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Pakistan's unemployed figure to reach 5.6 million this year

According to the ILO estimates, Pakistan’s employment-to-population ratio in 2023 fell well below its pre-crisis trend line at 47.6pc, while the number of unemployed persons is expected to reach 5.6m — a surge of 1.5m since 2021.

ANI Sep 15, 2023 22:36 IST googleads

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Islamabad [Pakistan], September 15 (ANI): The number of unemployed people in Pakistan is projected to reach 5.6 million this year, an increase of 1.5 million since 2021, Dawn News reported on Friday.
Dawn is a Pakistani English-language newspaper.
The news daily reported quoting the International Labour Organisation (ILO) report that the Pakistan labour market has yet to recover fully from the COVID-19 pandemic and economic crisis.
Moreover, the female unemployment rate is expected to reach 11.1 per cent.
According to the ILO estimates, Pakistan’s employment-to-population ratio in 2023 fell well below its pre-crisis trend line at 47.6pc, while the number of unemployed persons is expected to reach 5.6m — a surge of 1.5m since 2021.
“Pakistan is facing a multitude of challenges that are taking a heavy toll on its labour market while driving greater informality and out-migration. The ILO, through its Fourth Decent Work Country Programme (DWCP), is dedicated to addressing the plight of workers and struggling enterprises and to finding solutions that will help to increase the security of their livelihoods through these difficult times,” said Geir Tonstol, ILO Country Director for Pakistan.
Compared to a post-Covid-19 no-crisis counterfactual scenario, employment numbers in 2022 are estimated at 1.8m below where it should have been. The estimated “jobs gaps” will grow to 2.4m in 2023.
Coupled with the devastating floods of 2022 and the currently unfolding financial crisis, Pakistan’s economy is experiencing negative growth and inflationary pressures that enterprises and households are finding increasingly difficult to withstand.
Pakistan’s total debt and liabilities have risen by 29 per cent to Rs 56.21 trillion in the fiscal year that ended on June 30, the country’s central bank said on Wednesday. This comes as the government borrowed heavily to finance its spending requirements, as per Dawn.
Pakistan’s debt and liabilities at the end of the last fiscal year, including domestic and foreign, totalled Rs 77.104 trillion, up from Rs 59.772 trillion the year before.
The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) data shows that in the fiscal year 2022/2023, the total debt and liabilities as a percentage of GDP increased to 91.1 per cent from 89.7 per cent in the previous year, as per Dawn.
The nation’s debt rose 28.4 per cent to Rs 72.991 trillion, while the liabilities increased 34.6 per cent to Rs 4.587 trillion in FY2023.To finance its expanding budget deficit and to cover the cost of repaying its domestic debt, the last Pakistan Democratic Movement government borrowed heavily from domestic sources, namely commercial banks.
As per Dawn, because the International Monetary Fund loan programme was suspended and there were no inflows of foreign currency through bilateral and multilateral channels, the government was forced to rely significantly on domestic borrowing, which increased its stockpile of debt.
The country’s domestic debt, as a result, increased by 25 per cent to Rs 38.808 trillion in FY2023.
The Pakistan government borrows funds from commercial lenders, multilateral institutions, the Paris Club, and international financial institutions to meet budget deficits, finance the current account gaps, and build up foreign exchange reserves.
A steep decline in the value of the local currency, however, caused the amount of foreign debt to rise, reaching Rs 32.495 trillion in FY2023 as opposed to Rs 24.358 trillion in FY2022. The rupee's value fell by 41 per cent during the last fiscal year. It traded at 286 per dollar in FY2023, down from 204 in the previous year.
The total debt and liability servicing rose 76 per cent to Rs 9.819 trillion in FY2023. The interest payments on debt rose to Rs 5.935 trillion from Rs 3.331 trillion, according to Dawn.
The pressure on domestic funding is increasing as a result of the bigger budget deficit and the absence of significant foreign inflows. (ANI)

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