Staff Report
ISLAMABAD: Failing to get financial assistance from the friendly countries, the federal government has decided to sell Balloki and Haveli Bahadur Shah Power Plants for $2 billion to a gulf country.
The coalition government has decided to sell both the Power Plants in government-to-government deal through an ordinance. The ordinance for the sell of Balloki and Haveli Bahadur Shah power plants can be introduced after the session of the National Assembly.
Furthermore, the government has also decided to sell shares of the three oil and gas companies including the OGDCL.
Earlier in the day, Minister for Finance and Revenue Miftah Ismail Wednesday said better laws and good governance were the only ways to expedite the privatization process in Pakistan.
“There are two basic things we need to work on, that is to come up with better laws and better ways to privatize State Owned Enterprises (SOEs), and to improve their governance,” he said while addressing a seminar on SOEs reforms organized by the ministry of finance here.
He said some SOEs such as Roosevelt Hotel had been part of the active privatization list for decades but could not be materialize due to the inefficient privatization laws. He said generally the management of the SOEs was professional but the poor laws were the main obstacle which actually governed these enterprises.
He said the country’s top profit making SOEs such as Sui Southern Gas Company (SSNGL), Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), Oil and Gas Development Company (OGDCL), and the power distribution companies were yielding outstanding performance but their performance slowed down and many of them were incurring losses now.
In its July 2022 Report on Pakistan, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) highlighted the need to reform the country’s SOEs as a key reform priority and the identified some of the activities to be done by the Pakistan government.
The activities included initiating the privatization of selected SOEs, increasing SOE transparency through new audits, triage of SOEs, and enhancing the SOE legal framework through a new SOE law.
The Ministry of finance initiated consultation with all the line ministries in this regard, the SOE triage was developed with support from World Bank and Asian Development Bank, and the audit of SOEs was also carried out and the findings were also shared with the IMF.
Earlier, in her opening remarks, Minister of State for Finance Ayesha Ghous Pasha informed that the SOE draft and SOE policy was developed with support of ADB to monitor and report on the financial and non-financial performance of Pakistan’s SOEs, thereby strengthening transparency and accountability.
She said the SOE Bill had been discussed in detail with standing committee of finance of national assembly. She said after its passage by the National Assembly, the Bill is presently awaiting approval of Senate.
With respect to the IMF prior condition, Miftah Ismail said almost all the prior conditions of the IMF including passage of budget, raising taxes on petroleum products, signing of MoUs with the provinces, and re-basing of power tariff had already been met.
He said the IMF was of the view that $4 billion funding gap still existed which he said would be bridged by many sources including financing from the friendly countries.
The finance minister said hopefully first tranche from the IMF would be received soon after the board meeting with Pakistan.
Unfortunately, he said due to board holidays, the meeting would be in the later part of August although we were hoping to get it in earlier part of the month.
On anti corruption laws, the minister said although it was not prior condition of the IMF but it was a structure benchmark.
He said the government was forming a high level commission in this regard comprising of experts from across the world.
He said some experts from two least corrupt countries Singapore and Newzealand were being hired for this commission along with some of local experts.
With respect to selling shares of the state owned companies, the minister informed that only those shares were being sold which were already traded in the Karachi Stock Exchange. He clarified that “we are not selling the ownership and the management stakes of these companies”.