Pakistan has formally requested for financial assistance: IMF

International Monetary Fund (IMF) Chief ‘Christine Lagarde’ on Thursday said Pakistan has formally requested for financial assistance.

 

“An IMF team will visit Islamabad in the coming weeks to initiate discussions for a possible IMF-supported economic programme,” Lagarde said in her statement.

Lagarde met with Pakistan’s Federal Finance Minister Asad Umar and Governor State Bank of Pakistan Mr. Tariq Bajwa, who are attending the fund’s annual meeting in Bali.

Earlier today, Lagarde had said she would meet with Pakistani officials today with expectations that Islamabad will request a bailout of its shaky economy. “I’m assuming that there might be a programme request on their part, but that has not been discussed and we will explore that this afternoon,” she had told a press briefing.

Asad Umar announced earlier this week that the government would seek talks with the IMF on a “stabilisation recovery programme”.

Prime Minister Imran Khan on Wednesday vowed to steer the country out of a looming balance-of-payments crisis, saying it needs $10-12 billion.

“We will get out of this. I will take (the country) out of this,” he said.

PM Imran Khan’s new administration took office in August vowing to weigh up whether to seek an IMF bailout as it sought other avenues of financing.

He has sought loans from friendly countries, promised to recover funds stolen by corrupt officials, and embarked on a series of populist austerity measures. But help has been in short supply and economists’ warnings have grown increasingly urgent.