There is, nonetheless, an emergency payment hovering over the heads to the tune of Rs1.5 trillion in principal amounts to eliminate the debt stock. Thus, the government's decision to borrow Rs1.25 trillion from the commercial banks is another recipe to stay afloat and does not come to guarantee a long-term solution.
The new loan sought at less than 11% interest rate is said to be 5% cheaper than the existing liquidity facility that the government ensures for making timely payments for energy purchases. While the endeavour is to log the new funds under the Central Power Purchasing Agency (CPPA) and not be part of the public debt, the bottom line of income and expenses makes it a perpetual debt in the shadows.
To strike a balance, it is said that IPPs will be convinced to waive the interest payments amounting to Rs272 billion in return for taking upfront full payments. The intention is to lower the soaring power tariff for domestic and industrial consumers by coming up with a rebate on bills and to gradually eliminate the threat of circular debt to the power sector viability.
The fixation, however, is in the form of the IMF's resistance to vet the deal. The Fund is also against lowering of power tariffs, making exports and production come to a naught. It is a catch-22 situation, and there isn't much room for the government as it struggles to live with IPPs and a plummeting economy. The way out of the mess is to renegotiate the power purchase deal with the IPPs, privatise the distribution companies, and cut down on pilferage and institutional corruption.
Circular debt fixation
Reviewed by Muhammad Javed Arif
on
March 08, 2025
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