25.9 C
Karachi
Friday, April 19, 2024
- Advertisement -

State Bank of Pakistan debunked

TOP NEWS

Islamabad: The federal government has publicly debunked the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) due to its failure to respond to the worsening currency crisis, directing its management to immediately take corrective measures.

In a statement that highlights the widening gulf between both pillars, the federal government crossed the delicate line between its authority and the operational independence of the central bank. The ministry of finance’s press note carried directions for the SBP and placed the entire responsibility of dollar-note shortage on it.

“Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has taken a serious note of the shortage at exchange companies and the scheduled banks,” read the handout. “He has issued orders to the State Bank to ensure that adequate supply of notes is made available in the market immediately.”

Under the SBP Act of 1956, the central bank enjoys complete operational independence, although the Ministry of Finance often calls the shots from the Q Block, but never publicly admitted its interference in the SBP affairs.
However, the administrative weaknesses of the SBP management, headed by its governor Yaseen Anwar, allowed the federal government to go public against the central bank for the first time in years.

With the devaluation of one rupee, an amount of Rs65 billion is added up in the country’s external debt even without any additional borrowing. Since the new government came into power, the rupee has shed its value by over 10% in the open market.

To defend the rupee, the SBP’s move to throw $3.3 billion in the market before the general elections ate a big chunk of reserves, a move that the economists had called naïve. Heavy international debt payments were also fast eating foreign currency reserves.

The International Monetary Fund has long advocated for the operational independence of the SBP and added conditions in the current and previous programmes. But the SBP’s lax management has weakened its case.

On Monday, in the inter-bank market, the dollar was traded at Rs108.5 a dollar while in the open market the rupee gained some value and remained at Rs109.80.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
 

POLL

Will the PML-N led govt be able to steer Pakistan out of economic crisis?

- Advertisement -
 

MORE STORIES