Connect with us

Business

Govt raises gas prices amid Rs2tr loss

Published

on



ISLAMABAD:

In the face of a staggering loss of Rs2.1 trillion in the gas sector, Minister for Energy, Muhammad Ali, justified the recent increase in gas prices as being in the best interest of Pakistan. He explained during a press conference alongside Minister for Information and Broadcasting, Murtaza, that the government plans to provide a subsidy of around Rs384 billion to gas consumers.

Ali revealed that there had been a loss of Rs879 billion in the gas sector, and this loss had now swelled to a colossal Rs2,100 billion across the entire gas supply chain. The energy minister underlined that the government had no choice but to raise gas prices in order to rescue gas utilities from the looming revenue deficit for the fiscal year 2023-24.

Advertisement

He noted that the diversion of imported gas and the inadequate gas pricing by the previous government had led to a circular debt of Rs2.1 trillion, excluding interest. Ali expressed hope that the adjustment in gas prices, in accordance with decisions by the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA), would help curb the growth of circular debt, mitigate inflation, control interest rates, and reduce fiscal deficits. Furthermore, he anticipated that the new gas prices would attract international companies to invest in exploring indigenous oil and gas.

Subsidies in the gas sector

The sectors set to receive subsidies include domestic, tandoor (clay oven), and fertiliser. The energy minister clarified that the objective of providing subsidies was to shield consumers from the impacts of inflation. However, experts have pointed out that these are essentially cross-subsidies, meaning they are being funded by consumers, and the government does not have to tap into the national treasury.

Read FPCCI urges govt to halt gas tariff hike

Throughout the saga of gas price adjustments, the government has remained silent about the fertiliser and textile barons who were supposed to pay over Rs500 billion in Gas Infrastructure Development Cess (GIDC). These two sectors, despite receiving substantial subsidies, refused to pay the GIDC, which was intended for funding major pipeline projects. As a result, the government’s plans to execute the Pakistan Gas Stream Pipeline project in cooperation with Russia were thwarted.

Advertisement

While the Supreme Court directed the defaulters to pay the cess amount in instalments, these two influential sectors managed to obtain stays from lower courts, avoiding any payments to the government. Meanwhile, they continued to receive multibillion rupees in subsidies.

DESIGN: IBRAHIM YAHYA

DESIGN: IBRAHIM YAHYA

The fertiliser sector, in particular, has been accused of exploiting farmers. While receiving gas at lower prices compared to other sectors, they raised fertiliser prices and collected cess taxes from farmers without remitting them to the government.

Now, the interim government is touting its plan to provide a Rs384 billion subsidy to various sectors. However, it’s worth noting that this subsidy is also being funded by gas consumers through a cross-subsidy mechanism.

The energy minister, detailed that the domestic sector would receive a gas subsidy of Rs139 billion, the fertiliser sector would receive Rs45 billion, and Rs200 billion would go to Roti tandoors (clay ovens). He assured that the monthly bill for protected class consumers would remain below Rs900, even when consuming 0.9 hm3 of gas per month.

Advertisement

Regarding the fertiliser sector, the energy minister explained that the gas price for fertilisers was set at Rs580 per mmbtu, in line with the cost from Mari Gas. He clarified that the government had increased the price by only Rs70 compared to the previous year to protect farmers and ensure food security in the country.

The government had developed a Regionally Competitive Energy Tariff (RCET) in consultation with all key stakeholders, taking into consideration the situations in India, Bangladesh, and Vietnam—countries that had emerged as net exporters of goods and services.

The government’s focus is on conserving gas in sectors that are inefficient or have alternative fuels. Notably, over 50% of commercial consumers are already using liquefied natural gas (LNG), and over 27% of compressed natural gas (CNG) connections are based on re-gasified liquefied natural gas (RLNG). Moreover, 57% of domestic gas connections fall into the protected category, entitling them to receive subsidised gas.

Ali emphasised that a fixed monthly bill of Rs400 had been introduced to ensure affordability. However, this fixed bill has now been increased from Rs10 to Rs400 for the 5.7 million gas consumers. As a result, around 93% of gas consumers are paying a gas price lower than the actual cost of gas.

