In a stark warning, a prominent Pakistani economist has declared that no amount of economic tinkering will save the nation’s finances until its politics is cleansed of corruption and incompetence. Writing in Dawn, Sakib Sherani lays bare how the political elite’s stranglehold is strangling growth.
The core thesis is simple yet profound: economics mirrors politics. A dysfunctional political machine contaminates every subsystem, from policy-making to resource allocation. Decoupling the two for analysis or reform is an exercise in delusion.
Pretending deep economic changes can occur without political cleanup is tantamount to fooling oneself and the public, Sherani writes. Real investment—geared toward innovation, productivity, and competition—won’t materialize under the prevailing rent-extraction regime.
Sherani dismantles the argument from an ‘elite panel’ pushing corporate shakeups as the panacea. Such thinking overlooks the hostile environment: world’s costliest and unreliable electricity, crushing tax loads exceeding 50%, currency overvaluation, smuggling epidemics creating a parallel $68 billion economy that undermines the formal one.
Businesses face a barrage of woes—intrusive bureaucracy, corruption premiums, talent gaps requiring extra training costs, self-funded utilities and security, gangster extortions, nepotistic appointments, and erratic policies. Expecting these firms to thrive competitively is absurd without addressing root political causes.
The path forward? Comprehensive political restructuring to eliminate these drags and unlock Pakistan’s economic potential, Sherani asserts in his compelling critique.