Saturday 22 October 2011

Musharraf-Imran election alliance being brokered by common friends
























Important political developments could be witnessed before the general elections as political parties are adjusting their positions in line with the prevailing scenario. The All Pakistan Muslim League chief Gen (Retd) Pervez Musharraf and Tehrik-e-Insaf leader Imaran Khan are being persuaded by common friends to enter into an alliance to win maximum number of seats and emerge as one of the major political force in the country.
These hints emerged as Tehrik-e-Insaaf Chief is now on a visit to the United States. Well placed sources said that Musharraf-Imran were busy in forging a covert political alliance through their friends in the US.
One person in the forefront to make this happen is the mayor of Paris (Texas, USA)) Dr Arjumand Hashmi, one of Musharraf's cronies, who is trying to broker a deal with all he is worth. The likely alliance is election specific.
Sources brought to fore that Imran Khan, flanked by his close aide Dr Zai, on the sidelines of a recent political visit to US met with Dr Arjumand who had invited him to dinner at his residence. It has also come to light that he (Imran) stayed there overnight.Dr Arjumand when approached by media persons confirmed the meeting and stay of Imran Khan at his house. He however denied any telephonic conversation between the two leaders during the whole time Tehrik-e-Insaf leader was his guest.

Musharraf to arrive in Pakistan on March 23 next year: APML Secretary General





















Peshawar,Former military ruler and All Pakistan Muslim League chief Pervez Musharraf will arrive in Pakistan on March 23, 2012, and will face all cases registered against him in the court, APML Secretary General Barrister Muhammad Ali Saif has said.

Talking to media persons in Peshawar, Barrister Saif said that the cases registered against Musharraf were fabricated due to political vengeance.He maintained that Musharraf could not be held responsible in murder cases of Benazir Bhutto and Akbar Bugti, as the cases had no legal and constitutional status, The Nation reports Saif said that former Prime Minister Benazir was killed in 2007, but Musharraf was nominated in this case in 2010.Pakistan Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani has personally made it clear that the Taliban were responsible for Benazir’s assassination, he added.He also claimed that the Pakistan Peoples Party-led ruling government is not sincere to find out the murderers of Benazir.Saif also underlined that Bugti was killed in a military operation when he had rebelled against the Pakistan Government in Balochistan, and if Musharraf was responsible for Bugti’s killing then President Asif Ali Zardari should also be held responsible for killing of people in military operation in North Waziristan, adding that there is no difference between the military of
FATA and Balochistan.The APML Secretary General also said that the elements who used to criticise the policies of Musharraf during his regime were now pursuing those policies.

Musharraf condoles death of Khurhseed Qasuri’s mother


All Pakistan Muslim League Quaid and former President of Pakistan Pervez Musharraf and APML central leadership expressed their condolence over the sad demise of Khursheed Qasur’s mother.

In his condolence message APML Quaid Pervez Musharraf condoled with Khursheed Qasuri and prayed for the departed soul to rest in peace and for the grant of courage to the bereaved family.

Poverty reduction in the Musharraf era By Dr Akmal Hussain


 Afiery debate erupted last week, on the official poverty estimates made during the previous regime of Pervez Musharraf. Dr Nadeemul Haq, Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission has faced a verbal attack from a concerned former official of the Musharraf government, for expressing scepticism at the latter’s poverty estimates. Even though there was more heat than light in the verbal war, Dr Haq has been “summoned” by a Parliamentary Committee, according to newspaper reports. Under these circumstances, perhaps a reasoned examination of the poverty estimates of the Musharraf government, however brief, may be helpful.

The official estimates claim a decline in the poverty incidence from 34.5 per cent in 2000-01 to 22.7 per cent in 2004-05. This reduction of 11.8 percentage points would suggest that almost one-third of poverty in Pakistan was eliminated within a period of only four years. If accepted at face value, this would probably be the largest poverty reduction over a four-year period in the history of the developing world, and would by far outmatch the poverty reduction performance of the former Soviet Union and China,

during their eras of central planning.Pakistan’s official poverty reduction figures for the period 2000-01 to 2004-05 become even more incredible when the data is disaggregated to the provincial level. Provincial level poverty figures of the official data set show that poverty in rural Sindh declined from 48.3 per cent in 2000-01 to 28.9 per cent over the period. Thus the Musharraf government’s figures would have us believe that over 40 per cent of the poverty problem in Sindh was eliminated within a four year-period of its rule. In terms of this
DR akmal hussain
trend, poverty in Sindh ought to have been completely eliminated by the year 2008-09. If this incredible phenomenon occurred, it was certainly not visible to the naked eye in Sindh.Further doubt is cast over these official poverty figures when we investigate the sources of growth on the basis of national income data for the same period. The results show that 80 per cent of the growth during the period was contributed by the services sector, consisting predominantly of banking, telecommunications and to a lesser extent, trade and transport. In the case of the large-scale manufacturing sector, the predominant driver of growth was automobiles and consumer electronics. Clearly, these sectors neither produce goods for the poor nor employ them. Therefore, the structure of the growth process during the Musharraf period was such that it could not be expected to have a substantial positive impact on poverty.Furthermore, there was a 70 per cent increase in the food price index in 2007-08; a sharp increase in gas and electricity prices; and a sharp increase in the prices of industrial and agriculture inputs following exchange rate depreciation. The aggregate consequence of the changes in these variables suggests that the positive effect of growth on poverty would be expected to have dampened by the end of the Musharraf regime rather than dramatically increased as the official figures claim.Finally, given the sharp increase in interpersonal inequality during the period, the trickle down effect of growth would tend to dry up. The mathematical relationship between growth, inequality and poverty is well known: For a given growth rate, the higher the level of inequality, the smaller the trickle-down effect. Indeed, if the inequality at the beginning of a period is high enough and if the growth of inequality is substantially greater than the growth of GDP, than the incidence of poverty may well rise rather than fall. The
huge poverty reduction estimates of the Musharraf government are, therefore, not consistent with the magnitude of the growth of inequality estimated from the same data set.

The official poverty data set of the Musharraf regime, which yields a poverty reduction magnitude unmatched in the history of developing countries, is neither internally consistent, nor is it consistent with national income data of Pakistan, nor consistent with the logic of economic science
The writer is distinguished professor of economics at Beaconhouse National University in Lahore

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