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Remittances touch
$4.3bn in July-Oct By Shahid Iqbal
KARACHI:
Overseas Pakistanis kept the morale of poor economy high by sending higher than
expected remittances as the four months data showed over 23 per cent rise
compared to same months last year. The State Bank reported that the country
received $4.315 billion during July-Oct compared to $3.501 billion during the
same period of the previous fiscal, a rise of 23.24 per cent. If the pace of inflow remained the same,
the country might end up with more than $12 billion remittances in the current
fiscal. In the wake of rising trade and current
account deficits the increased remittances give hope that the country could
deal with this situation safely provided the flow of remittances remained
intact. It is also equally important to protect the
remittances inflows, particularly when foreign aid and other inflows, including
the foreign investments have dried up. The inflows during the previous month
showed the sudden jump if compared with remittances during the month of
September. Bankers said the high inflows during October were due to Eidul Azha, which attracted
substantial amount of remittances from around the world. The September proved to be the turning
point as it broke the trend of regular inflows of $1 billion per month as the
total remained much below the trend during this month. Except for the month of September
Pakistanis remitted over $1 billion in July and August of the current fiscal
year. In September remittances stood at $890 million. In October 2011, an amount of $1.017
billion was sent home by overseas Pakistanis, up 19 per cent, when compared
with $855 million received during the same month last year. However, the most visible data was the high
increase in the remittances from Saudi Arabia. During the first 4 months of the
current fiscal the remittances were up by 50 per cent to $1.145 billion. It is
also the highest amount received during this period from any other country. Remittances from all significant countries
have shown positive improvement during the current fiscal as it rose by 17.5
per cent from UAE, USA 19 per cent, UK 23 per cent, GCC states 17 per cent and European Union 10 per cent. The monthly average remittances for the
July-Oct, 2011 period come out to be $1.078 billion as compared to $875 million
during the same period of the last fiscal year. Despite the significant growth in the
remittances, the current account balance seems to need a bigger injection of
dollars, particularly due to the widening trade imbalances. The four-month data shows that trade
imbalance rose to $6.87 billion, a rise of 31 per cent compared to the same
period last year giving a clear signal the coming months would put more
pressure on trade as well as the current account imbalances. The trade imbalance is the real cause of
higher current account deficit. Though the first quarter deficit was limited to
minus $1.209 billion yet it was much higher than the same period of last year.
Last year, it was minus $597 million in four months, while the same fiscal ended
with current account surplus. The government has yet not come out with a
plan or strategy to strengthen the flow of remittances, which has served as
backbone of the economy and helped the country to keep a reasonable amount of
foreign exchange reserves. This inflow with higher reserves succeeded
to keep the local currency relatively stronger against the dollar. November 15, 2011 Courtesy: www.dawn.com Last updated: 17 November 2011
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