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Chinese bank approves $700m to Pakistan: Dar

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Says SBP expected to receive loan by this week

Finance Minister Ishaq Dar on Wednesday announced that the board of China Development Bank approved a loan of $700 million for Pakistan.

Earlier this month, the country’s foreign exchange reserves slipped to the alarming level of below $3 billion for the first time in nine years, reducing import capacity to slightly over two weeks.

As the government seeks to revive the International Monetary Fund programme, Pakistan has sought to secure assurances from Saudi Arabia and China for more loans.

When Ishaq Dar took over as finance minister in September, his first preference was to avoid IMF’s tough conditions by seeking financial assistance from friendly countries.
In November, the minister claimed to have secured a $13 billion bailout from China and Saudi Arabia with $5.7 billion in fresh loans. Dar was confident that the cash would come before the IMF programme revival.

However, it became clear with time that Islamabad’s old allies refused to dole out more cash without the country first agreeing to the Fund’s conditions. That was when Pakistan had to invite the IMF mission to negotiate the deal.

The country is now hoping that its friends would come to its rescue as it has done all the hard yards to convince the IMF. Dar took to Twitter to announce that CDB has decided to lend Pakistan its support.

“Formalities completed,” announced the financial czar, adding that $700 million was expected to reach the State Bank of Pakistan by this week.

He maintained that the loan will “shore up” Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves. On the other hand, Islamabad has agreed to implement the Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies, which contains policy suggestions by the IMF.
Sources have revealed that the staff-level agreement between the fund and the government is expected next week.

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