1.
Intr oduction
1.1. Sta tement of the Pr oblem
Since the human have place them self in forms of groups, there have
always have been ups and down in there life. Economically all the
humans have never been divided equally. This has its roots from the
beginning of the earth till now.
There are many economic problems in the world such as
unemployment unstable political structure, poor governance and
many problems related to economic growth.
Poverty cannot be described it can only be felt. One knows more
about poverty when he is hungry and cannot purchase food, he
and his children want new clothes but they can’t purchase it
because of low income, he’s sick and doesn’t have money to have
medicine, he wants to send his children to school but can’t bear
educational expenditures. The world Development Reports define
poverty as “pronounced deprivation in well being’. Poverty can be
measured by following three methods, i.e. Head Count Ratio,
Basic Needs Approach, and Poverty of Opportunity.
According to Head Count Ratio, the persons who fall below the
poverty line as determined in the country are regarded as poor.
In Pakistan, for instance, the persons who earn income which
cannot meet the daily intake of about 2350 calories per person
are considered to fall below the poverty line. Basic Need’s
Approach suggests the measurement of ‘poverty’ with reference
1
to income distribution. According to this approach if the persons
of a fixed income group cannot purchase basic needs, i.e. food,
clothing, housing, education and basic health facilities, they are
considered to fall below the poverty line. The third approach
which is ‘poverty of opportunity’, if due to fall in income, health
or education the human sufferings increase the people are
considered to have fallen below the poverty line.
The major topics of our discussion are causes of poverty in Pakistan.
Poverty has many causes; some of them are very basic. Some
experts suggest, for instance, that the world has too many people,
too few jobs, and not enough food but such basic causes are quite
intractable and not easily demolished.
Poverty has always been a major concern all over the world. 20% of
world population consumes 86% of the world’s goods. While 80% of
humanity gets just the remainder 14%. Besides this, the developed
countries are also trapped in circle of poverty.
Even though Britain is one of the most affluent members of the
European Union, reports show that UK is the worst place in Europe to
be growing up if you are poor as more children are likely to be born in
poverty there, as compared to else where in the EU.
It has been reported by united affair economy that the wealthiest
nation on earth has been the widest gap between the richest and the
poor of any industrialized nation and inequalities continue to grow. In
US it has been reported that for 1998 almost 70% of the wealth was
in the hand of top 10%. In another report they mention that “In 1989,
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the United States had 66 billionaires and 31.5 million people living
below the official poverty line. A decade later, the United States has
268 billionaires and 34.5 million people living below the poverty line.”
The causes of poverty in such countries are the wide gap between
the rich and poor. There is also wide range of inequality.
“Gr owth with equity is good f or poor”
[ Oxa
m, june2000] The common factor that leads to poverty are:
1 – The unemployment
2 –Over population
3 – Inability to meet high standards of living
4 –inadequate education employment opportunities
5 –environment degradation
6 –certain economic and demographic trends and
7 –welfare incentives
Besides the developed countries that are trapped in vicious circles of
poverty, the developing countries are so badly trapped as if it were
quick sand. The more they try to come out of it, the more they get
into it. Pakistan is also adversely affected due to the poverty. Though
poverty is all around the world but is seems as if Asian countries
especially Pakistan is mostly targeted by poverty. Now the questions
that arise in every Pakistani’s mind are that:
• What are the causes that prevails poverty in Pakistan
• What are the factors the bound poverty in Pakistan
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• Who is responsible for poverty
• How should poverty be eradicated
1.2. Sour ce of Da ta and Me thodolog y
The major part of the information to formulate the term paper is
obtained from internet surfing. The repots are authentic and are
directly or indirectly related to the organization such as UNO, IMF,
World Bank and ministry of finance and economic affairs of Pakistan.
The time period allocated for the facts and figures, range from 1960
upto 2003. Both absolute and percentage values are used in the data.
The graphs are drawn using the percentage values whereas the
tables are made using either the percentage or the absolute values.
The time duration for analyzing the data is on the year bases, two
years bases, five years bases and ten years bases as well.
1.3. Objectiv es
The main objectives of the term paper are:
• To find causes for poverty in Pakistan.
• Discuss the factors of poverty in Pakistan.
• Find the causes responsible for poverty in Pakistan.
1.4. Or ganiza tion of Da ta
The following term paper has been organized as follows.
First of all, the term paper stats with the table of contents of the
paper and then comes the introduction.
4
Introduction includes the problem of the statement, source of data
and methodology followed by the objectives that are to be obtained.
Then it is followed by the review of literature which is further
followed by the conclusion.
After this comes the data analysis followed by the conclusion and
policy implications. Then there are the appendices and the
references.
5
2. Review of Liter atur e
Ar tic le
This article has been written by John Wall, the World Bank’s
country’s director for Pakistan in the year 1998.
In this article, he has discussed about the flaws that lie with the two
price indices available i.e. Consumer price index (CPI) and survey
base index (SBI).
A comparable survey using the same poverty line in 1998-99,
2000-01 and 2004-05, adjusted by both the CPI and SPI revealed
the following:
According to both measures poverty headcount had been rising
throughout the 1990s and peaked in 2000-01, a bad drought year.
It then fell sharply in 2004-05, a very good agricultural crop year.
Under the CPI poverty headcount dropped by 10.6 per cent, under
the SBI it dropped 5 per cent.
The reason that both the indices show different result of the
same thing is that incomes of a very large portion of the
population are just above and just below the official poverty line.