While 57% of households primarily consume 31% of the total gas, they only account for 11% of payments. In contrast, the upper class, representing 3% of gas connections, use 17% of the gas and incur a 39% billing rate.

Advertisement

 

Published in The Express Tribune, November 1st, 2023.

Like Business on Facebook, follow @TribuneBiz on Twitter to stay informed and join in the conversation.



Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Business

‘Domestic debt restructuring will be painful’

Published

on

By



ISLAMABAD:

As the government maintains silence about its next move after declaring its debt “unsustainable,” former central bank governor Shahid Kardar stated on Monday that Pakistan would need to be in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to qualify for debt restructuring, and the process would be very painful.

Banks may need to take a hit on their principal loans, the central bank may need to relax prudent regulations to lower capital requirements, and high taxes might have to be imposed on cash withdrawals to prevent a run on the banks, according to Kardar.

Advertisement

He delivered a presentation on the prospects of debt relief during the third Pakistan Prosperity Forum organised by the Policy Research Institute of Market Economy (PRIME).

“Pakistan would have to be in the IMF programme to qualify for the debt restructuring,” said Kardar in response to a question.

The Ministry of Finance’s spokesperson did not respond to questions even after three days regarding whether the government has approached commercial banks for debt restructuring.

The servicing of external and domestic debts appears increasingly unsustainable, with Pakistan’s gross public debt now equal to 667% of revenues compared to the average of 214% for more than 20 comparators, according to Kardar. Kardar also pointed out that wasteful expenditures on low-priority and poorly designed projects have made the debt unsustainable. Prospects for recovery depend on progress in restoring debts to manageable levels.

“Debt restructuring is complex, there are no short-cut solutions, and the government would also face issues like foreign currency swap arrangements, deposits with the SBP, bonds with a large number of holders and covered by New York Laws,” said Kardar.

Advertisement

The former governor said that Pakistan may also not qualify for the G-20 Common Framework for Debt Treatment, meant only for heavily indebted countries. Kardar stated that being lower-middle-income, Pakistan may also not get relief under the G-20 framework. He mentioned that bilateral creditors seem reluctant to suspend debt servicing payments due to difficult financial conditions, fearing credit rating downgrades leading to a loss of access to capital markets.

Domestic debt restructuring

Although the Ministry of Finance has not responded to a question on the future course of action, Kardar highlighted the prospects and challenges of domestic debt restructuring.

The former governor said that if Pakistan seeks the write-down of external debt, foreign lenders would also ask in return for similar adjustments in domestic debt. He predicted that banks, being the largest lenders to a bankrupt borrower, will have to bear the burden of some pain.

Read: FM warns of unsustainable debt

Advertisement

Pakistan’s total public debt has already increased to Rs75 trillion or equal to three-fourths of its economy, with interest payments consuming the entire net federal income.

Kardar said that the “reduction or liquidation of domestic debt will require a gradual approach, involving a combination of significantly negative real interest rates, a moratorium and suspension of interest payments for some years, longer maturities, and some write-down of its face value.”

He said that a substantial reduction in the face value of the banks’ lending to the government would hit the capital base of banks, requiring loans to them at concessional rates. A short-term relaxation of the SBP’s prudential regulations on capital adequacy might be needed for domestic debt restructuring. The former governor suggested that, to prevent large cash withdrawals and a run on banks by depositors, the government might have to impose a hefty withholding tax. This would need to be supplemented by the government guaranteeing all deposits for a two to three-year period.

He said that one option could be a higher tax rate on bank incomes, but he stated that it was not a preferred option. Kardar also mentioned that there was not much space for external debt restructuring, as 48% of the debt is owed to multilaterals and is mostly at highly concessional rates. He added that China, which holds 31% of bilateral debt, was already rolling over repayments of $8 billion but was reluctant to accept losses on its lending portfolio.

The former central bank governor found many similarities between Pakistan and Sri Lanka, another country facing a severe debt crisis.

