Travel
Smaller government
字号+ Author:Smart News Source:Business 2025-01-15 06:34:58 I want to comment(0)
THE IMF bailout programme has put the government under pressure to curtail its spending, especially current expenditures, slash its burgeoning fiscal deficits and produce a primary surplus for debt reduction and sustainability. It has also come under scathing criticism from economic experts and political parties for massively raising taxes on salaried individuals and tax-compliant sectors of the economy to meet the tax target of the IMF programme for the present fiscal year, instead of curbing its wasteful expenditures. In June, the prime minister told the National Assembly that the government planned to cut expenditures within months, citing his decision to abolish the Public Works Department as part of a plan to rightsize the government and curb its expenses. In August, his cabinet approved the abolition of 150,000 jobs, closure of six ministries, and the merger of two others, as part of a slew of reforms agreed upon with the IMF. Later, it instructed all federal divisions and their attached ministries and subordinate offices to prepare lists of contingency temporary posts, outsource their non-core services, such as plumbing and gardening, and provide details of surplus employees who could be given a severance package and sent home. However, matters are moving slowly. A report suggests that only 15 to 16 of over 40 ministries and divisions have started the process more than two months after the cabinet made its decision in this regard. Others have given a lukewarm response. That is not surprising. In 1997, the federal government had embarked upon a similar plan, prepared by the planning ministry, to rightsize. Nothing happened. Instead, according to a senior economist, the total number of federal employees was 829,000 in 2011. This strength remained largely steady until 2017 when the sudden infusion of 137,000 new entrants raised the figure to 966,000. The Imran Khan administration had approved a major government restructuring plan, which included retaining 325 entities out of the total 441. It has yet to be implemented because of bureaucratic inertia. A plan to jettison state-owned enterprises to prevent future losses was not executed either. Downsizing the government without a responsive bureaucracy is difficult. And bureaucrats seldom act unless the politicians want them to. If the bureaucracy is not getting the prime minister’s message it is because it has not been conveyed with the kind of force that is needed to put it across.
1.This site adheres to industry standards, and any reposted articles will clearly indicate the author and source;
Related Articles
-
Leverkusen stumble to goalless draw against Stuttgart as Liverpool loom
2025-01-15 06:12
-
UET approves new BSc, MSc programmes
2025-01-15 05:12
-
‘Holistic approach needed to counter fake news’
2025-01-15 04:34
-
Verstappen penalised as Norris tops Brazilian Grand Prix practice
2025-01-15 04:12
User Reviews
Recommended Reads
Hot Information
- Maulana vs Mevlana
- Govt steamrolls six key bills through parliament
- More than 100 BBC staffers accuse broadcaster of bias in coverage of Israel’s incursion in Gaza
- Harris, Obamas and voting rights leaders work to turn out Black voters in run-up to Election Day
- Married woman, friend killed for ‘honour’
- No evidence to support rape claims at Lahore college: HRCP
- Turkiye leads joint call to UN Security Council to halt arms shipments to Israel
- Lebanon PM says expanded strikes suggest Israel’s ‘rejection’ of ceasefire
- Govt slashes petrol price by Rs2.07, high-speed diesel by Rs3.4
Abont US
Follow our WhatasApp account to stay updated with the latest exciting content