THE fifth consecutive budget of this government, to be presented to parliament later today, is more than likely to be yet another timid fiscal policy statement.

Not unlike the previous three budgets under the current finance minister that have been hobbled by serious policy drift and reform inertia, this year’s budget speech will also be a statement of intent to achieve lofty goals that have completely eluded this government for the past several years, including reforming the power sector and containing the fiscal deficit.

Given electoral imperatives, the fiscal year 2012-13 is very plausibly going to be another year of abject failure on most budgetary counts, more so than in the previous three years, with an unreformed power sector continuing to guzzle over Rs1bn a day in resources and the fiscal deficit hovering around seven per cent of GDP.

In fact, this is the first of the many ‘innocent’ frauds the budgetary statement will likely contain — committing to a fiscal deficit target that will in all likelihood be around two per cent of GDP higher 12 months later. By employing overly optimistic assumptions and dubious accounting for yet another year, the finance minister will commit in parliament to a fiscal deficit target that he knows he will not be able to achieve. (In fact, even the reported fiscal deficit for the outgoing year will be misrepresented, as the power sector subsidy to the tune of 1.85 per cent of GDP will be removed from the budget deficit calculation in order to report a lower figure).

For the past two years in a row, the variance of the actual fiscal deficit over what was budgeted at the start of the year has been 40 per cent each year. Since 2009-10, measured in absolute terms, the actual outturn with regard to the deficit has been cumulatively Rs907bn over and above the amount budgeted at the start of the year — a whopping variance of five per cent of GDP in three years.

The other area where the finance minister’s speech is very likely to be economical with the truth is in characterising the election-related freebies in the budget as ‘people-friendly’ or ‘awam dost’. Untargeted subsidies, tax exemptions for the powerful, undeserving salary hikes for well-paid bureaucrats and members of the armed forces, and allocations for ‘pork barrel’ projects in the Public Sector Development Programme (PSDP) to buy the loyalties of increasingly affluent parliamentarians are hardly pro-poor measures — especially when they will be paid for not by roping delinquent sectors and individuals into the tax net but by borrowing from the central bank.

That the effects of the resulting inflation, tax and job-creation prospects by a walking-wounded economy will resonate with the populace far beyond the election cycle, should be enough reason for a supposedly ‘technocratic’ finance minister to desist from traversing this path. That he will not is unfortunate proof that his credentials as a competent technocrat or reformist are not withstanding scrutiny or any objective test of performance.

Under his watch, the reintroduction of tax amnesty schemes, a rejuvenated (and now flourishing) SRO culture and the bizarre exemption of stock market investment from tax scrutiny till 2014 have put paid to any notion of tax “reform” being implemented by this government.

In fact, it is in the area of taxes where the budget will contain its third — and traditional — misrepresentation: in the projection of revenues. Once again, according to media reports, a substantial increase in tax revenues is projected to come from “administrative improvements” within the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR).

While this potential avenue has become a regular feature of the FBR’s revenue assessment for the upcoming year, no one has been able to identify, much less quantify, what these improvements have been in the past three years, and how much they have yielded — if anything at all. In fact, the reality on the ground, judging by reports from the field, is that the FBR has become more corrupt and more predatory in its approach over the past three years. And yet, in the triumph of hope over experience, these elusive improvements are relied upon to deliver next year’s target.

The other usual suspects that will be employed to buttress the revenue side on paper are over-estimated Coalition Support Fund receipts, 3G license fees and, possibly, the balance payment by Etisalat for the PTCL acquisition (assuming it is recorded above-the-line).

On the expenditure side, the chronic under-estimation of government spending on untargeted subsidies is likely to continue, with large financial bailouts of corruption-infested public sector entities  another potential contributor to the eventual over-shooting of the budgetary spending target. On the flip side, governments have traditionally over-stated spending on the social sector, as reported each year to parliament, by including spending on security and law and order under poverty-alleviation expenditure.


