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Published:Sept 2013
The Lahore School’s Ninth Annual Conference on Management of
the Pakistan Economy took place on 20 – 21 March, 2013 and the topic of
this year’s conference was: “Human Capital Development for Sustained
Economic Growth”. The conference participants ranged from leading
economists and researchers in Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, the United
Kingdom, and the United States to leading Pakistani policy makers and
NGO representatives. Over the course of two days, 14 research paper
presentations were made on topics related to public service delivery, with a
special emphasis on the education and health sectors as well and human
development and social safety nets.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
USA,
India.
JEL:
N/A.
The Impact of Public School Enrolment on Child Labor in Punjab, Pakistan
Hamna Ahmed
Published:July - Dec 2012
This paper investigates the causal impact of public school enrolment on
child labor. Our main hypothesis is as follows: Is school enrolment a substitute for
child labor? Recognizing that schooling and work choices are jointly determined by
parents in a utility maximizing framework, the study applies an instrumental
variable solution to the problem of simultaneity. This approach entails using the
receipt of free textbooks and access to a public primary facility as instruments for
public school enrolment. Using data from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey
for 2007/08, our working sample consists of children between 5 and 14 years of
age, which makes up 25 percent of the surveyed population. The results suggest
that public school enrolment can be used as a substitute for child labor. On
average, a 1 percentage point increase in a household’s enrolment ratio has the
potential to reduce the number of hours of paid labor by almost 5 percentage points,
ceteris paribus. This substitutability is highest among poor, urban, male children.
Moreover, the incidence of child labor is higher among larger poor families.
KEYWORDS:
Child labor,
school enrolment,
instrumental variable,
tobit,
fixed effects,
education subsidy,
Pakistan.
JEL:
F66.
What Does Pakistan Have to Join the Inflation Targeters’ Club—a Royal Flush or a Seven-Deuce Offsuit?
Syed Kumail Abbas Rizvi, Bushra Naqvi and Sayyid Salman Rizavi
Published:July - Dec 2012
The economic and institutional structure required to successfully adopt
and implement an inflation targeting framework (ITF) is often lacking in
emerging economies. This paper evaluates these structures both qualitatively and
quantitatively for Pakistan’s economy. Although our comprehensive assessment
finds that many of the core requirements remain unrealized, the literature and
real-time experience argue that an ITF remains possible for emerging economies
even in the absence of these conditions. We investigate whether—were the State
Bank of Pakistan to adopt an ITF—there exists a stable and significant
relationship between the policy rate (monetary tool) and inflation measure
(objective). It is important to analyze this bivariate relationship, given the key
role of the interest rate in mitigating deviations between actual and target
inflation when working within an ITF. To illustrate this relationship, we use
Granger Causality test, but our estimates fail to find any significant link between
the interest rate and inflation. On the basis of our overall findings, we suggest
that Pakistan, in the absence of most of the fundamental requirements of an ITF,
is perhaps not yet ready for it.
KEYWORDS:
Inflation targeting,
Pakistan,
monetary policy.
JEL:
E52,
E30,
E58.
Human Capital and Multifaceted Innovation: Evidence from the Lahore Knitwear Cluster in Pakistan
Fahd Rehman
Published:July - Dec 2012
Clusters have the potential to grow, but their potential in Pakistan is
rarely analyzed and examined. This study examines the knitwear cluster of Lahore
in general and the performance of enterprises in particular. Most of the literature
on clusters in Pakistan has not looked at the characteristics of the individual
enterprises that play a pivotal role in cluster development. Using primary data
collected from 59 finished-knitwear producers in Lahore, this study assesses the
role of human capital in acquiring multifaceted innovations. We find that general
human capital acquired by schooling and specific human capital acquired through
operational experience is associated with the size of the enterprise. Additionally,
specific human capital acquired through operational and marketing experience is
strongly correlated with improved marketing channels.
KEYWORDS:
Clusters,
human capital,
schooling,
multifaceted,
Pakistan.
JEL:
E24.
The Harberger-Laursen-Metzler Effect: Evidence from Pakistan
Tayyaba Idrees and Saira Tufail
Published:July - Dec 2012
According to the Harberger-Laursen-Metzler (HLM) effect, an exogenous
temporary increase in the terms of trade leads to an improvement in the current
account balance. This paper uses a recursive vector autoregression to investigate
empirically the existence of the HLM effect in Pakistan, using a time series dataset
for the period 1980–2009. Two important results emerge. First, real income
deteriorates with an improvement in the terms of trade. Second, the current
account balance also responds negatively to innovations in the terms of trade,
which implies that the HLM effect does not exist in Pakistan.
KEYWORDS:
Terms of trade,
current account,
economic growth,
recursive VAR,
Pakistan.
JEL:
C3,
F32,
F41.