Compared to 2000-01, the consumption distribution has improved
substantially in 2004-05, meaning almost all families are better
off. The fact that there is an enormous clustering of population
around the poverty line means that even small changes in
consumption or income can affect poverty headcount ratios
dramatically. This clustering of Pakistan’s population just above
and just below the poverty also implies that families are quite
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vulnerable to falling into poverty with the slightest run of bad
luck. A drought or bad agricultural year, an illness of a
breadwinner, rises in prices of basic commodities not
compensated by rises in income—all of these can cause families
to fall into poverty.
Ar tic le
This article has been written by Dr Faisal Bari Associate professor
and head of economics (LUMS) in 1998.
Dr Faisal Bari discussed about the agriculture growth. The average
growth rate for agriculture declared in the 1990s was 4.54% per
annum. [see appendix 1]
House income distribution for rural areas show that over the 1990s
the share of the lowest 20% of the households, in the overall income,
decreased from 8085 TO 6.9%. At the same time the share of top 20%
of households increased from 40% about 47% by in 1998 – 99. The
Gini coefficient a measure of inequality also increased significantly
over the same period. [See appendix 2]
So even though rural incomes were increasing in 1990s there were
increasing distribution asymmetries that were also coming in. The
rich in rural areas, continued to get richer, while the rural poor got
poorer.
7
Ar tic le
This article is written by Dr Akmal Hussain in the year 1999. He has
proposed that the prevailing paradigm of poverty may have become
obstacle and it is time to replace it with new one. The essential flaw
in the prevalent poverty paradigm is that the issue of power is
systematically excluded from both the understanding of poverty as
well as policies for overcoming it.
The poor in Pakistan cannot simply be seen as free individuals
suffering from merely adverse ‘resource endowments’, and making
choices in more or less ‘free markets’. It is such a paradigm, which
induces the government to think that all it needs to do to reduce
poverty is to allocate more resources to the poor or to the local
governments who are supposed to ‘represent’ them. Within such a
paradigm it is possible to understand a fact that eludes the
conventional paradigm: The poor face markets, state institutions and
local structures of power that discriminate against the poor and
deprive them of a large proportion of their actual and potential
incomes.
The new survey evidence shows that the poor lose as much as one-
third of their income due to unequal access over input and output
markets and extortions by the local administration. For example, as
much as 51 per cent of the extremely poor tenants borrow money
from the landlord. The leverage of power available to the landlord on
the basis of tenants’ dependence for both operation of the land and
loans from the landlord, enables the latter to appropriate the only
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resource which the poor have, namely their own labor. The evidence
shows that health is a major trigger that pushes people into poverty
and the poor into deeper poverty. As many as 65 per cent of the poor
were ill at the time of the interview and lost as much as three
months of the year to illness. Given the inadequacy of the
government’s health facilities as many as 85 per cent of the poor go
to private allopathic medical practitioners for treatment.
The expenditures on such treatment are so high that poor households
are obliged to borrow mostly from informal sources to finance the
medical expenses of their families
Thus the analysis and evidence within this new poverty paradigm
suggest that the key to overcoming poverty is to empower the poor to
get better access over markets, governance, and the institutions that
provide public services such as health care, education and justice.
Empowerment in this specific sense means establishing autonomous
community based organizations of the poor at the local level. These
organizations would be quite distinct from the ‘village organizations’
set up by large cross-district NGOs.
Ar tic le
This journal article has been taken from Wikipedia. In this article the
author has discussed about the various causes of poverty in
Pakistan. Poverty is major economic issue.
One of the causes of poverty describe is the spatial distribution of
poverty. Poverty in Pakistan has historically been higher in rural
9
areas and lower in urban areas (cities). Out of total 47 million living
blow the poverty line, 35 million lines rural areas poverty rose
sharply in rural areas in 1990s and the gap on Income between urban
and rural areas of country become more significant.
Another cause of poverty is gender discrimination. The gender
discriminatory practices in Pakistani society also shape the
distribution of poverty in the country.
Households are considered vulnerable if they do not have the means
to smooth out their expenses in response to changes in income.
Economic vulnerability is a key factor in the rise of poverty in
Pakistan; vulnerability also arises from social powerless.
Environmental problems in Pakistan, such as erosion, use of agro –
chemicals, deforestation etc, contribute to raising poverty on poverty
on Pakistan. Increasing population contributes to increasing risk of
toxicity, and poor industrial standards in the country to rising
pollution.
Pakistan has been run by military dictatorships for large period’s of
time, alternating with limited democracy. These rapid changes in
governments led to rapid policy changes and reversals and reduction
of transparency and accountability in government.
Pakistan is home to large feudal landholding system where
landholding families hold thousands of acres and do little work on the
agriculture themselves. The landlord’s position of power allows them
to exploit the only resource the poor can possibly provide; there own
labor.
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The raise of poverty in the country has been correlated with rise of
Islamic fundamentalism in many parts of country. The Pakistani
government attempts at proposed reforms have been criticized as
weak and have been associated with an “expedient brand of romance
between the establishment and the religious right”
Ar tic le
This article is published by Asian Development Bank and addresses
poverty issues, causes and institutional responses.
Poverty reduction has always been an important objective for the
Asian Development Bank (ADB), and the Bank's Poverty Reduction
Strategy.
The report provides a comprehensive commentary on the causes
of the increase in poverty in the 1990s, and hypothesizes that
poor governance is the key underlying cause of poverty in
Pakistan. The report also analyzes responses to poverty in the
country.
Finally, to accelerate social development in Pakistan, ADB will
concentrate on improving provincial resource management capacity
for better allocative efficiency of human development investments.
