by
Ali Ashraf Khan
- Qaraz ki pitey they Maeen
Laikeen Samjhetey They ke Haan
- R a a n g Laiyegi Haamarri
F a q a a h M a s t i a i k
d i n
-
- “ I use to drink wine by taking loans.
I was also conscience of the fact that this high spirited
starvation of mine will take its toll some time some day.”
Mirza Asadullah Ghalib was the greatest poet of his
time and quite a large number of his poems are not only prophetic but also
fit on the events in Pakistan. Mirza Ghalib once went to meet the Resident
Governor of Delhi. The Governor questioned him, are you a Muslim.
Ghalib’s reply was I am half a Muslim, I do not take pork but I do drink
liquor and wine. This depicts Ghalib’s character and his entire dewan
– the collections of his poems describes the conditions of Musalmans
during those days of mutiny of 1857. In fact It was the Indian Muslims
strength for Independence which later culminated into Pakistan in 1947.
Mirza Ghalib use to drink to the extent of being a
drunkard but at the same time his best poems are when he use to be in high
spirits. As the story goes Mirza Ghalib once went to bazaar to buy
groceries, he spent the whole amount in buying wine and liquor and brought
them home, when his wife questioned him about other items, his simple
reply was God has promised food and not wine. So, I bought liquor with the
money available with me and God will provide the other items.
So, this was Mirza Ghalib and his couplet cited above,
fits on all fours with the events in Pakistan, soon after the
assassination of Quaid-e-Millat Liaquat Ali Khan. After the death of
Liaqat Ali Khan, it was a free for all for the politicians, who wanted the
largest chunk from the body of the infant state. The worst thing that
could happen was the migration of the All India Muslim League leaders from
their homes to this Eldora' do, which according to them they had founded
and then wanted to reap the harvest. In 1949 the value of one American
dollar was around Rs. 3.00 and the British pound was around 5.00. This did
not fit in the scheme of things of the arbiter's of the fate of Pakistan.
They invested more and more in foreign currency to travel abroad and live
in right royal moughal style, because they were promised Pakistan of a
proud nation, which had snatched Independence from both Hindus and the
British. So there was no alternative but to fall into the loan trap.
Instead of aggrandizing the nation and making use of the wealth, which
nature had endowed Pakistan with. The rulers discarded the advice of the
Quaid and the first loan was taken in March 1952 from the International
Bank for Reconstruction & Developments ( World Bank ). Pakistan also
became the Member of IMF on 11th July 1950 with a promise to receive aids
for imports which later turned into debt liability. All this money taken
on loan was spent in providing luxury to the politicians and the
bureaucrats instead of spending on nation building activity. How true was
Mirza Ghalib when he said – “ Qaraz ki pittey they mein. “ Liquor
and wine were never banned in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan right from
1947 till 1976 when Prime Minister Mr. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had to ban the
use of liquor and wine on political grounds. As a matter of fact in the
days of the so-called glory of 1958 to 1967 Night Clubs were galore in the
cities of Karachi, Dacca, Lahore and Islamabad, where more wine was
consumed than water. By and large this is how the dollars obtained as
loans have been consumed in Pakistan and has over burdened every single
Pakistani with debt liability of which they have never been informed. Our
simple people only know how to pay taxes, to let the rulers live in royal
moughal style. The political inadequacy, the demon of provincialism, the
lust of power and the colonial type of misrule led to the dismemberment of
Pakistan in 1971 and emergence of Bangladesh. The student leader Shaikh
Mujeebur Rehman of 1947 became the father of the nation of Bangladesh.
It is a pity that the potential adequacy evaporated
from the minds of our politicians and the rulers to the extent that Mr. A.
K. Fazalul Haq, a popular Musilm Leaguer from East Pakistan, who moved the
Pakistan Resolution in 1940 at Lahore was dubbed as a traitor by Mr.