A Benefit Incidence Analysis of Public Spending on Education in Pakistan Using PSLM Data
Zahid Asghar and Mudassar Zahra
Published:July - Dec 2012
Education is one of the most important means of economic development,
and there is consensus among policymakers that it is better to be educated than not.
The debate on education is not, therefore, whether it is good or bad, rather it centers
on whether the state should intervene in its provision. Public provision of
education at the school level is generally considered one of the most important
investments for creating social opportunities to help the wider population actively
participate in various economic activities. This study investigates whether public
spending on education in Pakistan is pro-poor at various levels of schooling. We
find that public spending at the primary and secondary level is progressive, while
higher education spending is regressive. These results hold at the national and
provincial level. Based on these findings, we recommend that the government
increase its spending on primary, secondary, and technical education. Higher
education, however, should be provided on merit, and the private sector should be
encouraged to provide high-quality education.
KEYWORDS:
Education,
economic,
development,
Pakistan.
JEL:
I25.
Poverty, Income Inequality, and Growth in Pakistan: A Pooled Regression Analysis
Ahmed Raza Cheema and Maqbool H. Sial
Published:July - Dec 2012
This study estimates a set of fixed effects/random effects models to
ascertain the long-run relationships between poverty, income inequality, and
growth using pooled data from eight household income and expenditure surveys
conducted between 1992/93 and 2007/08 in Pakistan. The results show that
growth and inequality play significant roles in affecting poverty, and that the effect
of the former is substantially larger than that of the latter. Furthermore, growth
has a significant positive impact on inequality. The results also show that the
absolute magnitude of net growth elasticity of poverty is smaller than that of gross
growth elasticity of poverty, suggesting that some of the growth effect on poverty is
offset by the rise in inequality. The analysis at a regional level shows that both the
gross and net growth elasticity of poverty are higher in rural areas than in urban
areas, whereas the inequality elasticity of poverty is higher in urban areas than in
rural areas. At a policy level, we recommend that, in order to reduce poverty, the
government should implement policies focusing on growth as well as adopting
strategies geared toward improving income distribution.
KEYWORDS:
Poverty,
inequality,
growth,
pooled data,
Pakistan.
JEL:
I32,
O40.
Book Review Pakistan – The Political Economy of Growth, Stagnation and the State, 1951–2009, Routledge, London and New York, ISBN13: 978-0-415-57747-2 and ISBN13: 978-0-203-81476-5, 2011, pp. 241.
Nina Gera
Published:July - Dec 2012
McCartney, Mathew, Pakistan – The Political Economy of Growth,
Stagnation and the State, 1951–2009, Routledge, London and New
York, ISBN13: 978-0-415-57747-2 and ISBN13: 978-0-203-81476-5,
2011, pp. 241.
This book is, one can assert without a doubt, sui generis, unique in
that it provides an entirely new perspective on the development of
Pakistan’s political economy. It is a thorough and objective analysis, an
eye-opener, and the author leaves no stone unturned.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
development,
Growth,
capital,
political economy.
JEL:
N/A.
Published:Sept 2012
The Lahore School’s Eighth Annual Conference on Management of the Pakistan Economy took place on 16 – 17 May, 2012 at the school’s Main Campus. The topic of this year’s conference was: “Towards Accelerated Economic Growth in Pakistan: Its Need and Feasibility”. It was attended by the country’s leading economists, Pakistani and foreign academics, and renowned researchers from India, Sri Lanka, United Kingdom, and United States. Some 25 research papers and oral presentations were made during the two days of the conference.
The richness of the discussions during the two days of the conference cannot be adequately captured in a short report but, as a record of the salient issues raised, it could be useful for the participants as well as others interested in the subject. Since discussions in different sessions tended to overlap, what is offered here is a composite summing-up rather than a chronological account of the actual proceedings.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
Lahore School,
Annual Conference,
Pakistan economy.
JEL:
N/A.
Toward a Heterodox Approach: Reconciling Stabilization and Economic Growth in Pakistan
Irfan ul Haque and Sahar Amjad
Published:Sept 2012
This article attempts to show that a strategy for accelerated growth for Pakistan is both necessary and feasible. Pakistan’s macroeconomic conditions are broadly similar to some of its more rapidly growing neighbors. The country’s macroeconomic imbalances and inflation need to be brought down, but the required adjustment does not entail precipitate action, which could further depress the economy. We develop a “Heterodox Scenario,” which shows that macroeconomic adjustments can be phased in over the next few years and will be easier to make if the economy were to grow more rapidly. For accelerated growth to materialize, as a minimum, determined steps are needed to overcome the energy crisis, sharply raise the investment rate—particularly, private investment—and strengthen Pakistan’s competitiveness in the world market. A national strategy is needed toward that end.
KEYWORDS:
Growth,
inflation,
economy,
strategy,
Pakistan.
JEL:
O10,
E22.