ADB's development strategy shall target the most vulnerable groups,
particularly women, children and the indigent
11
Ar tic le
This article is written by Anup Shah. In this article he discussed
about the relation of poverty with hunger.
The direct medical cost of hunger and malnutrition is estimated at
$30 billion each year. One of the major causes of hunger is poverty
itself. The various issues discussed through this site about poverty
lead to people being unable to afford food and hence go hungry
There are other related causes as well, land rights and ownership,
diversion of land use to non – productive use, insufficient emphasis
on export – oriented agriculture, inefficient agriculture practices, war
famine, and drought.
Ar tic le
This article has been written by Ishrat Hussain in year 2000.
Social indicators such as literacy rate, infant mortality rate,
population growth rate, access to water, nutritional intake etc.,
all corroborate the above findings that poverty and weak social
and human development are not only at an unacceptable level in
absolute terms but also have worsened over the last decade.
In this article he has discussed the factors responsible for these
outcomes.
First and foremost, economic growth rate has declined from the
historical level of 6 per cent to 4 per cent and with population
growth rate of almost 2.5 per cent and more, the increase in per
capita incomes has been insignificant.
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Second, the poor performance on economic growth is
accompanied by rising income inequality and high open
unemployment rates. Overall unemployment is estimated at well
over 10 per cent and underemployment even higher. The Gini
coefficient has risen.
Third, the high fiscal deficits of public sector inherited from the
1980 have not allowed much space for poverty oriented. On the
other hand, the ratio of development expenditure has
consistently declined from 8 per cent of GDP to the current level
of 3.2 percent. Even considering the leakages, waste and
inefficiency of public expenditures this decrease has led to
severe imbalances in the demand and supply of public goods
which benefit the poor.
Fourth, the poor governance of public sector institutions and
cornering of public goods by the well-to-do segments of the
society in a general environment of congestion and shortages
have led to reduced access to these services by the poor.
Fifth, in an era of growing globalization, financial integration and
technological revolution of the 1990s Pakistan has not benefited
very much. Foreign direct investment flows to Pakistan have
remained modest in relation to the size of its economy and spurt
in information technology has by passed the Shores of Pakistan.
13
Ar tic le
This article has been released by World Bank. In this article the
author tells about the poverty in Pakistan, Poverty rates fell in the
1970s and early 1980s but rose again towards the end of the 1990s.
According to the Government of Pakistan’s poverty reduction
strategy paper, currently about 10 per cent of the population is
chronically poor, but a much larger part of the population (about
33 per cent) is considered vulnerable and likely to sink into poverty.
Most of the land in Pakistan is arid, semi-arid or rugged, and
therefore not easily cultivated. Water resources are scarce
throughout most of the country, and providing more remote rural
communities with a reliable water supply is difficult.
Because of unequal land distribution, large numbers of rural
people live in poverty. A handful of big landholders own a
disproportionate amount of land. Most farms are small,
measuring less than 5 ha, while 25 per cent of all farms are less
than 1 ha in size. About 80 per cent of the farming community is
made up of landless laborers. Sharecroppers who work land
belonging to large-scale farmers are often in debt to their
employers and therefore take a more meager share of the crops.
Ar tic le
This article has been written by Talat Anwar, Sarfraz .K. Qureshi,
Hammad Ali in [Link] paper examines the landlessness and rural
poverty in Pakistan. The results showed that poverty is strongly
14
correlated with lack of land which is the principle asset in rural
economy of Pakistan. Prevalence of poverty was found to be the
highest among landless at 54.89% across the rural areas in the
country. Not only the poverty gap but also the degree of inequality
among the landless was substantially high. A highly un equal land of
ownership pattern is reflected by the fact that merely 1.07% house
hold own greater then 35 acres and above land in Pakistan. This
result is also supported y the Gini Coefficient of land holding which
was considerably high at 0.6151 in 2001 – 02. It thus appears that
highly unequal land distribution is a main manifestation of poverty in
rural Pakistan.
Distribution of land holding at province level indicates that a very
small portion of all households large firms size in all provinces.
Striking, just 0.1% households own 55 acres and above land in Sindh
and NWFP, Sindh and Balochistan in 2001 – 02.
The finding that Gini coefficient of landownership was substantially
higher than the Gini coefficient of expenditure and income is
suggestive of the fact of high underreporting of expenditure and
income by richest households due to tax evasion. The highly unequal
land distribution seems to have resulted in tenancy arrangements
such as sharecropping which seems to have resulted in high
incidents of poverty particularly in Sindh.
Analysts have shown that land redistribution has been a source of
increased demand for labor and reduced poverty are discussed here.
First, it was found that landlessness and the poor are largely
15
dependent upon non agricultural sources of income. In rural economy
employment is mainly seasonal and determined at low wages,
leaving a large proportion of households in poverty. In this context,
employment programs for rural public works can have significant role
in reducing rural poverty. It is, therefore, suggested to initiate rural
public works programs and scale up the existing programs and scale
up the existing programs.
Second, though agricultural growth is considered, essential for
poverty reduction in rural area, it may not alone be sufficient to
reduce poverty because of the factors that derive the growth in
agricultural sector.
AR TICLE
This article discusses in detail about the causes of poverty.
Poor governance is one of the major causes of poverty. Corruption
and political instability resulted declining business confidence,
deteriorating economic growth, declining public expenditure, low
efficiency in delivery of public services and inadequate access to
justice.
There are many economic determinants as well, which helped
poverty to increase. Such economic determinants are categorized
into structural and other determinants.
