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Finance Ministry Defends Borrowing Record Under Caretaker Setup

The Ministry of Finance Thursday said that borrowings in the caretaker government’s term have been lower as compared to the preceding period.

In a statement, the ministry said that the bulk of the borrowings raised in the last few months was to meet debt repayment obligations including principal and interest expense liabilities as caretaker government focused primarily on fiscal consolidation measures including revenue mobilization and expenditure rationalization.

The ministry compared borrowings in the preceding period (February 1, 2023, to August 16, 2023) to borrowings in caretaker government’s tenure (August 17, 2023, to January 31, 2024).

Domestic Borrowings

The statement said that the caretaker government inherited a policy rate of 22 percent, which is highest ever since 1972. The average policy rate during preceding period was almost 19.5 percent.

Over a short stint, with careful debt management operations, the caretaker government has managed to improve domestic debt profile by: (i) extending maturity of government securities; (ii) raising debt on margin below the policy rate; and (iii) tapping non-bank and retail investors through capital market. Focus was on reducing borrowings from government securities through the banking sector.

The borrowing through government securities fell by 67 percent in the caretaker government’s term as compared to the preceding period.

Moreover, the caretaker government successfully retired short-term Treasury Bills amounting to Rs. 1.6 trillion, contrasting with around Rs. 3.3 trillion raised in the preceding period. This helped in reducing the gross financing needs of the government, the statement added.

The caretaker government also shifted its domestic borrowing to long-term debt securities for the financing of fiscal deficit. Out of medium to long term instruments, major borrowing remained from floating rate securities, while fixed rates instruments were borrowed on average at 3 to 4 percent below the policy rate during caretaker government period.

Resultantly, the average time to maturity of domestic debt has increased to around 3 years by the end Jan 2024 as compared to 2.8 years at the end of June 2023. This is in- line with the targets mentioned in the Medium-Term Debt Management Strategy (MTDS) FY23-FY26 and a step in the right direction to meet the end June 2024 target of 3.1 years, according to the finance ministry.

External Borrowings

At end June 2023, share of external debt in total public debt was 38.3 percent which reduced to 36.7 percent at end December 2023. This helped to reduce the foreign currency risk of the total public debt in-line with the targets defined in the MTDS FY23- FY26.

Moreover during caretaker government’s tenure, the net external debt inflows were around $0.3 billion, which is lower as compared to preceding period. Furthermore, no expensive external borrowing was raised from commercial banks and international capital markets during caretaker government.

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ProPK Staff