Islamabad: In a major blow to cash-strapped Pakistan, the World Bank has delayed the approval of two loans worth USD 1.1 billion until the next fiscal year, according to a media report. The Washington-based lender has also opposed slapping a flood levy on imports, creating a new hole in an already ambitious USD 32 billion annual financing plan.
The Bank's decision to withhold approval of the second Resilient Institutions for Sustainable Economy (RISE-II) loan worth USD 450 million and the second Programme for Affordable Energy (PACE-II) worth USD 600 million will be a major jolt for the government, The Express Tribune reported.
"The indicative date for (World Bank) Board discussion of the RISE-II project is the fiscal year 2024, which will start on July 1, 2023, and end on June 30, 2024," a spokesperson told the newspaper.
The Bank's documents also showed that the PACE-II loan might be approved in the next fiscal year. The government hoped to receive approval for at least the USD 450 million loan in January, which would have unlocked another USD 450 million from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) which had pegged a USD 450 million loan with the approval of the World Bank's RISE-II.
The coalition government was already struggling to revive the International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme. The global lender's latest decision, however, has created a hole of USD 1.5 billion against the government's annual financing plan. Just before the revival of the IMF bailout package in August last year, the World Bank had agreed to enhance its lending envelope to cover a USD 300 million hole. All this, however, seems to have been lost due to a lack of decision-making from the federal government.
The World Bank spokesperson added that "preparation of the RISE-II operation is underway and the World Bank is working closely with the government toward the implementation of supported reforms".
For the current fiscal year, the government had hoped to receive USD 30 billion to USD 32 billion in foreign financing but the plans now appear unrealistic. The financing plan included loans worth USD 2.9 billion from the World Bank. With the current foreign reserves standing at a mere USD 4.3 billion, Pakistan may not be able to reach June without support from foreign creditors.
The UAE is expected to give the county a USD 1 billion loan and Saudi Arabia is also "studying" the possibility of extending an additional USD 2 billion. The government, however, has not yet announced dates for the disbursements. Sources told the newspaper that the World Bank has also communicated that it was opposed to the idea of slapping a 1 per cent to 3 per cent flood levy on imports that the government wants to impose to raise Rs 60 billion to Rs 70 billion in additional taxes and to contain imports.