Among the structural causes, the increasing debt burden and
declining competitiveness of the Pakistan economy in the
increasingly skills based global economy are the most important.
16
The other economic determinants include investments, fiscal policy
subsidies, inflation, remittances
There are social determinants as well, that play a vital role in
increasing poverty. The social determinants are as follows land
tenure system, the structure of the society, low level development
ethnic and sectarian conflicts. One of the worst casualty that
reinforce poverty and vice versa is environmental degradation. The
environmental determinants are as follows, health, natural
resources.
Ar tic le
This article is written by Qurratulain in September 2, 2006. In this
article she discussed about the poverty reduction strategies that
were launched by government in 2001 in response to raising trend in
poverty during 1990s government of Pakistan spent about Rs.1332
billion to reduce the poverty. And as a result poverty reduced from
39.26 to 28.10 percent (rural) and from 22.69 to 14.9 percent (urban)
but government has spent all this amount only on first strategy of
poverty reduction, i.e. Accelerating economic growth and
maintaining macroeconomic stability, while other four strategies
have been left either untouched or neglected. Government only
targeted high macro economic growth; the level of investment in
human capital has not been seen at even a low extent. Augmentation
in targeted interventions has also been misdirected. Employment
opportunities should have been created with in the industrial or
17
agricultural sector in order to accelerate the production of basic
needs so that consumer goods should have been in the reach of low
income group. While services sector was expanded without any
planning, which resulted in a situation that mobile is kept by every
one but they don’t have access over basic needs.
After that social safety nets have also been neglected, there’s no
proper pronouncement by government in this regard. And finally
‘improvement in Governance’, which has been left untouched. For a
long time, whenever senior government personnel visits a major city
like Karachi, all the traffic on the roads is diverted in the streets and
all the work being done is stopped in order to ensure the security of
the official. By this way those who earn on daily wages, have to
suffer loss in daily wages.
Concisely, in spite of all efforts of government poverty still stands as
an iron wall for Pakistan’s economy. And to break this iron wall we
are in need to apply all five poverty reduction strategies at utmost
level.
2.1. Conc lusion
The following conclusion can be drawn from the review of the above
literature.
The income of the people is just above or below the poverty line due
to which, any disaster to the nation or even a single bread winning
person of the family makes them fall into the poverty line. There is a
lack of good governance. The strategies formulated to remove the
poverty, fails due to improper use of the budget allocated for this
18
project. The gap between the rich and poor is increasing with the
passage of time. There should be a new paradigm put forward to help
the poor. The key to overcome poverty is to empower the poor to get
better access to services such as health care, education, and
justice.
3. AN ALYSIS
From the appendix -3 we can see the trends in poverty.
Poverty is influenced by a number of factors. Some of these may
be general i.e. they would have a bad affect on all the sectors of
the economy and different population groups and others are
those which are specific and may affect the specific sectors of
the economy as well as only the specific population.
Furthermore, causes can be categorized through different ways
they affect poverty level. For example, they may originate from
issues of governance and the structure of institutions or be
economic or social in nature. However, poverty is likely to be the
result of several mutually reinforcing factors that together define its
scope. The prime causes of poverty in Pakistan are as fallows:
3.1. POOR GO VERN ANCE
Governance is defined as the manner in which power is exercised
in the management of a country's social and economic resources
for development. Good governance turns public income into
human development outcomes.
Good governance is an essential pre-condition for pro-poor
growth as it establishes legal framework essential for the sound
19
functioning of land, labor, capital and other factor markets.
Corruption and political instability resulted in declining business
confidence, worsening the economic growth, declining public
expenditure, low efficiency in delivery of public services
The lack of public confidence in state institutions, including the
police and judiciary, directly contributed to worsening conditions
of public security and law and order.
3.1.1. Go ver nance, P olitical I nsta bili ty and P over ty
Political stability is the basics to the creation of an enabling
environment for growth and development.
Economic agents, particularly investors, must be reassured with
regard to the continuation of policies, should have confidence in
the government's credibility in order to operate effectively and
investor should be persuaded to take risk.
The perceived security threat on its eastern border which has
dominated Pakistan's political culture has resulted in the
domination of the military in politics, excessive public spending
on defense at the expense of social sectors. Politically, Pakistan
has alternated with regularity between democratic and military
governments. Between 1947 and 1988, Military governments
were in power for 24 out of the 41 years. During the period of
parliamentary democracy between 1988 and 1999, there were
four national elections and nine changes of government. Three of
the last four civilian governments that were in power in the
20
1990s were dismissed prematurely by successive presidents on
charges of corruption.
Pakistan's involvement in the war during the 1980s and 1990s in
Afghanistan was responsible for the growth of extremist groups,
spread of weapons, and frequent breakdowns of internal
security. The uncertainty created by these frequent changes of
government, the associated economic policies and errors in
internal security has had a negative impact on private
investment and growth.
These and other factors not only discouraged private investment,
but prompted capital flight, as businessmen either migrated in
large numbers (most notably to Canada), or shifted assets to
more favorable locations (such as the United Arab Emirates).
The change of governments in the 1990s was also characterized
by extreme policy reversals as well as one sided and
non-transparent accountability drives that have shattered the
morale of public servants and private entrepreneurs alike.
All these factors have in turn affected growth, and subsequently
poverty levels in the country. In general, political instability and
macroeconomic imbalances have been reflected in poor credit
worthiness ratings.