Mohammad Ali Bogra, who was appointed Prime Minister by Mr. Ghulam
Mohammed the then Governor General of Pakistan in 1954, not only this
Shaikh Mujeebur Rehman, the popular leader of East Pakistan was arrested
in Agartala conspiracy case and released was later arrested by General
Tikka Khan as a traitor. Later on General Tikka Khan, the then Chief of
the Army Staff slauted the same Shaikh Mujeebur Rehman as President of
Bangladesh, when he visited Pakistan to attend the 2nd Islamic Summit at
Lahore in 1974. Another veteran Muslim Leaguer Malik Mohammed Qasim was
arrested on high treason only for writing a letter to the Chief Election
Commissioner of Pakistan to fulfill his responsibility under the
constitution by holding general elections in Pakistan, as the national
convenor of the Lawyers Action Committee and later he was absolved of this
charge when MRD was launched against the regime in 1981. These are the
antiques of rulers and politicians whose activities are for them and their
party and not for Pakistan and its nation.
1972 saw the establishment of another democratic
government in Pakistan with a civilian Chief Martial Law Administrator and
the President of the republic vested in one person, parallel of which is
not found in the annals of history, the government continued to live on
borrowed money which kept on mounting, and in 1977 a loan of $ 2.2 billion
has risen to $ 9.65 billion in 1980 and now it is $ 37 billion. Nearly 47
% of the revenue goes to debt servicing, Pakistan is rated to be the
highest debt servicing borrower of IMF and World Bank, while some other
borrowers of the third world have to pay 7 % or even 1 % of their revenue
to service their debt liabilities. How true Mirza Ghalib was when he said
“Qaraz Ki pittey they laikin samjhtey they haam raang laigee hammari
faqah masti aikdin.”
This is only the trait of Pakistani administration that
we borrow to pay an earlier debt with pride and thus the debt keeps on
rising like a recurring decimal. In order to shed the debt burden it is
imperative that Pakistan ask for a moratorium for at least 20 years and
utilize the amount required for debt servicing for nation building
activities. Reduce the expenses drastically, if necessary foreign travels
of politicians and bureaucrats and if we mean business even of the players
must cease. There was an advice given by Mr. Chou en lai, the Prime
Minister of China and Second in Command to Mao Tse Tung to the then
President of Pakistan Mr. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto that instead of building his
international stature, he should try first to build a strong Pakistan,
that advice was conveniently ignored and scraped at the alter of personal
ambition of the ruler to go down in history as a world statesman, and it
was gallows that were seen, fate has these turns.
Premier Chou en lai of China use to live in a three bed
room apartment and would travel to his office in Great Peoples Hall on his
bicycle, where the official limousine would be available to him for state
purposes and not for personal use, can we not borrow a leaf from China’s
book and emulate the example of Caliph Omar, who had to account for to a
commoners question for the extra three yards of cloth used in his new
dress, there is no royal road to survival. For that matter a royal road
has never been a source of strength for nation and the country after
having learnt from Mirza Ghalib. Let us now stop drinking on loans.
Ban the imports of luxury items, rather the imports of
all items which can be produced indigenously, this will provide
establishment of factories and create more jobs for the manpower which is
now engaged in car snatching and robberies and other criminal acts. This
will also reduce the imbalance in our balance of payments. If only this
item is worked out squarely and strongly, half the battle is won.
Whatever may be our tall claims about foreign and local
investment, yet its an admitted fact that investments are shy, the foreign
investors are reluctant to invest in Pakistan for more than one reason,
the top most reason being that the law & order situation is not
conducive for any investment whatsoever. It is a talk of the town that
nobody is safe. Let us ensure the safety. One window operation has been
the promise of every successive government since the days of democracy,
even they could not deliver the goods, the official rigmarole and running
from pillar to post emanating from the corrupt bureaucracy makes the
investment shy. The government must stem this ignoble factor in our
national life in order to attract more and more investment leading to
smooth running of the wheels of economic productivity.
