By PTI
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is likely to get USD 4 billion from friendly countries this month to bridge a gap in foreign reserves highlighted by the International Monetary Fund, Finance Minister Miftah Ismail has said, two days after the cash-strapped nation reached a deal with the global lender for the revival of a USD 6 billion loan facility.
Ismail on Saturday referred to the shortfall in foreign reserves highlighted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Dawn newspaper said. As per the IMF, there is a USD 4 billion gap, the minister said.
”We will, God willing, fill this gap in the month of July, he said. We think that we will get USD 1.2billion in deferred oil payments from a friendly country. We think that a foreign country will invest between USD 1.5billionn to USD 2 billion in stocks on a G2G (government-to-government) basis, another friendly country will perhaps give us gas on deferred payment and yet another friendly country will make some deposits,” he said without naming the friendly nations.
Pakistan on Thursday reached a preliminary staff-level agreement with the IMF for the revival of the USD 6 billion loan facility.
The agreement paves the way for the release of the much-awaited USD 1.18 billion loan tranche that had been on hold since earlier this year. The board is also considering adding USD 1 billion to a USD 6 billion programme agreed on in 2019, Dawn newspaper reported.
Depleting reserves, a widening current account deficit and the rupee’s depreciation against the dollar have left the nation facing a balance-of-payments crisis.
Without the IMF deal, which should open up other avenues for external finance, Ismail said the country could have headed towards default.
He said the country would also get around USD 6 billion from multilateral lenders this fiscal year, including USD 3.5 billion from the Asian Development Bank and USD 2.5 billion from the World Bank.
He said USD 400 million to USD 500 million was also expected from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank while the Islamic Development Bank was also likely to increase the funding.
He hoped the rupee would strengthen against the dollar soon after the IMF agreement was finalised, which was expected in the current month.
Besides, he said the government was aiming to curb energy imports to USD 2.7 billion this month from USD 3.7 billion last month, which was also expected to take some pressure off the local currency, as per the Dawn report.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is likely to get USD 4 billion from friendly countries this month to bridge a gap in foreign reserves highlighted by the International Monetary Fund, Finance Minister Miftah Ismail has said, two days after the cash-strapped nation reached a deal with the global lender for the revival of a USD 6 billion loan facility.
Ismail on Saturday referred to the shortfall in foreign reserves highlighted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Dawn newspaper said. As per the IMF, there is a USD 4 billion gap, the minister said.
”We will, God willing, fill this gap in the month of July, he said. We think that we will get USD 1.2billion in deferred oil payments from a friendly country. We think that a foreign country will invest between USD 1.5billionn to USD 2 billion in stocks on a G2G (government-to-government) basis, another friendly country will perhaps give us gas on deferred payment and yet another friendly country will make some deposits,” he said without naming the friendly nations.
Pakistan on Thursday reached a preliminary staff-level agreement with the IMF for the revival of the USD 6 billion loan facility.
The agreement paves the way for the release of the much-awaited USD 1.18 billion loan tranche that had been on hold since earlier this year. The board is also considering adding USD 1 billion to a USD 6 billion programme agreed on in 2019, Dawn newspaper reported.
Depleting reserves, a widening current account deficit and the rupee’s depreciation against the dollar have left the nation facing a balance-of-payments crisis.
Without the IMF deal, which should open up other avenues for external finance, Ismail said the country could have headed towards default.
He said the country would also get around USD 6 billion from multilateral lenders this fiscal year, including USD 3.5 billion from the Asian Development Bank and USD 2.5 billion from the World Bank.
He said USD 400 million to USD 500 million was also expected from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank while the Islamic Development Bank was also likely to increase the funding.
He hoped the rupee would strengthen against the dollar soon after the IMF agreement was finalised, which was expected in the current month.
Besides, he said the government was aiming to curb energy imports to USD 2.7 billion this month from USD 3.7 billion last month, which was also expected to take some pressure off the local currency, as per the Dawn report.