3.1.2. Non T ranspar enc y in R esour ce Alloca tion
The lack of transparency in public sector planning, budgeting
and allocation of resources in Pakistan has ensured that those
21
who do not constitute the political elite are unable to make
political leaders and the Government responsive to their needs or
accountable to promises. This has brought a result that the
development priorities are determined by the bureaucrats and
the political elites who use the rights for their own sake. Such
people may or may not be in touch with the needs of the citizens.
3.1.3. Inadequa te Acces s to J ustice
Inadequate access to justice is widely perceived in Pakistan to
be a key to governance issue that directly contributes to the
powerlessness of the poor and reinforces social and economic
inequities. With the general deterioration of public sector
institutions in the country, those providing judicial services could
not have been expected to remain insulated from this trend.
In addition, the access to justice of the citizens at large is
severely restricted by an inefficient and corrupt police system
that is often accused of playing in the hands of the influential
and victimizing the poor. In this regard, harassment by the police
and its indiscriminate and unfair means of power has been
repeatedly reported by the poor to be a major source of
insecurity and vulnerability for their lives and livelihoods.
3.2. ECONOMIC DETERMIN ANTS
The slowdown in economic growth in Pakistan during the 1990s
was a key factor in rising poverty during the period. Growth
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declined in all sectors in the 1990s and there was also much
greater instability in the growth rate, particularly in agriculture.
In addition, growth was slower than the average in labor
intensive sectors, such as construction and wholesale and retail
trade, and faster than the average in capital intensive sectors,
such as electricity and gas distribution. Thus not only was
growth slow, but was also not pro-poor.
The causes of the slowdown in growth may be divided into two
categories, i.e. structural and others.
Among the structural causes, the increasing debt burden and
declining competitiveness of the Pakistan economy in the
increasingly skill-based global economy are the most important.
While the former occurred due to economic mismanagement, the
latter was because of Pakistan's low level of human capital
development.
Increasing debt service requirements resulted in a growing fiscal
squeeze, which in turn led to a declining proportion of GDP being
spent on development and social sectors in the 1990s. Falling
public investment adversely affected private investment. At the
same time, reduction in tariffs, and elimination of export
subsidies in the 1990s meant that international competitiveness
became an increasingly important determinant of investment
opportunities in Pakistan. Because of the low level of human
development and poor state of physical infrastructure, areas
where Pakistan was competitive were not many. As a result,
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total fixed investment declined significantly, bringing about a fall
in the economic growth rate.
The bad impact of structural factors was reinforced by other
problems such as racial and sectarian violence, poor state of law
and order, and a high degree of economic and political
uncertainty because of the many changes in government.
Throughout the 1990s, the Government was implementing a
series of medium term structural adjustment programs under
International Monetary Fund (IMF). However, because of frequent
changes in government, adherence to the adjustment program
was unsatisfactory, and as a result, the 1990s can be
characterized as a decade of stop-go stabilization policies, with
the attendant negative impact on growth, but without the desired
improvement of macroeconomic fundamentals.
As shown in Figure 3.1, annual compound growth rates of GDP in
Pakistan have declined from 5 percent for the first period of
adjustment, to 3.6 percent for the most recent period.
Manufacturing growth has been adversely affected by
deficiencies in infrastructure, as well as by slow-moving
domestic demand. In the most recent period of the analysis,
agricultural growth rates have been particularly low at just 1.6
percent. This sharp decline has been mainly due to the
unexpected drought, along with inadequate rainfall that the
country experienced from 1999 to 2001.
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Fig 3.1
SECTORAL GROWTH RATES IN 1990'S
5
GROWTH RATE(%)
0
1988-93 1993-98 1998-02
YEARS
GDP MANUFACTURE AGRICULTURE SERVICES
SOURCE: Government of Pakistan, economic survey, various issues.
3.2.1. In vestment
Investment is a key driving force for GDP growth, and declining
investment levels results in low GDP growth rates. The early
1990s were characterized by the increase of deregulation and
privatization policies. Private investment during this period
increased from 7.4 percent of GDP in FY1988 to 10 percent by
FY1993 (Table 3.1). Public investment averaged just over 8.4
25
percent of GDP in this period, and total investment increased
from 17.3 to 19.9 percent.
Table 3.1 Trends in Investment – 1988 to 2001
Years Total Fixed Public Private Share of the private sector in
Investment Investment Investment Investment the fixed investment
% of GDP % of GDP % of GDP % of GDP % of GDP
FY1988 17.3 15.8 8.5 7.4 46.5
FY1989 18.3 16.7 8.7 8.0 48.2
FY1990 18.2 16.6 8.0 8.6 51.7
FY1991 18.5 17.0 8.3 8.7 51.3
FY1992 19.9 18.4 8.7 9.7 52.7
FY1993 20.6 19.0 9.0 10.0 52.5
FY1994 19.4 17.8 8.3 9.5 53.6
FY1995 18.3 16.8 8.2 8.6 51.3
FY1996 18.7 17.1 8.1 9.0 52.5
FY1997 17.7 16.2 6.8 9.4 58.0
FY1998 17.1 14.5 4.9 9.6 66.2
FY1999 15.0 13.3 5.3 8.0 60.2
FY2000 15.0 13.4 5.3 8.1 60.4
FY2001 14.7 13.1 5.6 7.5 57.3
Source: Government of Pakistan, Economic Survey, various Issues
The period from FY1993 to FY1998 was characterized by a lack
of continuity in economic policy. Total investment declined from
20.6 percent to 17.1 percent of GDP.
