China rolls over $600 million loan to Pakistan

By Asif Shahzad

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -China has rolled over a $600 million loan to Pakistan, helping shore up the South Asian country’s foreign exchange reserves following a long-awaited deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Tuesday.

China had already rolled over more than $5 billion in loans to Pakistan in the last three months, helping it avert a default as negotiations to secure the IMF bailout dragged on.

“We have received another $600 million from our friend China,” said Sharif at an event in Islamabad.

The IMF talks took months, and in the meantime Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves shrunk to barely enough to pay for a month of controlled imports, and an acute balance of payment crisis pushed the country to the brink.

Pakistan finally secured a $3 billion bailout on June 30 from the IMF, which later disbursed an initial instalment of about $1.2 billion.

A further $3 billion of financial support from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates after the IMF pact helped steady the Pakistani economy, according to Finance Minister Ishaq Dar.

Pakistan’s central bank said on Tuesday the current account recorded a surplus of $334 million for June, while the trade deficit for the same month fell 62% year-on-year.

In the financial year to end-June, Pakistan’s trade deficit fell 43% from the previous year to $27.6 billion.

The current account deficit for the year fell to $2.56 billion against $17.48 billion for the 2022 financial year, Dar said in a recorded statement, after the central bank released the data.

“That’s how Pakistan didn’t default, God be praised,” he said. “We’re now in a safe zone.”

Analysts say the huge drop in the deficit was due to import suppression policies Pakistan put in place late last year to try to overcome its balance of payment crisis.

The IMF programme, however, includes objectives that require Pakistan to lift its import curbs, which have artificially depressed the economy.

Another key objective of the programme is achieving a real effective exchange rate for the Pakistan rupee.

As a result of the IMF deal, the rupee has been appreciating, but on Tuesday it dropped 1.34% in the interbank market to 283.04 rupees against the U.S. dollar, the central bank said.

Analysts believe the decline was due to the dollar demand after Pakistan’s import restrictions were eased.

(Reporting by Asif Shahzad; Additional reporting by Ariba Shahid in Karachi; Editing by Christina Fincher and Tom Hogue)

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