Type | Report |
Title | Growth of the provincial economies |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | http://ipr.org.pk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/GROWTH-OF-PROVINCIAL-ECONOMICS-.pdf |
Abstract | The time for formulation of Provincial Growth Strategies (PGS) has come. These strategies should form the basis for the allocation among sectors of the funds in the respective Annual Development Programs (ADPs). This role of the Provinces in promoting the growth of their respective economies has been greatly facilitated by the passage of the 18th Amendment. This Amendment has led to the abolition of the Concurrent List in the Constitution and the resultant transfer of the large number of functions in this List to the Provinces. Unfortunately, not much is known currently about the size, composition and growth of the Provincial economies. Pakistan, unlike India, does not have a tradition of constructing and maintaining Regional Income Accounts so as to estimate and derive the trends in the Provincial Gross Domestic Products (PGDPs). This has rendered it extremely difficult to engage in meaningful planning at the Provincial level. The Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS), in coordination with the Provincial Bureaus of Statistics, should have undertaken the task of distributing the national GDP into the PGDPs on the basis of allocators for each sector. This has not happened because planning has been very much in the Federal domain under the Planning Commission, Government of Pakistan. The approach now required is a ‘bottom-up’ process whereby Provincial development plans are first prepared and then aggregated into the National Plan. The task for the Federal Planning Commission is to ensure that there is a consistent sectoral and macroeconomic framework to support the Provincial and Federal plans. The objective of this report is to present estimates by sector of the PGDPs for the period, 1999-2000 to 2014-15. In the process, there is substantial deepening of the knowledge on the economy of Pakistan, especially in terms of the location of different activitiesThe report is organized as follows: Section 2 describes the methodology used for constructing the regional income accounts to yield estimate of the PGDPs. Sections 3 and 4 presents the results of the application of the methodology and conclusions derived regarding the relative size, composition and growth of the four Provincial economies. Section 5 quotes or constructs other indicators of regional growth to judge the consistency of the PGDP estimates. Section 6 asks the question as to whether regional inequality has been increasing or decreasing in Pakistan over the last fifteen years? Section 7 identifies the sub-sectors which can act as potential drivers of growth in each Province. Finally, in Section 8 are presented a summary of the major findings and recommendations. |
» | Pakistan - Integrated Household Survey 2001-2002 |