World Bank restores budgetary support to Pakistan
- The development comes after Pakistan showed improvement in economic indicators.
- World Bank alongside Asian Development Bank suspended budgetary support to Pakistan during 2017 due to economic deterioration.
The World Bank has restored budgetary support to Pakistan after more than three years, Federal Minister for Economic Affairs Muhammad Hammad Azhar said on Friday.
The minister said in a tweet that the development comes after Pakistan showed improvement in economic indicators. The World Bank, alongside the Asian Development Bank (ADB), suspended budgetary support to Pakistan in 2017 due to rising macroeconomic imbalances that had arisen in the economy at that time.
The World Bank has restored Budgetary Support to Pakistan on account of strengthening of economic stability. Both ADB and WB had suspended budgetary support to Pakistan during 2017 due to rising macroeconomic imbalances that had arisen in the economy at that time.
— Hammad Azhar (@Hammad_Azhar) 22 November 2019
ADB has already reinstated the budgetary aid two months ago. However, the World Bank had contradictions with the value of rupee and has linked the disbursement of budgetary aid to rupee devaluation.
Meanwhile, the World Bank in its latest report, said that employment is a key challenge in Pakistan as the unemployment rate is low at six percent while the quality of employment is not high.
The bank in its latest paper “Labor Market Analysis Using Big Data; the Case of a Pakistani Online Job Portal" stated that among the employed people, three-quarters work in informal sectors; 36 percent and 24 percent are self-employed and family workers, respectively; and only 12 percent are wage workers with a written contract.
The youth, despite being more educated, face a three times higher unemployment rate and are more likely to work in informal sectors than older people, the report said.
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