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The IMF's "extend and pretend" deal with Pakistan
Instead of "one and done", Islamabad and the Fund kick the can down the road.
Putting some flesh on the Hagan-Setser sovereign debt proposal
Sri Lanka’s Bond Deal Should Not Set a Precedent
Russia’s surprising consumer spending boom
The IMF's "extend and pretend" deal with Pakistan
Pakistan and the IMF recently agreed on a program worth $7 billion, which appears woefully insufficient to resolve the country’s macroeconomic imbalances. The Fund claims that the Extended Fund Facility over the next 37 months intends to “cement macroeconomic stability and create conditions for a stronger, more inclusive, and resilient growth.” But this nothingburger of a deal - painfully, obviously so ($2.3 billion per year?) - will more likely achieve the opposite.
Some quick stats from 2023 pulled from my sovereign stress tracker, where Pakistan flashes red on reserve cover and debt-to-revenue:
International reserves / GDP: 2.9% ($9.8 billion)
Public Debt / Revenue ratio: 670
Some other figures worth bearing in mind:
Gross financing needs = 24% GDP (~80 billion)
Average annual interest payments over the next five years = ~6.5% / GDP (~$20 billion)
Average annual principal payments over the next five years = $19 billion
Imports typically range from $60-85 billion
Export revenues range from $30-40 billion
Tax revenues = ~10% / GDP (~$35 billion)
In 2023, the current account deficit narrowed to -0.7% of GDP (-$2.4 billion), but in the past these have been much larger (e.g. ~-$17.5 billion in 2022). But even financing small external deficits could prove difficult. With annual FDI generally under $2 billion and in the absence of other private capital inflows, the government will likely have to borrow more. This is a problem given already-high public debt levels at 77% / GDP, of which Pakistan owes 28% / GDP to external creditors.
So it is crucial that Pakistan runs small current account deficits or, dare I say it, surpluses. If the global trading system worked as it should (i.e. fantasy-land), non-commodity-exporting emerging and frontier economies should be expected to run current account deficits. The idea is that the current account surpluses of wealthy countries would fund the development and climate transition of poorer nations.
But since so few advanced economies run surpluses, I guess this nuclear power and world’s fifth-most populous country will just have to tighten its belt. Fantastic.
To avoid large external deficits, Pakistan’s real exchange rate needs to depreciate. Yet the exact opposite is happening, so don’t hold out too much hope for a small CAB deficit this year:

Pakistan’s real exchange rate has surged upwards YTD through end-May 2024.
Olivier Blanchard once said that inflation is the canary in the coal mine. In the chart below you can see that Pakistan’s weighted inflation differential with its trading partners skyrocketed in May 2024.

Consider the alarm sounded. Even on the off-chance Pakistan manages to run a small CAB deficit in 2024 (say, like the -$2.4 billion in 2023), annual IMF support ($2.3 billion) will barely help bridge that gap. Islamabad still has to cough up about $39 billion in combined principal and interest payments every year going forward. This sum is roughly equivalent to export receipts and slightly larger than tax revenues.
This looks to be a solvency issue. And with inflation through the roof, it’s hard to see how this doesn’t get worse before it gets better. Watch this space.
Headline Roundup
Sovereign Debt
Global:
Putting some flesh on the Hagan-Setser sovereign debt proposal
Emerging-Market Junk Index Hits Record as Growth Lures Investors
The Big Exit: Emerging market sovereigns carve a way out of default
Emerging Markets Show Resilience Despite Global Monetary Tightening
Sovereign Debt Restructuring Process Is Improving Amid Cooperation and Reform
Sri Lanka:
Pakistan:
Pakistan’s latest record-breaking, reality-denying IMF program
Pakistan's course correction continues
Cameroon: Cameroon Joins Ivory Coast, Kenya, Senegal in Africa’s 2024 Eurobond Wave
Ukraine:
Ukraine Warrant Holders Form Group for $2.6 Billion Talks
Ukraine avoids default with generous bond restructuring deal
Will Ukraine default on its debt in August?
Ghana:
Assessment of recovery values under restructuring agreement
Second Review under the Extended Credit Facility
Agreement in Principle – initial thoughts
Barbados: EIB and Inter-American Development Bank approve guarantees to support climate and fiscal resilience
Kenya:
Zambia: Third Review Under the Arrangement Under the Extended Credit Facility
Saudi Arabia: Crown Prince’s Transformation Stress-tests Economy and Stretches Petrowealth
US: There is no need for investors to panic over government debt
Geoeconomic Fragmentation
Global: A Brief History of Globalization
Russia:
Stepping up economic sanctions is urgently needed to constrain Russia
Hong Kong shell companies’ exports bust sanctions
Hungary faces energy crisis, after Ukraine cuts off Russian oil deliveries
Russia’s surprising consumer spending boom
Russian oil tracker – revenues down despite higher volumes
Increasingly isolated by sanctions, Russia’s metal producers are being pushed into China’s arms
US:
US-China: Iraq halts financial transactions in Chinese yuan under US pressure
Africa: Africa's energy ambitions stifled by investment shortfall
Serbia: Serbia signals its geopolitical alignment with EU lithium deal
Global Electoral Calendar
Highlights

The Big Picture

Looking back
See the update for Q1 2024 electoral results here.
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