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Poverty is the
biggest and most intractable issue in Pakistan today. The problem
can only be addressed by finding ways to reduce the population
growth rate, increase agricultural output and boost exports of farm
produce – thus raising income levels in the rural areas where the
majority of the people live.
Years of low GDP growth, on the one hand, and high
population growth on the other have combined to put
Pakistan in a situation where
the size of the economic pie has not been increasing fast enough to extricate
the country from the poverty trap. To compound the problem, recent years have
seen food prices and utility tariffs shooting up and up and up, making it
increasingly difficult for people to make ends meet.
Industry, too, has been badly hit by the ever-rising cost of
inputs, including electricity tariffs that are now the highest in the world.
This has made our manufactured goods less competitive in export markets, leading
to very slow growth in export earnings and a widening trade gap. Oil imports
alone have cost us over $ 8 billion in the first six months of the current
fiscal year. Driven by soaring international crude oil prices of over $ 100 a
barrel, our trade gap is now running at about $ 1.7 billion a month, or about $
20 billion a year.
We cannot sustain a trade gap of this magnitude indefinitely.
The growing trade gap is putting increasing pressure on the country’s balance of
payments and is reducing the fiscal space available to the government to finance
development schemes. This, in turn, has forced the government to resort to
increasing levels of foreign and domestic borrowing, with a corresponding rise
in debt servicing costs.
The previous government repeatedly claimed to have “broken
the begging bowl” and “reduced” its dependence on foreign borrowing. In fact,
the total amount of foreign loans went up from $ 36 billion in 1999 to more than
$42 billion in 2007. Total domestic borrowing, too, has risen sharply in recent
years.
These multifarious problems cannot be tackled by economic
measures alone. Economic measures must be accompanied by a policy aimed at
reducing the population growth rate if
Pakistan is to get out of the
trap of demographic-induced poverty.
At the time of the first post-independence census in 1951,
the area that now constitutes
Pakistan (the former West
Pakistan) had a population of 37 million. Today, it has a population of about
165 million, which is increasing by 2.1 per cent a year, according to government
figures, though independent estimates put it closer to 2.5 per cent. Given this
high rate of increase, Pakistan’s population is expected to double to 330
million in the next twenty years and double again to 660 million over the next
two decades, making it the third most populous country in the world after China
and India. With a population of that size,
Pakistan’s
economic future would be bleak indeed.
No government thus far has been able to put in place the
population planning policies needed to reduce
Pakistan’s population growth
rate to a level that would allow the country to extricate itself from the
demographic-cum-poverty trap. It is true that the population growth rate has
fallen by about half-a-per cent from the three per cent level of 15 years ago,
but this is not enough. It needs to be brought down further to around 1.5 per
cent or less to give Pakistan the breathing space it needs to get out of the
poverty trap.
At the present level of population growth,
Pakistan would need a
continuing GDP growth rate of well over seven per cent a year to make any kind
of dent in the number of people living below the poverty line. That’s why this
seven per cent-plus figure is now referred to by some analysts as the
“poverty-busting” GDP growth rate. But achieving this seven per cent-plus rate
of GDP growth on a continuing basis is going to be far from easy in today’s
global economic environment of soaring oil prices and increasingly competitive
export markets. This makes reducing the population growth rate all the more
important.
Of all the forces that will change
Pakistan and the rest of the
world over the next generation, demography is probably the most important. The
numbers of mouths to feed, the relative sizes of the population of the
industrial world and the less developed countries, the age distribution of the
west – all these forces will have a profound effect not just on the world
economy, including the economies of developing countries like Pakistan, but on
societies both rich and poor. The change will be gradual – the world population
rose by some 110 million in 2000 to reach 6 billion, but in the west people
barely noticed the fact that more than the population of Germany had been added
to the human race that year.
Pakistan’s population is now
growing by more than 3.46 million people a year, even going by the government
figure of a 2.1 per cent population growth rate. That’s well over three million
people that have to be fed, and clothed and housed every year. What is more,
this 3.46 million is not a static number; it is increasing every year at a rate
proportionate to rise in the total population of the country. Thus unchecked
population growth and demography-induced poverty are our No. 1 problem, one that
the new government needs to seriously address. And it must start addressing the
problem not two years from now, or three years from now, or at some unspecified
date in the future, but as soon as it has put its policy team together. In other
words, reducing the population growth rate has to be the new government’s top
long-term priority. Otherwise, Pakistan will remain forever mired in poverty,
and the income gap between the haves and have-nots will go on increasing, along
with all the attendant social, economic, political and law and order tensions
that this gap creates.
Population shifts have an inexorable effect on the world’s
living standards, its politics, its environment, and on how people behave
towards each other in societies as diverse as
Italy and China and Pakistan.
If, for most people, demography seems abstruse, there is at
least no shortage of information to analyse. There is a wealth of data about
population change – the birth rate, marriage age, number of children, and so on
– which for some countries goes back several centuries. This data sets some
curious puzzles: why, for example, given the fact that the Catholic faith frowns
on artificial birth control methods, has the birth rate in Catholic Italy fallen
to the lowest in western Europe, while that of Catholic Ireland has remained the
highest. And it raises nightmarish questions: can the world feed the 8 billion
people the United Nations estimates will be alive in 2020?
The problem is compounded by the fact that long-term
population projections can be spectacularly wrong. We know pretty much how many
people there will be in the world in 2010, and can make a decent shot at the
number in 2020 or 2025. What is much more difficult is guessing where and when
the world’s population growth will level off: the United Nations has estimates
of a world population of between 7.5 billion and 14.2 billion for the year 2100,
but it is perfectly possible that it could be outside even these extreme ranges.
Pakistani demographers and policy planners face the same
problem in trying to figure out what
Pakistan’s population will be
in fifty or sixty years’ time. Who, in 1951, for example, when today’s Pakistan
had a population of 37 million, could have predicted that the figure would soar
to 165 million by the year 2007?
The world’s population more than doubled between 1950 and
2000, rising from 2.5 billion to 6 billion. In 1950 nearly a third of humankind
lived in the industrial world; now it is below one-quarter. By 2020 it will be
less than one-fifth.
Within the developing world, national populations are growing
at very different rates. As countries grow richer, and infant mortality
declines, so women have smaller families. In some developing countries – such as
South Korea
and Taiwan – women typically have families as small as those in industrial
countries, two children or fewer. Contrast this with some African countries
where women typically bear seven or eight children. The figure for
Pakistan
is five or six. This figure has fallen somewhat in recent years in the urban
areas. In the rural areas, however, with their much higher levels of poverty and
lack of education for women, the number of children that women typically bear
has not gone down.
Education, of course, is the key to family planning and to a
lowering of the population growth rate. Despite increased migration to the
cities in the last twenty years, close to 70 per cent of
Pakistan’s population still
lives in the rural areas. Given this fact, the new government must make
education in the rural areas an urgent priority. This will require investment in
education on a massive scale, especially health education for women of
child-bearing age. Tokenism will not do the job; what is needed is investment in
education running into tens of billions of rupees a year.
Along with this, massive investment also needs to be made in
development schemes in the rural areas, which include some of the most
underdeveloped parts of the country. The future pattern of population growth and
reduction in poverty will depend largely on how powerful a force the apparent
link between development and fertility rate turns out to be.
Ref link:
http://jang.com.pk/thenews/mar2008-weekly/busrev-31-03-2008/index.html#1 |