Foreign reserves buoyed up by inflow of $700m from Chinese bank

ISLAMABAD: The State Bank of Pakistan-held (SBP) foreign exchange reserves registered a major boost on Friday as Pakistan received $700 million from the China Development Bank.

“AlhamdoLilah! Funds $700 million [were] received today by [the] State Bank of Pakistan from [the] China Development Bank,” Finance Minister Ishaq Dar announced on Twitter.

Pakistan has been struggling to pay off its extraordinarily high levels of external debt and barely has enough dollars to cover less than three weeks’ worth of its imports, and at such a critical time, the $700 million deposit from China will act as a lifeline for the cash-strapped country.

The coalition government has been struggling to boost SBP-held foreign exchange reserves — which currently stand at $3.25 billion as of February 17. However, amid the delay in the revival of the $6.5 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme, the government continued to face difficulty in increasing the reserves.

Earlier this week, Dar announced that the board of the China Development Bank approved a loan facility for Pakistan worth $700 million, and the formalities in this regard have been completed.

Taking to his Twitter handle, Dar announced that the money, which would bolster the country’s diminishing foreign exchange reserves, is expected to arrive at the SBP this week.

Well-placed sources on Wednesday informed The News that the two more commercial loans are also expected to be re-financed including $500 million and $800 million.

So in totality, Pakistan is eyeing the re-financing of Chinese loans up to $2 billion by the end of February or the first week of March 2023.

Pakistan also hopes to reach a staff-level agreement with the IMF this week. However, the global lender would need another one and a half months before calling a board meeting and approving the $1.1 billion tranche.

Pakistan has taken painful fiscal consolidation measures to unlock funding from a $6.5 billion IMF bailout. Experts believe that even with the IMF programme resumed, it was unlikely that the nation’s economy would get back on track.

Continued programme performance and funding are subject to significant risks, especially in the run-up to this year’s elections. A debt readjustment is becoming a greater possibility sometime around 2023-2024.

Pakistan’s external debt servicing obligation for the ongoing fiscal year 2022-23 is $23 billion, of which $6 billion has been repaid and $4 billion rolled over, leaving $13 billion yet to be funded.

The country also has further repayment obligations of $75 billion during FY24-26.

 

 

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