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Comments (17)

Ajamal
June 1, 2012 7:08 pm
Need people like Sakib Sherani and Hafeez Shaikh to come out clearly on actual doing of the government. Their credibility should be above any political affiliation.
Haji Ashfaq
June 1, 2012 5:36 pm
Thanks for deleting my comments - always !
Cyrus Howell
June 1, 2012 3:43 pm
The stock market was positive about the budget. "sales tax on imports has been standardized at 16 per cent from 22 per cent to 19.5 per cent." This is also good news on import duties. A 9.5% inflation target is also good if the economy can get there. The jobless rate is 8.5% in the United States and 11% in the EU. They still must recover.
Ercelan
June 1, 2012 2:05 pm
Hoping against hope: one day SS will employ a fine mind to eloquently illustrate the adverse consequences of macro policy for the working poor, and specially the rip-off subsidies that benefit us of the chattering classes. An example of what really worries me are the facts of one, indecent wages for our benefit and two, the absence of public commentary on this consequence of public policy. I dont know if its a "failure" or otherwise of the elites who run and of technocrats who serve islamabad.
Z Ali
June 1, 2012 2:02 pm
yeah right!
Sarwar Faraz
June 1, 2012 1:54 pm
The author has more credibility than the entire finance ministry. He should be congratulated for exposing their fraudulent policies that are leading the country towards disaster.
Aqib E Mehboob
June 1, 2012 12:47 pm
Sakib, eloquent and incisive critique. I really enjoyed reading the above and found it to be very informative.
Aqib E Mehboob
June 1, 2012 12:44 pm
Donors and IFIs have also been duped in the past! That said, I don't think anyone is that gullible now, even our populace.
Sakib Sherani
June 1, 2012 11:00 am
I resigned from the position of principal economic adviser. Hope thats credible enough!
yousuf
June 1, 2012 10:00 am
well done sakib....it was easy to read. and yes, all your assessments can pass the empirical evidence. wish the minister's analysis could do the same.
Haji Ashfaq
June 1, 2012 9:37 am
Absolutely true that 'Shaheen' is making fool to the '18 karor awwam'. And Raika talks of 'hard facts'. The hard facts are very difficult to digest. The hard facts are : A minister of the present Government has declared the PM Yusuf Gilani as the most 'corrupt' PM of Pakistan - commodity prices have increased beyond 'bearable, level - 10 people average are being killed in Karachi daily - Loans have doubled during last 3 years ( $ 28 bn to 56 bn) - Utility bills have swollen but there is no Utility available. Hazaron hain shikwe - kya kya sunaoon'.
iftikhar
June 1, 2012 9:20 am
good critiques of the budget. it would have been far better had the author would have the credibility of truth when holding government office.
Dr Meekal Ahmed
June 1, 2012 8:47 am
Actually they may deceive the nation but not the economy! That is the real problem. Another year of stagflation and growing vulnerabilities which could push the economy over the edge.
A.Javed
June 1, 2012 8:31 am
What ever the budget will, no matter how badly it will effect the Nation but at least the government is going to present its fifth budget and al most near to complete its tenure. We should be glad on this unlike pessimistic people who only sees one side of picture that common men are dying of hunger, suffering with deadly load shedding of both electricity and gas, facing abusive and degrading language and messages from outer world upon our National policies and dilemmas. Just avoid their voices and be ready to celebrate the budget party. be happy democracy is evolving in the country so if people die with inflation or poverty no guilt its their own fault. His highness Prime Minister Syed Yousaf Raza Gillani had humbly asked them to leave the country if anyone is having any problem. SO if you want to live in, than make up your mind that all you need to live is to evolve democracy and completion of five years tenure of democratic government. But if you want food, electricity, shelter and a secure future then you may leave no one stops you.
raika45
June 1, 2012 7:08 am
They may deceive the nation, but not international donors.They are not that gullible.They rely on hard facts.
Baba Sidni
June 1, 2012 6:25 am
It is innocent in my opinion, as the government is trying its level best to get a proper fiscal policy, poor administrators, themselves don't know how to fix it, and are either too proud to seek someones help, or think, that all others are incompetent as themselves. But trust me, they are trying their level best. Just their best is not good enough for the public in this case.
malik
June 1, 2012 3:40 am
How can it be innocent? It is more like criminal. Trying to deceive the whole nation and international donors and alike.