Advertisement

He said that, like Pakistan, Sri Lanka also granted generous tax exemptions and booked a primary budget surplus in only three years since 1951. Sri Lanka, like Pakistan, financed its unsustainable fiscal deficits through foreign and domestic borrowings, resulting in its public debt jumping to 128% of GDP and interest payments being 72% of revenues.

For this fiscal year, the IMF has estimated Pakistan’s interest payments cost at 92% of the FBR’s revenues.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 28th, 2023.

Like Business on Facebook, follow @TribuneBiz on Twitter to stay informed and join in the conversation.

 

Advertisement



Continue Reading

Business

PSX crosses 60,000 points milestone

Published

on

By


Segregation of client assets is critical as brokers have been penalised for using client money illegally. PHOTO: AFP





KARACHI:

The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) smoothly crossed the psychological barrier of 60,000 points during the early trading hours of Tuesday. 

Advertisement

The gains came due to rich individuals and institutional investors making significant new investments in expectation of deep cuts in interest rates and the availability of stocks at low prices.

The PSX benchmark KSE-100 Index hit a new all-time high level of 60,745 points, rising by 1.56% or 934 points before mid-day from Monday’s close at 59,811 points. Penny stocks were the volume leader in the rally including textile, technology, food, bank and steel stocks.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, Arif Habib Limited Head of Research Tahir Abbas said: “The high expectation for a deep 7% cut in the key policy rate (interest rate) by the State Bank of Pakistan over the one-year agreed investors to take new possessions”.

“The central bank is expected to cut its key policy rate to 15% by December 2024 from record high 22% at present…ahead of a potential deceleration in inflation reading next year,” he added

Advertisement

Abbas mentioned that the interest rate cut expectations have made rich individuals and institutional investors relocate their investments to the stock market from fixed-income instruments these days.

Topline Securities CEO Muhammad Sohail said in a comment on X (formerly Twitter) that the PSX is breaking records and the development is “still not surprising.”

The market has gained 50% in only five months to over 60,000 points from 40,000 points. “This is the fastest 50% rise in a few months after 2004,” he wrote.

Read PSX hits fresh record, nears 60k milestone

“When you have an unbelievably low valuation, a price-to-earnings ratio of 3-4%, such recovery is not at all surprising,” Sohail further commented.

Advertisement

Abbas further said the listed companies have booked record high growth in profit of 46% in the first nine months ending September 2023 and added that “accordingly, dividend payments by them rose robustly by 42% in the same period. This is another factor that has attracted new investment at PSX”.

The market is expecting foreign currency inflows worth around $1.5-2 billion from multilateral creditors like the World Bank and Asian Development Bank soon after the IMF executive board approves the release of its second tranche of $700 million to Pakistan in December 2023.

This is another factor for the record-buying spree at PSX.

He anticipated the market reaching 75,000-80,000 points by the end of December 2024 considering all goes well including political stability in the country, economic growth, and global commodity prices remaining stable.

“The next six months seem stable at least”, he maintained.

Advertisement



Continue Reading

Business

Completion of key projects increases water storage

Published

on

By



LAHORE:

The completion of eight ongoing water and hydropower projects by Water and Power Development Authority (WAPDA) is set to significantly enhance Pakistan’s water storage capacity and hydel power generation. The carry-over water capacity in the country will increase from 30 to 45 days, with an additional 9.7 MAF water storage.

 

Advertisement

During a visit to WAPDA House, a delegation from PAF Air War College Karachi, led by Air Commodore Raja Imran Asghar, received a comprehensive briefing. The delegation comprised officers from Pakistan and allied nations.

Read: Water projects presented to Turkish consultants

The delegation learned about the climate change threats and water security challenges faced by Pakistan. WAPDA’s ongoing projects, such as Diamer Basha Dam, Mohmand Dam, and others, were highlighted as crucial for the water, food, and energy security of the country.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 28th, 2023.

Like Business on Facebook, follow @TribuneBiz on Twitter to stay informed and join in the conversation.

Advertisement

 



Continue Reading

Trending