In subsequent years, the investment declined even more
significantly as a result of the imposition of sanctions on the
country after the nuclear tests of 1998. Total investment
declined from 17.1 percent of GDP in FY1998 to just 14.7 percent
in FY2001. This decline was entirely due to a sharp fall in private
26
investment, which declined from 9.6 percent of GDP in FY1998 to
7.5 percent in FY2001. Initial estimates suggest that total
investment further declined in FY2002, to 13.9 percent of GDP,
primarily due to the post 11 September regional conflict, the
military standoff with India and a further disturbance in internal
security. Growth depends not only on the level of investment, but
also the pattern. Growth depends not only on the level of
investment, but also the pattern. Trends in the pattern of
investment, as given in Table3.2, show that investment in
agriculture has consistently declined over the period under
review, from an average of 1.8 percent of GDP in FY1988 to just
0.9 percent in [Link] in manufacturing has
Table 3.2 Pattern of investment in the 1990s
Sector Investment (% of GDP)
1987-88 1992-93 1997-98 2001-01
Agriculture 1.8 1.5 1.3 0.9
Manufacturing 2.9 4.7 2.1 2.5
Power 2.0 2.5 2.7 1.4
Total fixed investment 16.5 19.1 14.5 13.0
Source: Government of Pakistan, Economic Survey, various Issues
fluctuated, and reached a peak of 4.7 percent of GDP in FY1993
because privatization. However, by FY1998 it had declined to 2.1
percent of GDP. In the last period of the analysis, there was a
improvement in investment in the sector largely as a result of
balancing and modernization in the textile sector, which was
preparing for the removal of restrictions on international trade in
textiles by 2005 under the World Trade Organization.
27
Investment in the power sector increased from 2 percent of GDP
in FY1988 to 2.7 percent in FY1998, attracted significant
amounts of foreign direct investment.
However, investment in the sector declined to 1.4 percent of GDP
by FY2002.
The patterns of investment indicate that investment in
agriculture, which employs 47% of the labor force, has been low
and falling in the last decade, while investment in industry has
fluctuated sharply. Total investment in the power sector has,
however, been quite high, even surpassing investment in
manufacturing in FY1998. The growth witnessed since the early
90s has not, therefore, been "pro-poor", and has not served to
alleviate poverty to a significant extent.
3.2.2. Emplo yment
Pakistan's labor force is expanding at an annual rate of 2.4
percent, and the average annual GDP growth rate of 4.5 percent
during the 1990s was insufficient to generate the necessary
additional employment. The average employment elasticity in
Pakistan is estimated to be 0.4, which means additional jobs
created in the 1990s would have provided employment to only
about two-thirds of the new entrants into the labor force. It is
estimated that about 0.6 million people are being added to the
ranks of the unemployed every year. In the absence of a formal
social security system, this does not fully translate into an
28
increase in the unemployment rate, but adds to the large number
of under-employed workers in the informal sector, and a growing
number of working poor. The official unemployment rate had
increased to 7.8 percent by 2000 - 6.1 percent for men and 17.3
percent for women. However, unemployment statistics in
Pakistan are generally unreliable because of the relatively high
incidence of disguised unemployment, and the fact that a
significant proportion of total employment even outside
agriculture is generated in the informal sector
3.2.3. Infla tion
High inflation acts as a tax on household incomes by decreasing
purchasing power, and has particularly adverse impacts on
households dependent on fixed salaries, as well as low-income
households in general. Pakistan experienced double digit
inflation from FY1991 to FY1997. As it is clear from Figure 3.2,
however, there has been a declining trend in inflation since
FY1997, which is obviously beneficial to the low-income groups.
Inflation fell significantly, to 7.8 percent in FY1998, and has
continued to decline thereafter, largely because of reduction in
the average rate of increase of money supply to 9 percent
between FY1998 and FY2001. In FY2002, inflation was estimated
at 2.6 percent for the first ten months of the year, with food price
inflation estimated at 1.4 percent. Inflation has also been
controlled because of low average international prices of key
commodities like petroleum and petroleum products, and
29
because of improved supply of food items in markets all over the
country.
FIG 3.2
14
12
INFLATION RATE(%)
10
8
6
4
2
0
FY91 FY92 FY93 FY94 FY95 FY96 FY97 FY98 FY99 FY00 FY01 FY02
3.3. SOCIAL DETERMIN ANTS
The economic determinants of poverty are key to understanding
the circumstances that can intensify poverty, or increase the
proportion of people falling below the poverty line. The existence
of poverty, wherein a significant proportion of the population
remains poor over an extended period of time, is attributable
more to social than to economic factors. The impacts of
economic causes of poverty tend to be prominent under social
structure, and rigid societal mores can act as hurdles to the
equitable distribution of the benefits of growth. Some of the
social determinants of poverty are discussed as follows
30
3.3.1. Land T enur e Systems
Access to land, which is the basic factor of production, is crucial
to reduce poverty in rural areas. Data from the Agricultural
Census of Pakistan conducted in 1990 shows that cultivated land
is highly unequally distributed in Pakistan. About 47 percent of
the farms are smaller than 2 hectares, accounting for only 12
percent of the total cultivated area. Approximately 19 percent of
farms are of 5 hectares or more and account for 61 percent of
the total cultivable land. Table 3.3 details the data.
The uncombined data by province shows that NWFP has the most
number of small farms, with almost 70 percent of farms having
an area of less than two hectares. In Balochistan, a province
characterized by vast expanses of land and strong tribal
society, the percentage of small farms is only 23 percent. In
Sindh, a province where the rural society is dominated by feudal
elite, the percentage of the small farms is 34 percent.
