On Thursday 10 Jan 2008 5:03 pm, Valsa Williams wrote:
> The case of Pakistan is especially instructive. Because it believed all the
> American dogma about free trade

Here is a take on Pakistan's recent economic success:

http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=90999

An ode to Shaukat Aziz
  Hit and run
 
 Monday, January 14, 2008
 Shakir Husain
 
 Since about Oct 12, 2007, the news in the country and internationally hasn't 
really allowed us to pay homage to a great patriot who gave us NINE years of 
his life and has recently left with a heavy heart for greener pastures. I 
speak of Shaukat Aziz, who has recently left for London and then will be 
attending the World Economic Summit at Davos in his "personal" capacity. 
Shaukat Aziz needs no introduction to the people of Pakistan, who have so 
much to thank him for, for his extended tour in Pakistan as finance minister 
and then prime minister. Mr Aziz came, he banked, and now has cashed his 
chips to move on, leaving his illustrious career as a politician to perhaps 
serve the people of another wretched country. I really don't know what the 
people of Tharparkar and Attock will do without their beloved leader.

I think Shaukat Aziz is one of the most misunderstood "politicians" in the 
history of Pakistan. The middle class and the English-speaking minority 
really liked him because he wore nice suits and spoke such wonderful English, 
which automatically made people think that he was going to do good things for 
the nation. Unfortunately, what most people didn't realise is that he was a 
private banker and not an economist. His job for two decades had been to help 
people stash away ill-gotten money in places where other people couldn't find 
it, and not formulate fiscal policy to help a developing nation grow.

During the fiscal reign of Shaukat the First, the average Pakistanis saw 
access to unprecedented levels of cheap credit which can be compared to the 
United States where people bought houses in unprecedented numbers due to 
access to cheap credit. Being a banker, Shaukat Aziz rallied to the cause of 
his fellow bankers, liberalised the banking sector, and ensured that banking 
spreads were among the highest in the world. Needless to say, over the past 
eight years banks have been more profitable than they had ever been. And who 
got screwed in the process? The average depositor, of course. Thank you, 
Shaukat Aziz.

Since 1999, when Shaukat Aziz became a member of Musharraf's "dream" team and 
took over as finance minister till the day he left office as prime minister, 
not one megawatt of electricity was added to the national grid. Yet, because 
of Shaukat Aziz's policies of providing cheap credit to one and all, he can 
be credited with selling more consumer electronics than any advertising 
campaign. But if we weren't generating more power, how was the average 
Pakistani supposed to run his fancy new air-conditioner and deep-freezer? 
Today's power crisis, which is affecting both the consumer and the industrial 
user, can squarely be blamed on Shaukat Aziz's flawed economic policies. Yes 
men like Dr Salman Shah who played Robin to Shaukat's Batman should be 
ashamed of themselves for not speaking out when they could have. Maybe if 
this lot had spent less time jetting around the globe and running their 
self-promotional PR exercises, and focused on their jobs we wouldn't find 
ourselves in the mess we are in today.

Shaukat Aziz and his economic dream team can also be squarely held responsible 
for the disastrous food insecurity Pakistanis are facing today. There is an 
atta crisis in the land today and prices have spiralled out of control 
because Mr Aziz decided to allow the export of wheat as a political favour a 
little before he took off for London. According to news reports, a rice 
crisis is also in the pipeline. While Mr Aziz was more partial to scones, he 
should have known that his trickledown effect hadn't quite brought his 
constituents to the same culinary level as him. 

Our alternate energy policy is also one of the most backward in the region. 
Permissions to set up wind farms have been doled out to cronies and political 
allies like party favours. For instance, the former foreign minister's son 
has been given the green light to set up a wind farm in Sindh in record time, 
while others had to wait with applications in hand till some secretary found 
time to meet them. While our neighbours are generating electricity from wind 
and solar sources, our grid relies on expensive oil and gas sources. 
Sweetheart deals all around for everyone. Sad, but we can thank the dream 
team.

The fallout from some of the flawed policies of the last ten years will be 
felt in the coming years in the form of spiralling inflation, high interest 
rates, higher utility bills, and more; but they're not because of ineptitude 
or lack of resources, rather of picking the wrong guy for the job. Hiring a 
private banker to do the job of a policy economist is like getting a plumber 
to fix your car's engine. I do believe in divine justice and Shaukat Aziz was 
vying for Citibank's top job and was lobbying hard for it, yet the board, 
instead, picked an Indian with an impeccable reputation. Mr Aziz is currently 
at Davos in his "personal" capacity, no doubt looking for a plum opportunity. 
While I personally don't hold a grudge against him, I would urge him not to 
return to his home constituency of Tharparkar or Attock anytime soon. 

The writer is an entrepreneur and business consultant. Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
com

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