All economic policies must have a stamp of stability,
what has been happening in our unfortunate country is that a political
government formulates a policy more for the benefit of the party in which
the country is also benefited to some extent and at the end of the term
this policy is reversed by the successor government. The investor is
alarmed at this change, he is not sure where to invest, if the investor
can not get the return on his investment the investment is not worth its
while. This is the major obstacle to investment local and foreign.
All cultivable land must be brought under the plough
and given to the tillers of the soil, as land belongs to the tiller of the
soil. Extend Income Tax on agricultural income without any expediency.
Abolish the rule of 2 % minority of landlords, Sardars, Vederas, Shaikhs
and Chaudhris, so that the majority of Pakistanis and the tax-payers live
in comfort and above the poverty line. The government should develop the
National Tax Number (NTN) culture, which should be a bye word for every
citizen of Pakistan as is the National Identity Card.
The stock markets instead of being the hand made of
speculators should act as guide of the investors who are normally fleeced
by the smart speculators. This tendency in the stock exchanges must be
corrected by use of electronic and print media and through the policies
enunciated by the stock exchanges to educating the masses and promote
investment culture in Pakistan.
The government should take effective measures to stop
Hawala culture in the foreign remittances. At the moment what happens is
that the remittances for export proceeds have to be received within 120
days. Most of the time it happens that the exporter on account of
circumstances beyond his control can not receive payments from foreign
buyers within 120 days, then what happens is that he has to forgo the
exchange rate difference of the time of its late receipt to the prevailing
rate of exchange on previous 120th day when it was due and thus he is
forced to fall back to hawala system through which he arranges his payment
on 120th day and keeps the late payment out of the country for better
returns. If the government gives some incentives for remittances received
in Pakistan through banking channels. It will go a long way to improve the
remittance position of Pakistan.
Over the years the position has been that the business
class and the salaried class have borne the brunt of the taxes and therein
also the discretionary powers of the taxation authorities have created
wild riot in the tax administration and revenue collection. The Chief
Executive is reported to have said very wisely that he is going to reduce
the contact between the taxpayer and the tax collector, this will go a
long way to minimize malpractice and corruption on the part of the tax
authorities.
The interest on Export refinance is yet another
agitating factor for the exporters who are the people to reduce the
balance of payments widening gap, generate revenues, promote and utilize
the utility services and also generate employment in the country. As a
matter of fact the exporters are the orphan children of the economy of
Pakistan, who work for themselves and earn for the country valuable
foreign exchange without any assistance worth the name from the government
in spite of a huge bureau of export promotion to boot. The interest rate
on export refinance has been enhanced from 8 % to 10 % or more with an
enhanced export target and that too with increase in utility charges,
telephone charges, patrol charges and postal charges, as a matter of fact
the postal charges have been doubled. Let not the government fix
unattainable targets with back breaking loads of extra cost in input to
enable the exporters to take part in the international markets at a
competitive prices, then and only then the foreign exchange can be earned,
export targets can be achieved and the balance of payment deficit reduced.
Pakistan should seek a moratorium on foreign debts for at least
ten years and arrange low interest loan of five billion dollars to give a
jumpstart to our ailing economy. It is our firm opinion that with a
moratorium of twenty years or more Pakistan can not only use the debt
servicing on nation building activities and reduce the government
expenditure with austere hands. The foreign debts to pay off the
installments of the previous loans. No nation can survive with this fiscal
policy which has been followed by our rulers in the name of democracy.
Moratorium would be a very bold and drastic step for the survival of the
country, we need bold, drastic and revolutionary steps to save the country
from a bigger revolution, which is knocking at our door. There is going to
be a vast change in the economic policy all over the world, recession is
on the anvil, let us prepare our selves, tighten our belts to face the
International economic challenges.
Mr. Ali Ashraf Khan is a
Pakistani Businessman and Ex-Politician who bid good bye to politics in
order to concentrate on more useful service benefit of the political
intrigues prevalent in the National Political life of Pakistan. He
frequently writes for English and Urdu newspapers in Pakistan.
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