Table 3.3 Farm Classification by Size of Farms
PROVINCE Less than 2 hectares Greater than 2 Hectares and 5 hectares and above
less than 5 Hectares
Farms (%) Area (%) Farms (%) Area (%) Farms(% Area (%)
)
Punjab 45 12 34 29 21 61
31
Sindh 34 9 47 34 19 58
N.W.F.P 69 24 21 29 9 47
Balochistan 23 3 35 12 43 86
Pakistan 47 12 34 27 19 61
Source: Agriculture Census Organization (1994).Census of Agriculture,
[Link] of Food, Agriculture and Livestock.
The data in the table 3.4 indicates that in 1990, 73 percent of
farms were owner operated, while the remaining operated under
tenants operated. Ownership of even small landholdings can
significantly increase the owner's capacity to absorb economic
shocks, and ensure food security for the household. Land
ownership is also the key factor determining access to credit
from the formal banking sector, thereby decreasing the
dependence of the poorest sections of society on informal credit
markets, which can be usually unfair. Unequal land tenure
patterns do not just have implications for income distribution, but
can also have adverse impacts on agricultural productivity. The
prevalence of an unequal land distribution system is thus a major
cause of poverty.
Table 3.4 Tenure Classification of Farms
Total Farms Owner Tenant Operated
Operated
Province Area in % of total Area in Sharecropped Leased Other
Million Acres Area Million Acres % % %
N.W.F.P 5.83 80 1.15 77 21 3
Punjab 27.11 72 7.57 69 29 2
32
Sindh 8.60 65 3.00 76 23 2
Balochistan 5.78 86 0.81 89 7 2
Pakistan 47.32 73 12.54 72 26 2
Source: Agriculture Census Organization (1994). Census of Agriculture, 1990.
Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Livestock
3.4. ENVIR ONMENT AL DEGRAD ATION
AND PO VER TY
The environmental degradation and poverty are interrelated with
one and other, and the two states reinforce each other as well.
These linkages are further explored as follows:
3.4.1. Impacts on Health and Linka ges with P over ty
The most commonly cited indicators of environmental
degradation in Pakistan are increasing air pollution and
contamination of ground and surface water. Recent studies
suggest that emissions of matter in the form of separate
particles in Pakistan exceed WHO recommended standards.
Emissions of pollutants like nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide
and lead, from both stationary and mobile sources are on the
increase, and according to some estimates may be costing Rs.
25 billion in health costs in urban areas.
The poor are more frequently affected by the air and water
pollution, both in rural and urban areas, given their limited
access to quality health care. Extended exposure to such
pollutants is likely to have significant impacts on health in the
form of skin and respiratory diseases, eye infections and in
33
extreme cases, disorders of the central nervous system. The
prevalence of disease intesify poverty firstly by compelling the
poor to devote ever increasing proportions of a limited income to
health costs, and secondly by reducing productivity and working
days.
3.4.2. Ef fects o f De g rada tion of Na tur al R esour ces
The degradation of natural resources can have a overwhelming
impact on the poor, given that they tend to be strongly dependent
on such resources. The rural economy in particular is built
around the sustainable use of natural resources, particularly
water and cultivable land. In Pakistan, the effects of land
degradation have been apparent for the last few decades, and
may have been intensified by the increased use of fertilizers and
pesticides. Similarly, high rates of siltation in uncovered
watersheds and the degraded state of the irrigation system have
led to inefficiencies in water use and wastage of freshwater
resources. Around 25 million acre feet of water is lost every year
due to low water management efficiency. The rural poor are
particularly vulnerable to approval between rent-seeking
Irrigation Department bureaucrats and powerful local feudal
elements. The rural population, particularly small landholders
bear a uneven part of the costs of environmental degradation in
the form of lower crop yields and reduced productivity of
agricultural land. The poor also bear the burden of the
34
degradation of wastelands, which increasingly support smaller
herds, and of forest lands from which they meet their fuel wood
needs. The high rate of deforestation in the country has
endangered biodiversity and may have devastating effects on the
livelihoods of communities in mountain areas, which are
dependent on forests for their energy and fodder needs, in
addition to putting medicinal plants and herbs found in forests to
a variety of uses. The poor are also more vulnerable to the
effects of climate change, which in the short term may manifest
itself in the form of increased incidence of floods, droughts,
cyclones and other natural disasters and in the long term could
have potentially serious effects on water resources and cropping
patterns. The effects of climate change can thus cause
widespread loss of the assets of poor communities in the short
run, which tend to be more vulnerable to natural disasters. In the
longer term, climate change can potentially have negative
effects on the yields of crops such as cotton which are grown in
areas where heat stress is high, and rice which requires the
regular provision of adequate water
4. Conc lusion and Polic y
implica tion
By studying all the facts and figures given in this term paper, the
following conclusions can be drawn,
35
Poverty is high in Pakistan with one-third of the population living
below the poverty line.
From the analysis above, we can see that there are a number of
factors that are responsible for the increasing poverty in
Pakistan, such as:
• Poor Governance
• Environmental degradation
• Economic determinants
4.1. Steps being ta ken by the
Go ver nment for abolishing these
facto r s
Government of Pakistan has been working for many years, trying
to imply different policies in order to abolish poverty from its
roots. ADB (Asian Development Bank) support the Government’s
poverty reduction strategy and ADB’s operational strategy for
Pakistan will balance the Government’s efforts. Improving
governance will be the central focus of ADB’s operational
strategy for Pakistan, in addition to the efforts to encourage
pro-poor growth .The key features of ADB's operational strategy
for Pakistan will be as follows.
