Structural Adjustment Programs: Composition & Effects: S.Akbar Zaidi
Structural Adjustment Programs: Composition & Effects: S.Akbar Zaidi
CHP16
S.Akbar Zaidi
What is SAP?
• Introduction
• intergovernmental institution
• oversees the global financial system
• balance of payment problems
• the stability of currencies.
• IMF headquarters is in Washington D.C , U.S.A
• Member countries
• Where does IMF get the money from?
• member countries: payment of quotas..
• Partly in gold and partly in its own national currency.
An overview of IMF
Functions of IMF:
• Three Major Functions of IMF
1. Surveillance
• Gathering the data and gives advices in making policies of the
country.
2. Technical Assistant
• Strengthening the human skills and institutional skills of the
country.
3. Financial Assistant
• Lending to countries to support reforms
SAP
2. Fiscal Policy
1. Reduce fiscal deficits: Cut down public expenditure
2. Reform tax system
3. Cut or eliminate energy subsidies
3. Public enterprises
4. Close down unprofitable public enterprises
5. Stop preferential treatment to public enterprises
SAP: Composition
4. Financial Sector
1. Improve regulatory framework
2. Relax interest rate ceilings
3. Restructure institutions
5. Industrial Policy
4. Remove protectionism
5. Encourage industries that produce for export purposes
6. Agriculture
6. Remove bias against agriculture: remove protection to
industry
7. Discontinue subsidies
IMF’s lending Arrangements
1. Stand-By Arrangements (SBA).
2. Extended Fund Facility
3. Poverty reduction and growth facility
4. Supplementary reserve facility
Implementation and Effects
• Large number of studies
• “We certainly cannot say whether the adoption of
programmes supported by the fund led to an improvement
in inflation and growth performance. In fact, it is often
found that programmes are associated with a rise in
inflation and fall in growth rate”
• Fiscal cut: Fall in investment and growth, recessionary
• Erosion of industrial base in fragile economies due to
openness
Implementation and Effects (cont.)
• Social unrest
• The SAP’s are so minutely detailed that the govt has little
room to be innovative, and it merely follows the steps
outlined in the document no independent or original
economic program
Implementation of the SAP’s: an examination of the 1988 program
• Targets?
• GDP growth rates of 5.5% or above each year
• Increase investment and improve its efficiency
• Deregulation
• Adjustment in administered prices
• Better fiscal efforts
Achievements and Failures of the 1988 Program
Fiscal Policy
• implementation was weakest in this area
• Tax revenues as a % of GDP remained stagnant
• Steps taken in taxation
• numerous income and wealth tax exemptions were eliminated
• simplification and rationalization of the tax structure
• Attempts to improve tax administration
• Actual results?
• Number of tax payers and coverage remained low
• 121 commodity categories exempt from the GST, so progress in
reducing concessions remained limited
Achievements and Failures of the 1988 Program
Trade and Balance of Payments
• CA deficit declined
• Step-wise reduction in maximum tariff rates
• Elimination of many non tariff barriers
• Import licenses were abolished
• Exports increased sharply (11.5% p.a.)
• Deterioration in services balance
• Noticeable increase in FDI and foreign portfolio investment due to
foreign currency accounts: CA deficit decreased
Achievements and Failures of the 1988 Program
Financial Sector
• Resident Pakistani’s were allowed to open foreign currency
accounts in Pakistan (frozen in 1998)
• Banks were authorized to increase interest rates on deposits
• MCB and ABL were sold to the private sector
o10 new private sector commercial banks and 8 investment banks
were sanctioned
• Increased activity and capitalization in the stock market
• Rate of return on T-bills increased from 6 to 13%
Achievements and Failures of the 1988 Program
Liberalization and Privatization
• A forceful program of liberalizing the economy from govt control
undertaken
• Power generation, commercial and investment banking, and air and
sea transport opened to private investors
• Sanctioning of private investment abolished
• Regulatory restrictions abolished
• Registration of technical and foreign loans
• Procedures for employment of foreign workers
Achievements and Failures of the 1988 Program
Other Areas
1. Agriculture
• Performance of the agricultural sector, particularly cotton,
improved significantly
• Subsidies on pesticides, seeds and agricultural machinery
were eliminated
• Prices of fertilizers adjusted upwards
2. Industry
• Industrial value added increased by 6.3% p.a.
• Large investments undertaken in all major energy sources
• Cotton industries dominated
• Domestic savings increased (due to FCD’s)
• Energy prices increased by an average of 4% in real terms
WB/IMF’s evaluation of the 1988 program
WB opinion
‘While performance during the adjustment period has been
strong in GDP and export growth and in structural reforms to
encourage private sector economic activity, it has been
weaker in achieving a sustained reduction in the fiscal deficit
and in improving external sector balances….lack of
significant improvement in poverty and social sector
indicators.
• 4 key indicators which reflect the state of an economy:
i. GDP growth rates
ii. Budget deficit as a %age of GDP
iii. Current account deficit/GDP ratio
iv. Inflation rate
The latter 3 indicators were way off target : the SAP of 1988
has not been much of a success
WB/IMF’s evaluation of the 1988 program
William McCleary (WB):
• Pakistan’s economy was doing well for itself, and then the IMF
intervened, after which it did somewhat better for a few years
• Pakistan’s economy did well because the conditions imposed on
it were being followed, and because the govt. of Pakistan was
thinking like the IMF
• The IMF/WB policies were sound and things went bad because
of the poor management of the government
WB/IMF’s evaluation of the 1988 program
Mohsin Khan (IMF):
• The changes that have been made, as far as openness and
outward orientation are concerned, have been marginal
• savings/investments were off target
• Large fiscal deficits persisted
• Efforts at resource mobilization were not successful
WB/IMF’s evaluation of the 1988 program
Microeconomic effects
• The impact was sever particularly on labor and the poor
• GST and the subsequent inflation hurt the poor
• Cuts in govt. hiring to release pressure on govt. expenditure
increased unemployment
• Poverty returned to Pakistan following the IMF programs
• Low GDP growth, its sectoral distribution, lower
employment and real wages, cuts in public expenditure and
in social development