinator on Commerce, said the ultimate goal of reducing average tariffs to 9.7% over five years remains intact, although the pace has been slowed in the first year. According to the plan, the government will eliminate additional customs duties in four years, regulatory duties in five years, phase out the 5th Schedule of customs law in five years, and reduce the number of tariff slabs to four, with a maximum rate of 15%, also within five years. The World Bank's model projected that exports would grow by 10-14%, while imports would increase by only 5-6%. However, the State Bank of Pakistan and some cabinet members disagreed with these assumptions. When asked about the projections during a National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance meeting last week, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said, "These are assumptions — some may work and some may not." The committee was informed that revenues would grow by 7-9%, compared to an estimated Rs500 billion loss under static calculations. For the next fiscal year, the FBR's net revenue gains from the tariff rationalisation will now rise to Rs74 billion. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had constituted a steering committee, chaired by Muhammad Aurangzeb, to oversee the implementation of the new tariff policy. After receiving feedback from stakeholders, the committee informed the prime minister that a majority of its members believed the original proposal should be retained. However, it has now been decided that tariff lines initially slated for a complete regulatory duty reduction in the first year will instead face a 50% reduction.