4.1.1. Go ver nance
36
Improving governance will be the central theme and the major
focus of ADB's poverty reduction strategy for Pakistan. To this
end, ADB's support will be channeled through a two-pronged
approach: firstly, ADB will bring about reforms in the various
sectors, such as supporting capacity building in public policy,
enforcing women's and child rights, promoting public private
partnerships in provision of social services and motivating
instruments for social protection, will be developed and
implemented in a manner consistent with the overall governance
reforms in the country. Secondly, direct assistance would also be
provided to support the Government's governance reform
agenda. A major focus of ADB's governance support will be in the
area of provincial and district judicial and police reforms. These
governance interference will support a range of reforms that
have important implications for relations between the State and
civil society institutions.
4.1.2. Emplo yment gener ation
Employment generation is very important for poverty reduction
and it will be an important area of support in ADB's operational
strategy.
4.1.3. SOCIAL DEVEL OPMEN T
The poverty assessment also shows that a key factor in
Pakistan's poor growth performance in the 1990s was its low
level of human development. Although it is true that Pakistan has
37
historically under-invested in the social sectors. ADB strategy
will assist the Government in making decentralization a success.
In addition, ADB will concentrate on improving provincial
resource management capacity for better allocative efficiency of
human development investments; establishing decentralized
financing, planning, and delivery of selected social services
(health and population, and education); financing incremental
services (new teachers, textbooks, medicines, etc.) small scale
civil works (building or repairing boundary walls or toilet
facilities in girls schools for example) targeted at making
existing social sector facilities operational, or improving their
utilization; improving quality of primary education by supporting
changes in governance structures, institutions and incentives;
promoting public-private/civil society partnerships in the context
of devolving service responsibilities to local governments; and
improving municipal services in the context of devolving of
municipal functions to local governments, with particular focus
on services for the poor.
4.1.4. Sustaina ble E nvir onmental Mana gement
ADB’s environmental program is also going to expand in the
medium term, with increased emphasis on environmental
management on the part of industry and promotion of
38
renewables. Building capacity within the Government to
effectively monitor the violations of environmental regulations is
crucial, and supporting initiatives such as the development of the
self-monitoring and reporting tool for reporting industrial
emissions to the environmental protection agencies. Finally, ADB
will explore the possibility of using special funds to support
nature conservation and biodiversity in national parks and other
protected areas.
4.2. P er sonal sug gestion:
This term paper was a group effort. While bringing up this term
paper, there were many ideas that were storming in the minds of
every group member.
Following are the refined suggestions that were put forward by
each:
Poverty has brought many problems along with it’s self. To over-
come these problems, an increase in GDP growth rates will,
however, only lead to appreciable reduction in poverty levels if
growth is broad based. To generate employment opportunities on
a scale needed for long-term poverty alleviation, it is necessary
to create an environment favorable for private economic activity,
and encourage domestic and foreign investment. That requires
significant improvements in management of public resources,
establishment of law, and a move to a less disturbing system of
economic regulation. For the longer term, it is very important to
39
not only bring about a significant decrease in the incidence of
poverty, but also to reduce vulnerability to economic variations,
and remove the feeling of powerlessness that is the most
important thing that shapes the lives of the poor. Poverty
alleviation thus has to be effected not only through
macroeconomic policies, but also by bringing about significant
improvements in the structure. Seventy-five percent of Pakistan's
poor live in rural areas, a large proportion of who are pushed into
poverty because of the instability of income. There must be
higher growth and greater stability of income and employment in
rural areas by focusing on (i) getting the policy of the
government to be right (ii) increasing agriculture productivity (iii)
increasing employment (iv) promoting rural-urban linkages by
improving communications, particularly rural roads (v) expanding
rural economic infrastructure, especially for irrigation, drainage,
and water resource conservation and management (vi) investing
in infrastructure in areas where poverty is high, and where the
lack of infrastructure is a barrier to development.
For social development, it must provide protection to the most
vulnerable groups, particularly women, children and the poverty-
stricken. There should be organizations besides ADB that should
target projects for women, and encourage gender mainstreaming
across all projects, in addition to promoting policy and
institutional reforms for awareness and enforcement of women's
40
right's and representation in all aspects of economic and social
development.
A ppendix- 1
41
Years Agricultural (growth rate)
1960’s 5.10
1970’s 2.40
1980’s 5.40
1991 5.00
1992 9.50
1993 -5.30
1994 5.20
1995 6.60
1996 11.70
1997 0.15
1998 4.50
1999 1.90
2000 6.10
2001 -2.70
2002 -0.10
2003 4.10
A ppendix- 2
Years Gini-Coefficient Lowest 20% Highest 20%
1979 0.32 8.3 41.3
1984-85 0.34 7.9 42.8
1985-86 0.33 7.9 40.0
1986-87 0.32 8.0 39.0
1987-88 0.31 8.8 40.0
42
1990-91 0.41 6.0 47.4
1992-93 0.37 7.0 44.8
1993-94 0.40 7.4 43.1
1996-97 0.41 7.3 49.3
1998-99 0.40 6.9 46.8
A ppendix- 3
Years Total Rural Urban
1963-64 40.24 38.94 44.53
1966-67 44.50 45.62 40.96
1969-70 46.56 49.11 38.76
1979 30.62 32.51 25.94
1984-85 24.47 25.87 21.17
1987-88 17.32 18.32 14.99
1990-91 22.11 23.59 18.64
1992-93 22.40 23.35 15.50
1993-94 27.40 29.90 23.10
1996-97 29.60 31.60 27.40
1998-99 35.20 39.80 31.70
43
44